Nothing comes to mind. I think if you're looking for an engine that generates thrust from something contained inside the ship, simply emitting radiation out the back will never generate enough oomph to get you anywhere. The solar sail sidesteps that problem because it doesn't generate thrust from inside the ship.
Probably the closest thing to what you want is laser propulsion. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_propulsion There are several ways of doing it, but all of them involve focusing a laser on the ship from somewhere else, and igniting or burning off material that's contained there to generate a reactive force. This has the advantage of not requiring a powerful energy source to be carried aboard the ship and technically it uses "radiation", which light is. However, the radiation does not really push the ship. Ultimately we're still talking about reaction mass being thrown from the ship to push it this way and that. And it's an external source of radiation, just like in a solar sail.
If you want something that is self-contained aboard ship, about the best you can do is an Orion drive. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_drive Basically we're talking about dropping nukes out the back of a (very well-armored) ship and exploding them to propel it. You're getting a lot more bang for your buck (so to speak) than with any sort of fuel, and technically this could be classified as a nuclear engine. Unfortunately this isn't "radiation drive" in the sense you seem to mean, other than there being a severe radiation hazard for anyone nearby. It's still just a reactive force being used to push the ship. For something that's self-contained, there isn't any way around that requirement until we discover some new laws of physics.
Probably the closest thing to what you want is laser propulsion. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_propulsion There are several ways of doing it, but all of them involve focusing a laser on the ship from somewhere else, and igniting or burning off material that's contained there to generate a reactive force. This has the advantage of not requiring a powerful energy source to be carried aboard the ship and technically it uses "radiation", which light is. However, the radiation does not really push the ship. Ultimately we're still talking about reaction mass being thrown from the ship to push it this way and that. And it's an external source of radiation, just like in a solar sail.
If you want something that is self-contained aboard ship, about the best you can do is an Orion drive. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_drive Basically we're talking about dropping nukes out the back of a (very well-armored) ship and exploding them to propel it. You're getting a lot more bang for your buck (so to speak) than with any sort of fuel, and technically this could be classified as a nuclear engine. Unfortunately this isn't "radiation drive" in the sense you seem to mean, other than there being a severe radiation hazard for anyone nearby. It's still just a reactive force being used to push the ship. For something that's self-contained, there isn't any way around that requirement until we discover some new laws of physics.