4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Nuclear tracks in solids: registration physics and the compound spike

Journal

RADIATION MEASUREMENTS
Volume 36, Issue 1-6, Pages 13-34

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S1350-4487(03)00094-5

Keywords

latent tracks; spikes; clusters; radiation damage; thresholds; geothermometry

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Observations of GeV heavy ion and MeV cluster-ion tracks in crystalline solids give us new insight into registration physics. Thermal and ion explosion spikes no longer compete; a 'compound spike' accounts for both. Ion explosion dominates for surface tracks (electronic sputtering). And there can also be transient plasma stopping in the bulk. For Clusters there are 'vicinage effects'-both electronic and nuclear-which can influence track dimensions and structure. Displacement cascades in large energetic clusters may lead to projectile fission and coherent flow into sub-tracks. The absence of tracks in certain targets, and their size/structure in others, leads to a model of projectile assisted prompt anneal (PAPA) in similar to 10(-11) s, either partial or complete, often by swift epitaxy, on elemental lattices (e.g. silicon) or on compound sublattices (e.g. fluorite). Phase transformations are important, but simple target amorphization is rare-the exception, not the rule. For many targets the thermal spike (macroscopic) fails, since 'point' defects (atomistic) characteristic of the target, their motion, and the electronic band structure, determine latent track detail. Circumstances in which the Bragg Rule of Additivity fails completely are revealed, and the kinetic threshold for constructive phase transitions in tracks described. This same track physics applies generally also to geothermometry-the opposite time extremurn ( similar to 10(-11) s)-where annealing is due to defect assisted delayed anneal (DADA). Differences between etching rates of induced and spontaneous fission tracks can be explained. The geothermobarometric Wendt/Vidal effect (2002)-combined pressure, temperature and stress (with time) influences on fission track annealing (in e.g. apatite)-is briefly discussed. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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