Metal-Metal Peak Splitting in 5d Transition Metals
Dear All, I have a question that is not directly related to Athena or Artemis but it is more related with EXAFS theory. I work on lithium metal oxides and sometimes measure their XAS data. XAS data show typical trend, i.e; first prominent peak related with metal-oxygen co-ordination shell and second prominent peak is associated with metal-metal co-ordination shell in my materials. I have noticed that in similar crystal structures Li2MO3-type (where M is transition metal), if metal belongs to 3d transition metal groups I get a single prominent metal-metal peak but for 5d transition metals, the metal-metal peak splits and its intensity also drops. I could not figure out the reason for the splitting of metal-metal peak in case of 5d metals. I have attached a PDF file in which calculated EXAFS spectra for Li2RuO3 (4d transition metal) and Li2PtO3 (5d transition metal) are shown and metal-metal (Pt-Pt) peak in Li2PtO3 shows clear splitting whereas metal-metal peak for Li2RuO3 does not split even though their "ATOMS" input files are very similar. I would appreciate if anybody could briefly explain the reason for metal-metal peak splitting in 5d metals or point me towards any literature. Attachment can be downloaded from the below link as well. https://www.dropbox.com/s/1m3kf764junuukk/Metal-Metal%20Peak%20Splitting%20i n%205d.pdf?dl=0 Thanks, Shoaib Muhammad Department of Energy Science Sungkyunkwan University (South Korea)
Ramsauer-Townsend effect Bruce gives some references at the end of this talk: https://speakerdeck.com/bruceravel/the-ramsauer-townsend-effect-in-x-ray-abs... -R. On 9/19/2017 2:06 AM, Shoaib Muhammad wrote:
Dear All,
I have a question that is not directly related to Athena or Artemis but it is more related with EXAFS theory. I work on lithium metal oxides and sometimes measure their XAS data. XAS data show typical trend, i.e; first prominent peak related with metal-oxygen co-ordination shell and second prominent peak is associated with metal-metal co-ordination shell in my materials. I have noticed that in similar crystal structures Li2MO3-type (where M is transition metal), if metal belongs to 3d transition metal groups I get a single prominent metal-metal peak but for 5d transition metals, the metal-metal peak splits and its intensity also drops. I could not figure out the reason for the splitting of metal-metal peak in case of 5d metals. I have attached a PDF file in which calculated EXAFS spectra for Li2RuO3 (4d transition metal) and Li2PtO3 (5d transition metal) are shown and metal-metal (Pt-Pt) peak in Li2PtO3 shows clear splitting whereas metal-metal peak for Li2RuO3 does not split even though their “ATOMS” input files are very similar.
I would appreciate if anybody could briefly explain the reason for metal-metal peak splitting in 5d metals or point me towards any literature. Attachment can be downloaded from the below link as well.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/1m3kf764junuukk/Metal-Metal%20Peak%20Splitting%20i...
Thanks,
*Shoaib Muhammad*
Department of Energy Science
Sungkyunkwan University (South Korea)
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participants (2)
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Robert Gordon
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Shoaib Muhammad