A study of the effect of natural radiation damage in a zircon crystal using thermoluminescence, fission track etching and X-ray diffraction

Authors

Y.M. AminFollow

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-10-1989

Abstract

The natural radiation damage in zircon caused by the decay of uranium and thorium, present as impurities, is studied, The radiation damage is first gauged by etching the fission tracks. It is found that thermoluminescence (TL) sensitivity (defined as light output per unit test-dose) decreases as the radiation damage increases, suggesting a destruction of TL centres. The spacing d of the (112)-plane is also measured. It is also found that the d-value increases with radiation damage, suggesting the displacement of atoms from their normal lattice sites. However, as the track density increases beyond ∼ 3 × 106 tracks/cm2, the d-value remains at . By annealing the crystal, the displaced atoms are found to return to the original lattice sites, and this is followed by a reduction in d-value as well as the recovery of TL sensitivity. The fission track density also decreases and all the tracks disappear at the annealing temperature of ∼ 800°C.

Keywords

Natural radiation damage, Zircon crystal, Thermoluminescence, Fission track etching, X-ray diffraction

Divisions

PHYSICS

Publication Title

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment

Volume

280

Issue

2-3

Publisher

Elsevier

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS