Hi Rana, Currently, S02 is usually described as being due to the relaxation of the other electrons in an atom when a core electron is removed, resulting in incomplete overlap of initial and final states. This appears to be a fairly good description, as careful experiments show good agreement with theoretical calculations based on this idea. Note, however, that there could be some other contributors to S02. A photon could, in addition to exciting the core electron at the edge, also excite a valence electron. There's a small thread on the transferability of S02 here: http://www.mail-archive.com/ifeffit@millenia.cars.aps.anl.gov/msg01626.html E0 is a tricky concept, in my opinion: it is the energy origin in the EXAFS equation. Perhaps a theorist can give me a pithy physical interpretation of what happens at that energy, but I don't know there needs to be anything; at k near 0, the path expansion is not convergent, so I'm not sure we should expect anything special to happen exactly at 0. In other words, it's not exactly the Fermi level or any other special energy. E0 is dependent on oxidation state; it can shift by an electron volt or two when oxidation states vary. Note that oxidation state is a simplistic measure of what's happening with the electron distribution in a material. Suppose fluorine is substituted for iodine in some material. Formally, the oxidation state of the atom they are bonded to is not changed by the substitution. But in reality, the electron distribution is different, and a small E0 shift would not be surprising. I think the bottom line, then, is this: S02 is completely transferable for the same element at multiple absorbing sites. Delta E0 is transferable with some caution for the same element at multiple absorbing sites if the oxidation state is the same. One other note: there's no rule that when trying constraints, you have to start unconstrained and add constraints to see the effect on the fit. With complicated systems like yours, it often pays to start with unrealistically simple constrains (not only E0's and S02's the same, but also sigma2's), and see if you're on the right track. Then look at the effect of relaxing constraints. --Scott Calvin Sarah Lawrence College On Jul 28, 2010, at 4:00 AM, Jatinkumar Rana wrote:
Dear Users,
Since long, i was trying to understand the physical meaning of term "Delta E0" and "S02" in EXAFS equation. I have little bit of idea about both of them. for example, S02 is element specific and it is transferable between samples (if we consider same absorbing atom).
However, I am not able to realize their importance in terms of their "physical meaning" as far as interaction of photoelectron is concerned. Therefore, it is difficult for me to understand their influence on EXAFS.
I am dealing with a case of "nonequivalent multiple atomic sites of absorbing atoms". It is quite obvious that in such kind of case no. of variables are more than no. of independent points and there is a need to constrain the parameters to solve such problems.
I have following questions :
How do i understand "Delta E0" and "S02" theoretically (in terms of photoelectron interaction) ?
Can i constrain "Delta E0" for all absorbing atomic site as same ? (my assumption : all absorbing atoms are at same oxidation level)
your comments and suggestions would be highly appreciated...
Best regards, Rana _______________________________________________ Ifeffit mailing list Ifeffit@millenia.cars.aps.anl.gov http://millenia.cars.aps.anl.gov/mailman/listinfo/ifeffit