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Pulse EPR of Triarylmethyl Probes: A New Approach for the Investigation of Molecular Motions in Soft Matter

Triarylmethyl (TAM) radicals have become widely used free radicals in the past few years. Their electron spins have long relaxation times and narrow electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) lines, which make them an important class of probes and tags in biological applications and materials science. In...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of physical chemistry. B 2018-09, Vol.122 (36), p.8624-8630
Main Authors: Kuzhelev, Andrey A, Krumkacheva, Olesya A, Ivanov, Mikhail Yu, Prikhod’ko, Sergey A, Adonin, Nicolay Yu, Tormyshev, Victor M, Bowman, Michael K, Fedin, Matvey V, Bagryanskaya, Elena G
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Triarylmethyl (TAM) radicals have become widely used free radicals in the past few years. Their electron spins have long relaxation times and narrow electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) lines, which make them an important class of probes and tags in biological applications and materials science. In this work, we propose a new approach to characterize librations by means of TAM radicals. The temperature dependence of motional parameter ⟨α2⟩τc, where ⟨α2⟩ is the mean-squared amplitude of librations and τc is their characteristic time, is obtained by comparison of the 1/T m phase-relaxation rates at X- and Q-band EPR frequencies. We study three soft matrixes, viz., glassy trehalose and two ionic liquids, using TAMs with optimized relaxation properties OX063D and a dodeca-n-butyl homologue of Finland trityl (DBT). The motional parameters ⟨α2⟩τc obtained using TAMs are in excellent agreement with those obtained by means of nitroxide radicals. At the same time, the new TAM-based approach has (1) greater sensitivity due to the narrower EPR spectrum and (2) greater measuring accuracy and broader temperature range due to longer relaxation times. The developed approach may be fruitfully implemented to probe low-temperature molecular motions of TAM-labeled biopolymers, membrane systems, polymers, molecules in glassy media, and ionic liquids.
ISSN:1520-6106
1520-5207
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.8b07714