4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

Etch-pit morphology of tracks caused by swift heavy ions in natural dark mica

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.nimb.2004.01.009

Keywords

artificial ion tracks; alpha-recoil track dating; scanning force microscopy; natural radiation damage

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Ion tracks in solids can be visualized by appropriate etching. During the etching procedure, size and depth of the etch pits grow linearly with time. Their shape is mainly controlled by the crystal structure. For example, in muscovite, ion tracks have a rhombic cross-section after HF etching, whereas in polycarbonate etch pits are circular after NaOH etching. Natural phlogopite (dark mica) may contain fission tracks and alpha-recoil tracks (ART) as latent radiation damage. HF can be used to make them visible by optical, scanning electron and scanning force microscopy (SEM, SFM). ART, generated by collisions of the recoil nuclei with the lattice atoms, provide etch pits, which are triangular at the surface, whereas the fission tracks, created via electronic energy loss (dE/dx), have hexagonal etch pits. After ion irradiation of phlogopite in the electronic dE/dx regime, the etch pits are triangular below 5.7 keV/nm and hexagonal above 8.8 keV/nm in shape. To examine more precisely the shape transition and its relation to the radiation damage, phlogopite from the Kerguelen Islands (French territory, Indian Ocean) was first annealed (500 degreesC, 3.5 h) and subsequently irradiated at GSI with Ni-58 (kinetic energy similar to81 MeV), dE/dx amounting to 10.4 keV/nm (according to SRIM 2000). Using polyethylene! terephthalate (PET) foils of seven different thicknesses as a degrader, dE/dx in the sample could be reduced stepwise to 2.4 keV/nm. The irradiated samples were etched with 4% HF at room temperature and afterwards imaged with SEM and SFM. It was observed that the triangles relate to the octahedral sites (represented by OH, 0, Fe, Mg and other ions) and the hexagons to the SiO4-tetahedral positions in the tetrahedral sheet. We interpret our findings as evidence that the dE/dx-dependent etch-pit morphologies are controlled by the lattice structure. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available