Links

Web Resources

EPR Symposium Web Site

This Center is supported by NIBIB P41 EB002034

Resource materials on the five EPR Centers web sites include:

Chicago http://www.radonc.uchicago.edu/lfepri/ Discussion of physiological parameters to which EPR is sensitive.

Milwaukee http://www.mcw.edu/display/router.asp?docid=1402 Over 100 “research highlights” describe research performed at the Center. This site connects to the Newsletter of the International EPR Society, which has some tutorial and technique articles.  The link to the “NO Journal Club” provides copies of papers about NO.

Dartmouth http://www.dartmouth.edu/~eprctr/ Brief presentations of instrumentation and methodology developed at the Center.

Cornell http://www.acert.cornell.edu Discussion of the scientific background of the technology of the Center, and brief summaries of highlights of the research of the Center. Several computer programs are available.

Tallahassee http://www.magnet.fsu.edu/science/cimar/emr/ Brief discussion of the motivation for performing EPR at high magnetic fields.There is a brief tutorial about EPR on the Bruker web page, and some of the web pages of labs active in EPR research have tutorial materials of various levels. See, for example, www.Bruker-BioSpin.com and click on “what is EPR.”

Additional Useful Sites

Joseph Hornak has an introduction to NMR and MRI on his web page: http://www.cis.rit.edu/people/faculty/hornak/

The University of Manchester has an introduction to EPR for prospective users:http://mch3w.ch.man.ac.uk/services/epresr/EPRmain.htm

Many links to other EPR labs, and lists of books, are provided by the University of Wroclaw “Structural Applications of EPR Group”: http://www.chem.uni.wroc.pl/saeprs/epr/links/home.htm

Gunnar Jeschke has introductions to EPR, discussion of distance measurements, and illustrations from some of his seminars, on the Max Planck Institute Spiess group home page: http://www.mpip-mainz.mpg.de/documents/aksp/epr/index.html

Thomas Prisner also provides some introductory material, plus links to other sources http://www.prisner.de/Activities/Research/EPR/EPR.shtml

A dynamic cartoon of the spin echo is on Chris Noble’s web site (Monash University): http://www.physics.monash.edu.au/~chrisn/espin.html

Brief descriptions of several pulse sequences, and references to papers that have used them, and provided via Arthur Schweiger’s “What is Pulse EPR” site: http://www.esr.ethz.ch/intro/intro.html

John Weil makes some computer simulation programs available via his web site: http://chm15127.usask.ca/

The National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences EPR home page provides a data base of spin-trapped radicals, and an offer to answer questions about EPR via an on-line link called “Ask Dr. EPR” http://epr.niehs.nih.gov/ask_dr.html This site also contains many links to other sites.

 

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