RESUMEN
We recently developed [A. Ferté, et al., J. Phys. Chem. Lett., 2020, 11, 4359] a method to compute single site double core hole (ssDCH or K-2) spectra. We refer to that method as NOTA+CIPSI. In the present paper this method is applied to the O K-2 spectrum of the CO2 molecule, and we use this as an example to discuss in detail its convergence properties. Using this approach, theoretical spectra in excellent agreement with the experimental one are obtained. Thanks to a thorough interpretation of the shake-up states responsible for the main satellite peaks and through comparison with the O K-2 spectrum of CO, we can highlight the clear signature of the two non-equivalent carbon oxygen bonds in the oxygen ssDCH CO2 dication.
RESUMEN
Double core hole spectroscopy is an ideal framework for investigating photoionization shake-up satellites. Their important intensity in a single site double core hole (ssDCH) spectrum allows the exploration of the subtle mix of relaxation and correlation effects associated with the inherent multielectronic character of the shake-up process. We present a high-accuracy computation method for single photon double core-shell photoelectron spectra that combines a selected configuration interaction procedure with the use of non-orthogonal molecular orbitals to obtain unbiased binding energy and intensity. This strategy leads to the oxygen ssDCH spectrum of the CO molecule that is in excellent agreement with the experimental result. Through a combined wave function and density analysis, we highlight that the most intense shake-up satellites are characterized by an electronic reorganization that opposes the core hole-induced relaxation.