论文标题
液体水的X射线吸收光谱中的多体效应
Many-Body Effects in the X-ray Absorption Spectra of Liquid Water
论文作者
论文摘要
X射线吸收光谱(XAS)是一种强大的实验技术,可在具有核心电子激发的材料中探测局部顺序。实验解释需要支持理论计算。对于水,这些计算非常苛刻,迄今为止,只能通过限制计算光谱准确性的主要近似值来完成。这引发了激烈的争论,就四面体粘结水的标准图片进行实质性修订是否是为了改善理论和实验的一致性所必需的。在这里,我们报告了对水的XAS的新第一原理计算,该计算避免了电子激发理论的最新进展,从而避免了先前工作的近似值。计算出的XAS光谱及其随温度和/或同位素取代的变化而变化,与实验具有极好的定量一致。该方法需要超出密度功能理论近似值的准确的准粒子波函数,这些近似值是准粒子的动力学,包括动态筛选以及由于价级激发的连续性而引起的重新归一化效应。实验光谱中观察到的三个特征明确归因于激子效应。前边缘特征与结合分子内激子有关,主缘特征与激发分子协调壳内部的激子有关,而后边缘的壳体在更遥远的邻居上被定位,这是共振状态的预期。这三个特征相对于激发分子,在短,中间和更长的范围内探测了局部顺序。计算出的光谱与水的标准四面体图片完全一致。
X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) is a powerful experimental technique to probe the local order in materials with core electron excitations. Experimental interpretation requires supporting theoretical calculations. For water, these calculations are very demanding and, to date, could only be done with major approximations that limited the accuracy of the calculated spectra. This prompted an intense debate on whether a substantial revision of the standard picture of tetrahedrally bonded water was necessary to improve the agreement of theory and experiment. Here, we report a new first-principles calculation of the XAS of water that avoids the approximations of prior work thanks to recent advances in electron excitation theory. The calculated XAS spectra, and their variation with changes of temperature and/or with isotope substitution, are in excellent quantitative agreement with experiments. The approach requires accurate quasi-particle wavefunctions beyond density functional theory approximations, accounts for the dynamics of quasi-particles and includes dynamic screening as well as renormalization effects due to the continuum of valence-level excitations. The three features observed in the experimental spectra are unambiguously attributed to excitonic effects. The pre-edge feature is associated to a bound intramolecular exciton, the main-edge feature is associated to an exciton localized within the coordination shell of the excited molecule, while the post-edge one is delocalized over more distant neighbors, as expected for a resonant state. The three features probe the local order at short, intermediate, and longer range relative to the excited molecule. The calculated spectra are fully consistent with a standard tetrahedral picture of water.