Abstract
This paper makes an attempt to coordinate the various pulsed EPR experiments on a common ground. To that end we subdivide the pulse schemes into individual modules, each consisting of a sequence of microwave and/or radiofrequency pulses, or of another type of and external perturbation. The progress in time of both polarization and coherence transfer experiments, may then be considered as a sequence of such modules. This way of looking at a pulsed EPR experiment is illustrated by a number of examples of applications. The ninth Bruker Lecture of the Royal Society of Chemistry, given at the 27th Annual International ESR Conference held at the University of Wales, Cardiff, on 21st–25th March, 1994.

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