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Mössbauer spectroscopy References: J.P. Adloff, R. Guillaumont: Fundamentals of Radiochemistry, CRC Press, Boca Raton, 1993
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Mössbauer effect: recoil free nuclear resonance absorption of radiation Line width (W) results from: natural width of E 2 level + Doppler widening due to temp. W ~10 -6 eV (natural width) + 10 -3 eV (temp. effect) → 10 -3 eV (overall effect) R~100 eV in nuclear processes, R’~10 -7 eV in optical processes
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Realization of nuclear resonance: Source and absorber contain the same element (same nuclear energy levels). Reduction of R by embedding the isotope in a solid crystal matrix, cooling the sample (reduced oscillation of the atoms, reduced R↔reduced W). The missing part of „2R” energy can be provided by moving the source due to Doppler effect
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Mössbauer spectrometer: S A v D S source emitting weak radiation A absorber moving with velocity v (mm/s) D radiation detector The linear motion represents about 10 -8 eV. The resulting Es energy is derived from the E source energy: Es= E (1±v/c) Source or absorber is moved. (Emission and absorption spectroscopy, respectively.) Source or absorber should be in ground state, non-magnetic, symmetric environment precluding hyperfine splitting of nuclear level.
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The Mössbauer spectrum Resonance absorption spectrum : radiation intensity vs. velocity (Energy)
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Chemical information in Mössbauer spectra Spectra reveal splittings of nuclear levels, determined by the electronic environment. Isomer shift: position of the centroid of the line, oxidation state, covalency of the bondings Quadrupole splitting: multiplets asymetry in the electronic environment, chemical spin state, intensity of ligand field Magnetic splitting: multiplet due to magnetic field
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Mössbauer active atoms 75 transitions in isotopes of 44 elements Radionuclide: MBq activity alpha, beta, EC or IT T1/2: hours-hundreds of years Conditions to be fulfilled: - E <100 keV, - emitter should be bound in a lattice - mean life-time of excited level: 1 ns-100 ns - solid, cooled absorber (liquid N 2 ), m>100mg E.g.: 57 Co(EC) 57 Fe: 14,4 keV 241 Am(alpha) 237 Np: 60 keV Tc, Th, Pa, U, Np, Pu, Am
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Application examples Analysis of steels: oxidation state of iron (+2 or +3) chemical form (oxide, sulfate…) magnetic properties Analysis of iron oxide layers magnetite, hematite Recoil processes in condensed material Oxidation states of Np, Am compounds
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Other nuclear related methods providing information on chemical environment Positron annihilation spectrometry Muon spectrometry Nuclear magnetic resonance Electron spectroscopies: photoelectron spectroscopy conversion electron spectroscopy Auger electron spectroscopy
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