Abstract:
Energy distributions and properties of the occupied and empty electronic states for a planar complex of nickel porphyrin NiP are studied by X-ray photoemission and absorption spectroscopy techniques. As a result of the analysis of the experimental spectra of valence photoemission, the nature and energy positions of the highest occupied electronic states were determined: the highest occupied state is formed mostly by atomic states of the porphine ligand; the following two states are associated with 3$d$ states of the nickel atom. It was found that the lowest empty state is specific and is described by the $\sigma$-type $b_{1g}$ MO formed by empty Ni3$d_{x^2-y^2}$-states and occupied 2$p$-states of lone electron pairs of nitrogen atoms. This specific nature of the lowest empty state is a consequence of the donor–acceptor chemical bond in NiP.