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Main Authors: Nakazawa, Ryotaro, Sato, Haruki, Yoshida, Hiroyuki
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.21246
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author Nakazawa, Ryotaro
Sato, Haruki
Yoshida, Hiroyuki
author_facet Nakazawa, Ryotaro
Sato, Haruki
Yoshida, Hiroyuki
contents Inverse photoelectron spectroscopy (IPES) is a powerful technique for probing the unoccupied electronic states of materials. It can be regarded as the inversion process of photoelectron spectroscopy (PES), which examines the occupied states. Recently developed low-energy inverse photoelectron spectroscopy (LEIPS) can significantly advance the study of unoccupied states, owing to an improved signal-to-noise ratio and minimal sample damage compared to conventional IPES. However, the instrumental resolution remains at 0.2 eV, which is one order of magnitude lower than that of PES. Spectral broadening caused by the low instrumental resolution often results in overlapping peaks. Peak separation is therefore crucial in the analysis of LEIPS spectra. In this study, we compared three peak separation methods: second derivative, curve fitting, and deconvolution. These methods were applied to modeled and experimental LEIPS spectra of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital-derived band of pentacene, which consists of two splitting peaks due to the two inequivalent molecules in the unit cell. We systematically and quantitatively evaluated the performance of each method in terms of analysis parameters and discussed its robustness to noise as well as its peak separation capability. This work offers a practical framework for peak separation in LEIPS, with extensions to PES and a wide range of spectroscopies.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2509_21246
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Peak separation methods for inverse photoelectron spectra: Comparing second derivative, curve fitting, and deconvolution analyses
Nakazawa, Ryotaro
Sato, Haruki
Yoshida, Hiroyuki
Instrumentation and Detectors
Materials Science
Applied Physics
Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability
Inverse photoelectron spectroscopy (IPES) is a powerful technique for probing the unoccupied electronic states of materials. It can be regarded as the inversion process of photoelectron spectroscopy (PES), which examines the occupied states. Recently developed low-energy inverse photoelectron spectroscopy (LEIPS) can significantly advance the study of unoccupied states, owing to an improved signal-to-noise ratio and minimal sample damage compared to conventional IPES. However, the instrumental resolution remains at 0.2 eV, which is one order of magnitude lower than that of PES. Spectral broadening caused by the low instrumental resolution often results in overlapping peaks. Peak separation is therefore crucial in the analysis of LEIPS spectra. In this study, we compared three peak separation methods: second derivative, curve fitting, and deconvolution. These methods were applied to modeled and experimental LEIPS spectra of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital-derived band of pentacene, which consists of two splitting peaks due to the two inequivalent molecules in the unit cell. We systematically and quantitatively evaluated the performance of each method in terms of analysis parameters and discussed its robustness to noise as well as its peak separation capability. This work offers a practical framework for peak separation in LEIPS, with extensions to PES and a wide range of spectroscopies.
title Peak separation methods for inverse photoelectron spectra: Comparing second derivative, curve fitting, and deconvolution analyses
topic Instrumentation and Detectors
Materials Science
Applied Physics
Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.21246