We present synchrotron-excited oxygen x-ray K-emission spectroscopy ͑O K␣ XES͒ and oxygen x-ray absorption spectroscopy ͑O 1s XAS͒ spectra of transition-metal ͑TM͒ oxides MnO, CoO, and NiO. The comparison of oxygen K-emission and absorption spectra to valence band photoemission and bremsstrahlung isochromat spectra measurements shows that O 1s XAS is not strongly influenced by the core hole effect, whereas the TM 2p XAS significantly shifts to a lower energy. New and effective methods for determining the band gap and anion-to-cation cation charge-transfer energies of the oxides from the measured spectra are presented and applied, and the combination of O XAS and XES is shown to agree well with the results of numerical electronic structure methods applied to strongly correlated oxides. For MnO, the charge-transfer energy is found to be 6.6 eV and the band gap is 4.1 eV; for CoO, the values are 6.1 and 2.6 eV and for NiO, the values are 5.4 and 4.0 eV.
We present a comparison between experimental and calculated soft X-ray spectra of DNA's nucleobases, adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and thymine (T) using X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and soft X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES). Spectra of the 1s thresholds of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen give a complete picture of the occupied and unoccupied partial density of states of the nucleobases. A combination of both Hartree-Fock and density functional theory calculations are used in the comparison to experimental results. Most experimental results agree well with our theoretical calculations for the XAS and XES of all bases. All spectral features are assigned. A comparison of the experimental highest occupied molecular orbital-lowest unoccupied molecular orbital energy gaps is made to the diverse values predicted in the literature.
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