Metal L-edge
spectroscopy
Spectroscopy is the field of study that measures and interprets the electromagnetic spectra that result from the interaction between electromagnetic radiation and matter as a function of the wavelength or frequency of the radiation. Matter wa ...
is a spectroscopic technique used to study the
electronic structures of
transition metal atoms and
complexes. This method measures
X-ray absorption caused by the
excitation of a metal 2p electron to unfilled d orbitals (e.g. 3d for first-row transition metals), which creates a characteristic absorption peak called the L-edge. Similar features can also be studied by
Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy. According to the
selection rules, the transition is formally electric-dipole allowed, which not only makes it more intense than an electric-dipole forbidden
metal K pre-edge (1s → 3d) transition, but also makes it more feature-rich as the lower required energy (~400-1000 eV from scandium to copper) results in a higher-resolution experiment.
In the simplest case, that of a
cupric (CuII) complex, the 2p → 3d transition produces a 2p
53d
10 final state. The 2p
5 core hole created in the transition has an orbital angular momentum L=1 which then couples to the spin angular momentum S=1/2 to produce J=3/2 and J=1/2 final states. These states are directly observable in the L-edge spectrum as the two main peaks (Figure 1). The peak at lower energy (~930 eV) has the greatest intensity and is called the L
3-edge, while the peak at higher energy (~950 eV) has less intensity and is called the L
2-edge.
Spectral components
As we move left across the periodic table (e.g. from
copper to
iron), we create additional holes in the metal 3d orbitals. For example, a low-spin
ferric (FeIII) system in an
octahedral environment has a
ground state
The ground state of a quantum-mechanical system is its stationary state of lowest energy; the energy of the ground state is known as the zero-point energy of the system. An excited state is any state with energy greater than the ground state. ...
of (''t
2g'')
5(''e
g'')
0 resulting in transitions to the ''t
2g'' (dπ) and ''e
g'' (dσ) sets. Therefore, there are two possible final states: ''t
2g''
6''e
g''
0 or ''t
2g''
5''e
g''
1(Figure 2a). Since the ground-state metal configuration has four holes in the ''e
g'' orbital set and one hole in the ''t
2g'' orbital set, an intensity ratio of 4:1 might be expected (Figure 2b). However, this model does not take into account
covalent bond
A covalent bond is a chemical bond that involves the sharing of electrons to form electron pairs between atoms. These electron pairs are known as shared pairs or bonding pairs. The stable balance of attractive and repulsive forces between atoms ...
ing and, indeed, an intensity ratio of 4:1 is not observed in the spectrum.
In the case of iron, the d
6 excited state will further split in energy due to d-d electron repulsion (Figure 2c). This splitting is given by the right-hand (high-field) side of the d
6 Tanabe–Sugano diagram and can be mapped onto a theoretical simulation of a L-edge spectrum (Figure 2d). Other factors such as p-d electron repulsion and spin-orbit coupling of the 2p and 3d electrons must also be considered to fully simulate the data.
For a ferric system, all of these effects result in 252 initial states and 1260 possible final states that together will comprise the final L-edge spectrum (Figure 2e). Despite all of these possible states, it has been established that in a low-spin ferric system, the lowest energy peak is due to a transition to the ''t
2g'' hole and the more intense and higher energy (~3.5 eV) peak is to that of the unoccupied ''e
g'' orbitals.
Feature mixing
In most systems, bonding between a ligand and a metal atom can be thought of in terms of metal-ligand covalent bonds, where the occupied ligand orbitals donate some electron density to the metal. This is commonly known as ligand-to-metal charge transfer or
LMCT
193px, The intense color of tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II) arises from a metal-to-ligand charge-transfer band.
Charge-transfer bands are a characteristic feature of the optical spectra of many compounds. These bands are typically more intense tha ...
. In some cases, low-lying unoccupied ligand orbitals (π*) can receive back-donation (or
backbonding) from the occupied metal orbitals. This has the opposite effect on the system, resulting in metal-to-ligand charge transfer,
MLCT
193px, The intense color of tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II) arises from a metal-to-ligand charge-transfer band.
Charge-transfer bands are a characteristic feature of the optical spectra of many compounds. These bands are typically more intense tha ...
, and commonly appears as an additional L-edge spectral feature.
An example of this feature occurs in low-spin ferric
6sup>3−">e(CN)
6sup>3−, since
CN− is a ligand that can have backbonding. While backbonding is important in the initial state, it would only warrant a small feature in the L-edge spectrum. In fact, it is in the final state where the backbonding π* orbitals are allowed to mix with the very intense ''e
g'' transition, thus borrowing intensity and resulting in the final dramatic three peak spectrum (Figure 3 and Figure 4).
Model construction
X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), like other spectroscopies, looks at the excited state to infer information about the ground state. To make a quantitative assignment, L-edge data is fitted using a
valence bond configuration interaction (VBCI) model where LMCT and MLCT are applied as needed to successfully simulate the observed spectral features.
[ These simulations are then further compared to density functional theory (DFT) calculations to arrive at a final interpretation of the data and an accurate description of the electronic structure of the complex (Figure 4).
In the case of iron L-edge, the excited state mixing of the metal ''eg'' orbitals into the ligand π* make this method a direct and very sensitive probe of backbonding.][
]
See also
* Metal K-edge In X-ray absorption spectroscopy, the K-edge is a sudden increase in x-ray absorption occurring when the energy of the X-rays is just above the binding energy of the innermost electron shell of the atoms interacting with the photons. The term is ba ...
* Ligand K-edge
* Extended X-ray absorption fine structure
References
{{Reflist
X-ray absorption spectroscopy