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The electronic structures of the core and valence ion states of metal oxides
Authors:JA Tossell
Institution:Department of Chemistry, University of Maryland, College Park, Md. 20742 U.S.A.
Abstract:SCF-Xα SW MO calculations on metal core ion hole states and X-ray emission (XES) and X-ray photoelectron (XPS) transition states of the non- transition metal oxidic clusters MgO610?, AlO45? and SiO44? show relative valence orbital energies to be virtually unaffected by the creation of valence orbital or metal core orbital holes. Accordingly, valence orbital energies derived from XPS and XES are directly comparable and may be correlated to generate empirical MO diagrams. In addition, charge relaxation about the metal core hole is small and valence orbital compositions are little changed in the core hole state. On the other hand, for the transition metal oxidic clusters FeO610?, CrO69? and TiO68? relative valence orbital energies are sharply changed by a metal core orbital or crystal field orbital hole, the energy lowering of an orbital increasing with its degree of metal character. Consequently O 2p nonbonding → M 3d-O 2p antibonding (crystal field) energies are reduced, while M 3d bonding → O 2p nonbonding and M 3d-O 2p antibonding → M 4s,p-O 2p antibonding (conduction band) energies increase. Charge relaxation about the core hole is virtually complete in the transition metal oxides and substantial changes are observed in the composition of those valence orbitals with appreciable M 3d character. This change in composition is greater for e g than for t2g orbitals and increases as the separation of the eg crystal field (CF) orbitals and the O 2p nonbonding orbital set decreases. Based on the hole state MO diagrams the higher energy XPS satellite in TiO2 (at about 13 eV) is assigned to a valence → conduction band transition. The UV PES satellites at 8.2 eV in Cr2O3 and 9.3 eV in FeO are tentatively assigned to similar transitions to conduction band orbitals, although the closeness in energy of the crystal field and O 2p nonbonding orbitals in the valence orbital hole state prevents a definite assignment on energy criteria alone. However the calculations do clearly show that charge transfer transitions of the eg bonding → eg crystal field orbital type would generally occur at lower energy than is consistent with observed satellite structure.A core electron hole has little effect upon relative orbital energies and is only slightly neutralized by valence electron redistribution for MgO and SiO2. For the transition metal oxides a core hole lowers the relative energies of M3d containing orbitals by large amounts, reducing O → M charge transfer and increasing M 3d crystal field → conduction band energies. Large and sometimes overcomplete neutralization of the core hole is observed, increasing from CrO69? to FeO610? to TiO68?. as the O → M charge transfer energy declines.High energy XPS satellites in TiO2 may be assigned to O 2p nonbonding → conduction band transitions while lower energy UV PES satellites in FeO and Cr2O3 arise from crystal field or O 2p nonbonding → conduction band excitations. Our “shake-up” assignment for FeO610?, CrO69? and TiO68? are less than definitive because no procedure has yet been developed to calculate “shake-up” intensities resulting from transitions of the type described. However the results do allow a critical evaluation of earlier qualitative predictions of core and valence hole effects. First, we find that the comparison of hole or valence state ionic systems with equilibrium distance systems of higher nuclear and/or cation charge (e.g. the comparison of the FeO610? Fe 2p core hole state to Co3O4) is dangerous. For example, larger MO distances in the ion states substantially reduce crystal field splittings. Second, core and CF orbital holes sharply reduce O → M charge transfer energies, giving 2eg → 3eg energy separations which are generally too small to match observed satellite energies. Third, highest occupied CF-conduction band energies are only about 4–5 eV in the ground states, but increase to about 7–11 eV in the core and valence hole states of the transition metal oxides studied. The energetic arguments presented thus support the idea of CF and/or O 2p nonbonding → conduction band excitations as assignments for “shake-up” satellites, at least in oxides of metals near the beginning of the transition series.
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