Electron spin-lattice relaxation mechanisms of rapidly-tumbling nitroxide radicals.
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ABSTRACT: Electron spin relaxation times at 295 K were measured at frequencies between 250 MHz and 34 GHz for perdeuterated 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidone-1-oxyl (PDT) in five solvents with viscosities that result in tumbling correlation times, ?R, between 4 and 50 ps and for three (14)N/(15)N pairs of nitroxides in water with ?R between 9 and 19 ps. To test the impact of structure on relaxation three additional nitroxides with ?R between 10 and 26 ps were studied. In this fast tumbling regime T2(-1)~T1(-1) at frequencies up to about 9 GHz. At 34 GHz T2(-1)>T1(-1) due to increased contributions to T2(-1) from incomplete motional averaging of g-anisotropy, and T2(-1)-T1(-1) is proportional to ?R. The contribution to T1(-1) from spin rotation is independent of frequency and decreases as ?R increases. Spin rotation dominates T1(-1) at 34 GHz for all ?R studied, and at all frequencies studied for ?R=4 ps. The contribution to T1(-1) from modulation of nitrogen hyperfine anisotropy increases as frequency decreases and as ?R increases; it dominates at low frequencies for ?R>~15 ps. The contribution from modulation of g anisotropy is significant only at 34 GHz. Inclusion of a thermally-activated process was required to account for the observation that for most of the radicals, T1(-1) was smaller at 250 MHz than at 1-2 GHz. The significant (15)N/(14)N isotope effect, the small H/D isotope effect, and the viscosity dependence of the magnitude of the contribution from the thermally-activated process suggest that it arises from intramolecular motions of the nitroxide ring that modulate the isotropic A values.
SUBMITTER: Biller JR
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3952064 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Nov
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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