Abstract
Photoemission, optical-absorption, and isochromat spectra of NiO and are studied theoretically by the consideration of configuration interactions within the metal-ligand cluster. It is shown that the satellites in the valence-band photoemission spectra contain significant final-state components produced by photoemission of a electron from the largely -like ground state and that final states giving the main lines are predominantly -like resulting from ligand charge-transfer transitions following the -electron emission. This identification differs markedly from the traditional one, according to which the main lines are due to final states and the satellites are produced by ligand shakeup transitions. The crystal-field splitting and the apparent reduction of Racah parameters are shown to be due to hybridization between different configurations. The resonance enhancement of the satellites rather than the main lines at the photoabsorption threshold is attributed partly to covalency and partly to the small number of holes in the nickel compounds as compared to other transition-metal compounds. Excitation energies for ligand charge-transfer optical absorption are calculated and it is shown that the fundamental absorption edge of NiO at ~4 eV is not due to the charge-transfer transitions. Instead, charge-transfer transitions are proposed as the origin of the NiO fundamental edge. Energy levels involved in the intra-atomic optical absorption are also calculated by the configurationinteraction approach and good agreement with experiment and energy levels calculated by the ligand-field theory is obtained. Finally the isochromat spectrum of NiO is discussed, based on the same approach.
- Received 21 February 1984
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.30.957
©1984 American Physical Society