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TEM Study of Short-Range-Order in Zirconolite Induced by High Temperature Ion Irradiation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
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Zirconolite (CaZrTi207) is an important phase proposed for high level nuclear waste immobilization. Zirconolite was irradiated by 1 MeV Kr+ at various temperatures. At room temperature, zirconolite became amorphous after a dose of 7x1014 ions/cm2.1 Amorphization dose increased with temperature due to thermal annealing. The critical temperature, above which amorphization does not occur, was estimated to be 654 K. During the low temperature irradiation (<654 K), concurrent with amorphization, zirconolite transformed from a monoclinic structure to the cubic pyrochlore structure and then to the fluorite substructure. The structural change is due to the disordering between cations and between oxygen and oxygen vacancies.
After an irradiation at 673 K to a dose of 3.6x1015 ions/cm, the zirconolite samples remained crystalline. The diffraction pattern consists of strong maxima from the fluorite structure and diffuse maxima surrounding the Bragg positions of the pyrochlore superlattice (FIG. 1). Diffuse scattering patterns have been reported in other phases, and were generally attributed to the shortrange- order (SRO) domains.
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- Irradiation and Implantation Effects in Materials
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- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America