Old revisions Backlinks Rename Page This page is not fully translated, yet. (remove this paragraph once the translation is finished) Area EPR The EPR in short Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) is the less-known, although elder, sister of NMR. What makes EPR unique is its ability to detect directly, to identify, and to quantify paramagnetic species, i.e. materials or compounds that have one or more unpaired electrons in the outer orbitals of their atoms or molecules. EPR is a versatile tool for the study of materials and biological systems, especially if associated with other spectroscopic techniques, including its companion NMR. A surprisingly large number of materials have unpaired electrons, including free radicals, transition metal ions, and localized defects in materials. EPR is applied, in vitro ed ex vivo, to the study of stable paramagnetic systems (stable radicals, antioxidants, metals, radicals derived by radiation- and photo-induced damage), of unstable paramagnetic systems (reactive oxidizing species and target-centred radicals) as well as of non-paramagnetic systems charged with paramagnetic probes (protein structures and membranes), with applications in health, medicine, pharmaceutical and food science industries, material science. Tutorials Presentazione Area EPR 28 marzo 2017 - parte 1 Presentazione Area EPR 28 marzo 2017 - parte 2 Paramagnetismo e diamagnetismo EPR lectures by Prof. Daniella Goldfarb A simple tutorial by Bruker Links Gruppo italiano di risonanze di spin elettronico (GIRSE) European Federation of EPR (EFEPR) International EPR Society (IES) Shared EPR Gruppo EPR dell'Università di Padova Gruppo EPR dell'Università di Bologna Gruppo EPR dell'Università di Torino Gruppo EPR dell'Università di Firenze Nota: i link qui suggeriti non rappresentano posizioni ufficiali dell'ISS, né impegnano in alcun modo la responsabilità dell'Istituto. Sono una selezione dei ricercatori dell'area EPR allo scopo di fornire agli utenti materiale di approfondimento sulla tecnica. Table of Contents The EPR in short Tutorials Links