Satellite-Dominated Sulfur L 2,3 X-ray Emission of Alkaline Earth Metal Sulfides.
Lothar WeinhardtDirk HauschildOliver FuchsRalph SteiningerNan JiangMonika BlumJonathan D DenlingerWanli YangEberhard UmbachClemens HeskePublished in: ACS omega (2023)
The sulfur L 2,3 X-ray emission spectra of the alkaline earth metal sulfides BeS, MgS, CaS, SrS, and BaS are investigated and compared with spectra calculations based on density functional theory. Very distinct spectral shapes are found for the different compounds. With decreasing electronegativity of the cation, that is, increasing ionic bonding character, the upper valence band width and its relative spectral intensity decrease. These general trends are qualitatively reproduced by the spectra calculations, which give quite an accurate description of the spectral shapes in the upper valence band region. On the low energy side of the sulfur 3s → 2p transition dominating the spectra, we find strong satellites caused by "semi-Auger" decays involving configuration interaction. These satellites, previously believed to be energetically forbidden for sulfur L 2,3 emission and only observed for the L 2,3 emission of Cl to Cr, increase in intensity as the bonding character becomes more ionic and dominate the spectra for SrS and BaS. The intensities, energies, and widths of the satellites vary strongly between the investigated compounds, giving a very specific spectral fingerprint that can be used for speciation analysis.