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Molecular orbital simulations of metal 1s2p resonant inelastic X-ray scattering

Authors :
Guo, Meiyuan
Erik, Källman
Sørensen, Lasse Kragh
Delcey, Mickaël G.
Pinjari, Rahul V.
Lundberg, Marcus
Guo, Meiyuan
Erik, Källman
Sørensen, Lasse Kragh
Delcey, Mickaël G.
Pinjari, Rahul V.
Lundberg, Marcus
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

For first-row transition metals, high-resolution 3d electronic structure information can be obtained using resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS). In the hard X-ray region, a K pre-edge (1s -> 3d) excitation can be followed by monitoring the dipole-allowed K alpha (2p -> 1s) or K beta (3p -> 1s) emission, processes labeled 1s2p or 1s3p RIXS. Here the restricted active space (RAS) approach, which is a molecular orbital method, is used for the first time to study hard X-ray RIXS processes. This is achieved by including the two sets of core orbitals in different partitions of the active space. Transition intensities are calculated using both first- and second-order expansions of the wave vector, including, but not limited to, electric dipoles and quadrupoles. The accuracy of the approach is tested for 1s2p RIXS of iron hexacyanides [Fe(CN)(6)](n-) in ferrous and ferric oxidation states. RAS simulations accurately describe the multiplet structures and the role of 2p and 3d spin-orbit coupling on energies and selection rules. Compared to experiment, relative energies of the two [Fe(CN)(6)](3-) resonances deviate by 0.2 eV in both incident energy and energy transfer directions, and multiplet splittings in [Fe(CN)(6)](4-) are reproduced within 0.1 eV. These values are similar to what can be expected for valence excitations. The development opens the modeling of hard X-ray scattering processes for both solution catalysts and enzymatic systems.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1233708198
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021.acs.jpca.6b05139