 Quote by ApeXaviour
Thanks... initially that sounded great (get software to do it for me) so I took your advice. However, now it seems like it'd be quite a bit of overkill and a time-sink. I borrowed a copy of Spartan there and had a good play with it. It doesn't really appear designed for constructing bulk crystal structures, rather individual molecules (unlike for example VESTA). Nor could I find anything in the user guide that hinted at being able to create even a basic box and line MO energy-level diagram... it seems much more geared towards DFT and the like.
I think that would do me... I really just need to be able to draw or produce simple diagrams like this for TiO2: http://imgur.com/CfTfg
I was just wondering if you knew of any literature that guided one through those rules of thumb to generate such diagrams? (or if you knew more basic software that did a rough job of it?).
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Ok, so it sounds like you actually want a band-structure diagram .. there are fewer software packages for calculating those .. at least *I* know of fewer packages. I also am not an expert in solid-state chemistry, which is really what you need to answer your question. You might consider cross-posting this to the Solid-state physics forum, or ask a moderator to move it for you. There are likely to be folks there who can help you with this in more detail.
Those line-diagrams are typically drawn after the fact as a way of visualizing the results of measurements or calculations, once you know the proper values for the various energy levels ... for a band structure diagram, you would have to know the appropriate energy ranges for the various bands as well. I suppose that you can draw an approximate version of you already know some qualitative information about the relative spacings of the atomic levels and the bands of the material. Do you know that information? I had gotten the impression that you were trying to use the diagram to estimate the properties of the material, so perhaps I misunderstood what you were asking.
Have you tried looking up band-structure diagrams in a solid-state physics or materials science text? That might be of more help than a chemistry text, which will generally restrict the presentation to molecular systems.