ALPHA-DECAY DAMAGE IN TITANITE

被引:1
|
作者
HAWTHORNE, FC
GROAT, LA
RAUDSEPP, M
BALL, NA
KIMATA, M
SPIKE, FD
GABA, R
HALDEN, NM
LUMPKIN, GR
EWING, RC
GREEGOR, RB
LYTLE, FW
ERCIT, TS
ROSSMAN, GR
WICKS, FJ
RAMIK, RA
SHERRIFF, BL
FLEET, ME
MCCAMMON, C
机构
[1] UNIV NEW MEXICO,DEPT GEOL,ALBUQUERQUE,NM 87131
[2] BOEING CO,SEATTLE,WA 98124
[3] NATL MUSEUM NAT SCI,DIV MINERAL SCI,OTTAWA K1A 0M8,ONTARIO,CANADA
[4] CALTECH,DIV GEOL SCI,PASADENA,CA 91125
[5] ROYAL ONTARIO MUSEUM,DEPT MINERAL,TORONTO M5S 2C6,ONTARIO,CANADA
[6] UNIV WESTERN ONTARIO,DEPT GEOL,LONDON N6A 5B7,ONTARIO,CANADA
[7] UNIV BRITISH COLUMBIA,DEPT GEOL SCI,VANCOUVER V6T 2B4,BC,CANADA
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Titanite can incorporate minor amounts of radioactive impurity components (particularly U and Th) that affect the crystal structure by alpha- and beta-decay events; in particular, alpha-decay gives rise to significant knock-on structural damage by causing atomic displacements. We have examined a series of chemically and structurally well-characterized titanite samples by a variety of techniques to follow the progress of the metamictization process at low radiation doses. Ten titanite samples were characterized by electron microprobe analysis, powder X-ray diffraction, and powder infrared (IR) spectroscopy. The X-ray diffraction patterns vary from sharp and well resolved to almost totally degraded, reflecting the various degrees of alpha-decay damage. The powder IR spectra show a similar variation, and the order of increasing pattern degradation is almost the same as that for the X-ray diffraction patterns, indicating that both features reflect the same physical property of the material. However, the annealing behavior is different: powder X-ray diffraction patterns become sharp and well resolved; powder IR spectra sharpen slightly, but do not recover to anywhere near the same extent. Four representative samples were selected for further work. The crystal structures were refined using MoK-alpha X-ray single-crystal diffraction data. The crystals were then annealed at 1090-degrees-C under Ar and the intensity data were again measured. For small degrees of alpha-decay damage, the structure seems to be completely restored on annealing; this is not the case for titanite with the largest amount of alpha-decay damage. Polarized single-crystal IR spectra of undamaged titanite show a single sharp (OH) stretching band at approximately 3490 cm-1 with a little fine structure reflecting local cation disorder around the OH. With increasing alpha-decay damage, the sharpness of the adsorption band decreases and a wide wing appears on the low energy side of the sharp (OH) band. Mossbauer spectroscopy shows only Fe3+ to be present in undamaged titanite; as alpha-decay damage increases, the amount of Fe4+ increases, suggesting that radioactive decay causes reduction as well as atomic displacement. Fe3+ is easily oxidized on heating. The 39Si MAS-NMR peak width is strongly correlated with increasing radiation damage and increasing Fe content, and no signal was observed from the most damaged titanite. With increasing alpha-decay damage, single-crystal electron diffraction patterns develop diffuse halos indicative of a mean atomic spacing of 3.6 angstrom. In bright field, undamaged material shows continuous lattice fringes. Small amounts of damage are characterized by mottled diffraction contrast superimposed on largely continuous lattice fringes. The most damaged titanite shows mottled diffraction contrast with coexisting crystalline and aperiodic domains produced by overlapping alpha-recoil tracks, corresponding to damage on the order of 30-50% of that required to render the structure fully aperiodic. TI XANES spectra show intensification of the principal pre-edge feature (1s - 3d transition) with increasing damage, indicative of increasing local asymmetry around the Ti position. Loss of resolution in the EXAFS spectra also indicates increasing disorder around Ti with increasing damage. There is no sign of any [a]Ti in even the most damaged samples, although it was detected in a glass of titanite composition. The metamictization process begins by the formation of isolated alpha-recoil and alpha-particle tracks. With increasing dose, the alpha-tracks begin to overlap, producing aperiodic domains; in the most damaged titanite examined, there were approximately equal amounts of coexisting crystalline and aperiodic material. At this stage, the crystalline domains still retain their original orientation, except where affected by low-temperature annealing. As undamaged titanite does not (usually) contain significant Fe3+, it seems that the damage process is accompanied by reduction of Fe3+ - Fe1+, which resides in the aperiodic domains. These domains incorporate much more hydrogen (as OH) than is contained in crystalline titanite, presumably a result of postdamage diffusion of H into the structure. All information is consistent with the Ewing model for metamict materials, as aperiodic random network structure; HRTEM images show patterns of random contrast consistent with random network model, with no evidence to support any microcrystalline model of the metamict state. High-temperature annealing only partly restores the structure, the apparent degree of recovery being dependent on the coherence length of the experimental technique used to characterize the material. The degree of recovery is also dependent on the amount and pattern of damage. We suggest that the original structure is recovered when the ratio of surface area to volume for the damaged material is high, and the interface can be exert a strong memory effect on the amorphous material; when large equant aperiodic domains forms; they are annealed to a more defect-free and relatively stable aperiodic network structure.
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页码:370 / 396
页数:27
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