Heavy ion implantation combined with grazing incidence X-ray absorption spectroscopy (GIXAS): A new methodology for the characterisation of radiation damage in nuclear ceramics

2009 ◽  
Vol 1193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin C. Stennett ◽  
Neil C. Hyatt ◽  
Daniel P. Reid ◽  
Ewan R. Maddrell ◽  
Nianhua Peng ◽  
...  

AbstractAn understanding of the effect of cumulative radiation damage on the integrity of ceramic wasteforms for plutonium and minor actinide disposition is key to the scientific case for safe disposal. Alpha recoil due to the decay of actinide species leads to the amorphisation of the initially crystalline host matrix, with potentially deleterious consequences such as macroscopic volume swelling and reduced resistance to aqueous dissolution. For the purpose of laboratory studies the effect of radiation damage can be simulated by various accelerated methodologies. The incorporation of short-lived actinide isotopes accurately reproduces damage arising from both alpha-particle and the heavy recoil nucleus, but requires access to specialist facilities. In contrast, fast ion implantation of inactive model ceramics effectively simulates the heavy recoil nucleus, leading to amorphisation of the host crystal lattice over very short time-scales. Although the resulting materials are easily handled, quantitative analysis of the resulting damaged surface layer has proved challenging.In this investigation, we have developed an experimental methodology for characterisation of radiation damaged structures in candidate ceramics for actinide disposition. Our approach involves implantation of bulk ceramic samples with 2 MeV Kr+ ions, to simulate heavy atom recoil; combined with grazing incidence X-ray absorption spectroscopy (GI-XAS) to characterise only the damaged surface layer. Here we present experimental GI-XAS data acquired at the Ti and Zr K-edges of ion implanted zirconolite, as a function of grazing angle, demonstrating that this technique can be successfully applied to characterise only the amorphised surface layer. Comparison of our findings with data from metamict natural analogues provide evidence that heavy ion implantation reproduces the amorphous structure arising from naturally accumulated radiation damage.

1988 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. B. Greegor ◽  
F. W. Lytle ◽  
B. C. Chakoumakos ◽  
G. R. Lumpkin ◽  
J. K. Warner ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTX-ray absorption spectroscopy has been used to investigate the Nb B-site in pyrochlores (A1.2B2O6Y0–1, Fd3m, Z=8) and samarskites (A3B5O16) in both metamict and annealed condition. The XANES and EXAFS measurements indicate significant changes in pyrochlore and smaller changes in samarskite as a result of radiation damage. In the metamict state the Nb site in both pyrochlores and samarskites is similar to Nb in Nb2O5. Short Nb-O (1.65Å) bonds are not disrupted by alpha-decay/recoil-nuclei events as much as longer bonds (2.00Å). This increases the asymmetry and static disorder at the local Nb site while long range order is greatly diminished resulting in considerable distribution in Nb-M distances and bond angles.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 265-278
Author(s):  
陈晨曦阳 CHEN Chen-xi-yang ◽  
金春水 JIN Chun-shui ◽  
王 君 WANG Jun ◽  
谢 耀 XIE Yao

1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 12-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans-Henning Strehblow ◽  
Peter Borthen ◽  
Dirk Lützenkirchen-Hecht

2002 ◽  
Vol 16 (11n12) ◽  
pp. 1721-1730 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. OYANAGI ◽  
A. KOLOBOV ◽  
K. TANAKA

We describe X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) technique to probe the local structure of photo-induced phase. Photo-induced melting of chalcogenide glass (amorphous selenium, a-Se) was investigated. A grazing-incidence fluorescence excitation and a high efficiency X-ray detector were used to detect a small change of coordination number due to photo-induced transformation. It was shown that photo-induced three-fold coordinated sites are formed upon light irradiation forming cross-linking between selenium chains (photo-induced melting). A simple model is proposed which describes the reorientation of selenium chain perpendicular to the polarization direction of excitation light leading to photo-induced dichroism (anisotropy). Potential of XAS as a local probe of nanoscale structural modifications induced by photo-excitation is clearly demonstrated.


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