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Ewing, R.C.; Wang, L.M.
Univ. of New Mexico, Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Albuquerque, NM (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Energy Research, Washington, DC (United States)1998
Univ. of New Mexico, Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Albuquerque, NM (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Energy Research, Washington, DC (United States)1998
AbstractAbstract
[en] The crystalline-to-amorphous (c-a) phase transition is of fundamental importance. Particle irradiations provide an important, highly controlled means of investigating this phase transformation and the structure of the amorphous state. The interaction of heavy-particles with ceramics is complex because these materials have a wide range of structure types, complex compositions, and because chemical bonding is variable. Radiation damage and annealing can produce diverse results, but most commonly, single crystals become aperiodic or break down into a polycrystalline aggregate. The authors continued the studies of the transition from the periodic-to-aperiodic state in natural materials that have been damaged by α-recoil nuclei in the uranium and thorium decay series and in synthetic, analogous structures. The transition from the periodic to aperiodic state was followed by detailed x-ray diffraction analysis, in-situ irradiation/transmission electron microscopy, high resolution transmission electron microscopy, extended x-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy/x-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy and other spectroscopic techniques. These studies were completed in conjunction with bulk irradiations that can be completed at Los Alamos National Laboratory or Sandia National Laboratories. Principal questions addressed in this research program included: (1) What is the process at the atomic level by which a ceramic material is transformed into a disordered or aperiodic state? (2) What are the controlling effects of structural topology, bond-type, dose rate, and irradiation temperature on the final state of the irradiated material? (3) What is the structure of the damaged material? (4) What are the mechanisms and kinetics for the annealing of interstitial and aggregate defects in these irradiated ceramic materials? (5) What general criteria may be applied to the prediction of amorphization in complex ceramics?
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1998; 20 p; CONTRACT FG03-93ER45498; ALSO AVAILABLE FROM OSTI AS DE98007342; NTIS; US GOVT. PRINTING OFFICE DEP
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Report
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Progress Report
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