Free-Electron Laser-Powered Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
S. Takahashi, L.-C. Brunel, D. T. Edwards, J. van Tol, G. Ramian, S., Han, M. S. Sherwin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a high-power pulsed EPR spectrometer at 240 GHz powered by a free-electron laser, enabling faster spin manipulation and higher magnetic field applications than previous solid-state sources.
Contribution
It introduces a novel 240 GHz pulsed EPR spectrometer powered by a free-electron laser, significantly surpassing traditional solid-state sources in power and speed.
Findings
Achieved 6 ns pi/2 pulse rotation of electron spins.
Detected EPR lines separated by ~200 MHz.
Measured decoherence times as short as 63 ns.
Abstract
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy interrogates unpaired electron spins in solids and liquids to reveal local structure and dynamics; for example, EPR has elucidated parts of the structure of protein complexes that have resisted all other techniques in structural biology. EPR can also probe the interplay of light and electricity in organic solar cells and light-emitting diodes, and the origin of decoherence in condensed matter, which is of fundamental importance to the development of quantum information processors. Like nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), EPR spectroscopy becomes more powerful at high magnetic fields and frequencies, and with excitation by coherent pulses rather than continuous waves. However, the difficulty of generating sequences of powerful pulses at frequencies above 100 GHz has, until now, confined high-power pulsed EPR to magnetic fields of 3.5 T and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsElectron Spin Resonance Studies · Magnetism in coordination complexes · Photochemistry and Electron Transfer Studies
