'Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists (RCOG)'
Abstract
Spin relaxation is an important aspect of the spin dynamics of free radicals and
can have a significant impact on the outcome of their spin-selective reactions. Examples range from the use of radicals as spin qubits in quantum information processing
to the radical pair reactions in proteins that may allow migratory birds to sense the
direction of the Earth’s magnetic field. Accurate modeling of spin relaxation, however, is non-trivial. Bloch-Redfield-Wangsness theory derives a quantum mechanical
master equation from system-bath interactions in the Markovian limit that provides
a comprehensive framework for describing spin relaxation. Unfortunately, the construction of the master equation is system-specific and often resource-heavy. To
address this challenge, we introduce a generalised and efficient implementation of
BRW theory as a new feature of the spin dynamics toolkit MolSpin which offers an
easy-to-use approach for studying systems of reacting radicals of varying complexity