Dear mailing list - This is a general EXAFS question I decided to post in regards to your collective thoughts and/or experience with this EXAFS analysis approach. I am currently attempting to model a number of Fe-S clusters with nuclearities of 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6. In some cases (where all the Fe atoms are chemically equivalent i.e. same oxidation state and coordination geometry) it is easy to approach this by assuming a single Fe absorber model. When the Fe atoms become inequivalent (oxidation states which may be a mixture of I, II or III, and different coordination geometry) I can average the environments (by including all interactions and ajusting coordination numbers for the different iron atoms accordingly) again into a single Fe absorber model. The fits go well, giving realiable bond lengths (when compared to available crystallographic data), DW's, and statistics (I am also keeping in mind the number of refined parameters to ensure a well over-determined fit for each of the models). My only hesitation, and main reason I am posting this question, is that I am not completely sure this is a reasonable assumption as the Fe atoms are in different oxidation states and will have different E0's. What I do know is there is a shift of roughly 2 to 3 eV in E0 to higher energy for every increase, by one, in oxidation state (i.e. Fe(I) to Fe(II)). Is there any way of determining if this small difference in energy, and hence E0, between the Fe atoms in the clusters can or cannot be neglected in modelling the EXAFS? Regards, Mark -- Mark Bondin PhD student School of Chemistry, University of Melbourne (03) 8344 7015 (Tower lab) 0409 252 983 (mobile)