Guldar Baubekova , Ruslan Assylbayev , Alise Podelinska , Viktor Seeman , Evgeni Shablonin , Evgeni Vasil'chenko , Aleksandr Lushchik
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Single crystals of MgO have been exposed to 70-MeV argon ions with varying fluence of 4 × 1012-3 × 1014 cm−2. The dependence of radiation-induced optical absorption (RIOA) at 1.7–6.5 eV on irradiation fluence has been analyzed. The EPR signal of the F+ center in ion-irradiated crystal has been detected and via the EPR parameters proved to be the same as in well-studied neutron-irradiated MgO crystals. The precise isothermal annealing of the F+ EPR signal has been performed for the first time in a temperature range of 400–1100 K for both a fast neutron irradiated (2.7 × 1018 cm−2) and Ar-irradiated (3 × 1014 cm−2) MgO crystals. In both cases, the F+ EPR decay starts only above 700 K and ends at 950–1060 K, depending on irradiation type. Using the same stepwise annealing procedure, the changes in RIOA for ion-irradiated samples have also been analyzed and possible reasons for the discrepancy in the thermal behaviour of optical and EPR F+ -absorption have been considered.
期刊介绍:
The journal seeks to publish papers that present advances in the following areas: spontaneous and stimulated luminescence (including scintillating materials, thermoluminescence, and optically stimulated luminescence); electron spin resonance of natural and synthetic materials; the physics, design and performance of radiation measurements (including computational modelling such as electronic transport simulations); the novel basic aspects of radiation measurement in medical physics. Studies of energy-transfer phenomena, track physics and microdosimetry are also of interest to the journal.
Applications relevant to the journal, particularly where they present novel detection techniques, novel analytical approaches or novel materials, include: personal dosimetry (including dosimetric quantities, active/electronic and passive monitoring techniques for photon, neutron and charged-particle exposures); environmental dosimetry (including methodological advances and predictive models related to radon, but generally excluding local survey results of radon where the main aim is to establish the radiation risk to populations); cosmic and high-energy radiation measurements (including dosimetry, space radiation effects, and single event upsets); dosimetry-based archaeological and Quaternary dating; dosimetry-based approaches to thermochronometry; accident and retrospective dosimetry (including activation detectors), and dosimetry and measurements related to medical applications.