Ph.D. Thesis: Theoretical modeling of x-ray and vibrational spectroscopies applied to liquid water and surface adsorbates
by
Mathias P. Ljungberg(Stockholm University, Department of Physics)
→
Europe/Stockholm
FR4
FR4
Description
This thesis presents results of theoretical modeling of x-ray and vibrational spectroscopies applied
to liquid water and to CO adsorbed on a Ni(100) surface. The Reverse Monte Carlo method is
used to search for water structures that reproduce diffraction, IR/Raman and x-ray absorption
by fitting them to experimental data and imposed constraints. Some of the structures are created
to have a large fraction of broken hydrogen bonds because recent x-ray absorption and emission
studies have been seen to support the existence of such structures. In the fitting procedure a fast
way of computing the IR/Raman spectrum for an isolated OH stretch is used, where the frequency
is represented by the electric field projected in the direction of the stretch coordinate. This method
is critically evaluated by comparing it to quantum chemical cluster calculations. Furthermore,
the x-ray emission spectrum of water is investigated, the modeling of which is complicated by
the necessity of including vibrational effects in the spectrum calculations due to a dissociative
intermediate state. Based on the Kramers-Heisenberg formula a new semi-classical method is
developed to include vibrational effects in x-ray emission calculations. The method is seen to
work very well for a one-dimensional test system. Moreover, x-ray absorption and emission are
implemented in a periodic Density Functional Theory code which is applied to ice and to the surface
adsorbate system CO on Ni(100).