Publications by authors named "W Th Wenckebach"

Spectral diffusion of electron spin polarization plays a key part in dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP). It determines the distribution of polarization across the electron spin resonance (ESR) line and consequently the polarization that is available for transfer to the nuclear spins. Various authors have studied it experimentally by means of electron-electron double resonance (ELDOR) and proposed and used macroscopic models to interpret these experiments.

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We propose a mechanism for dynamic nuclear polarization that is different from the well-known Overhauser effect, solid effect, cross effect, and thermal mixing processes. We term it , and we show that it arises from the evolution of the density matrix for a simple electron-nucleus coupled spin pair subject to weak microwave irradiation, the same interactions as the solid effect. However, the SE is optimal when the microwave field is off-resonance, whereas RM is optimal when the microwave field is on-resonance and involves the mixing of states by the microwave field together with the electron-nuclear coupling.

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In samples used for dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP), spin-lattice relaxation times are usefully increased by going to high magnetic field and low temperature, typically several tesla and below 1 K. But the relaxation times for dipolar components of the nuclear spin energy remain stubbornly shorter than those for the Zeeman energy: dipolar order decays faster than the polarization itself by a huge factor-up to four orders of magnitude or more in the materials studied thus far. Such fast nuclear dipolar relaxation poses experimental challenges, for instance, when transferring polarization between different nuclear spin species via intermediate nuclear order: a proven technique to polarize rare nuclear spins.

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This paper presents a theory describing the dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) process associated with an arbitrary frequency swept microwave pulse. The theory is utilized to explain the integrated solid effect (ISE) as well as the newly discovered stretched solid effect (SSE) and adiabatic solid effect (ASE). It is verified with experiments performed at 9.

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Under typical conditions for dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP)-temperature about 1 K or below and magnetic field about 3 T or higher-the polarization agent causes nuclear dipolar order to relax up to four orders of magnitude faster than nuclear polarization. However, as far as we know, this ultra-fast dipolar relaxation has thus far not been explained in a satisfactory way. We report similar ultra-fast dipolar relaxation of proton spins in naphthalene due to the photo-excited triplet spin of pentacene and propose a three-step mechanism that explains such ultra-fast dipolar relaxation by ground state electron spins as well as by photo-excited triplet spins: nuclear spin diffusion transfers nuclear dipolar order-that is nuclear dipolar energy-spatially to near the electron spins.

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