perturbed angular correlation
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2020 ◽  
Vol 102 (22) ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Marschick ◽  
J. Schell ◽  
B. Stöger ◽  
J. N. Gonçalves ◽  
M. O. Karabasov ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 59 (17) ◽  
pp. 12209-12217
Author(s):  
Elena S. Kurakina ◽  
Valery Radchenko ◽  
Andrey N. Belozub ◽  
Georgi Bonchev ◽  
Gospodin A. Bozhikov ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. 186-196
Author(s):  
Gary S. Collins

Following nuclear decay, a daughter atom in a solid will "stay in place" if the recoil energy is less than the threshold for displacement. At high temperature, it may subsequently undergo long-range diffusion or some other kind of atomic motion. In this paper, motion of 111Cd tracer probe atoms is reconsidered following electron-capture decay of 111In in the series of In3R phases (R= rare-earth). The motion produces nuclear relaxation that was measured using the method of perturbed angular correlation. Previous measurements along the entire series of In3R phases appeared to show a crossover between two diffusional regimes. While relaxation for R= Lu-Tb is consistent with a simple vacancy diffusion mechanism, relaxation for R= Nd-La is not. More recent measurements in Pd3R phases demonstrate that the site-preference of the parent In-probe changes along the series and suggests that the same behavior occurs for daughter Cd-probes. The anomalous motion observed for R= Nd-La is attributed to "lanthanide expansion" occurring towards La end-member phases. For In3La, the Cd-tracer is found to jump away from its original location on the In-sublattice in an extremely short time, of order 0.5 ns at 1000 K and 1.2 ms at room temperature, a residence time too short to be consistent with defect-mediated diffusion. Several scenarios that can explain the relaxation are presented based on the hypothesis that daughter Cd-probes first jump to neighboring interstitial sites and then are either trapped and immobilized, undergo long-range diffusion, or persist in a localized motion in a cage.


Crystals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 611 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliana Schell ◽  
Georg Marschick

We provide an overview of time-differential perturbed angular correlation (TDPAC) measurements of ferroic and multiferroic materials. Here, we explore chalcogenide spinels, lead titanate, lead zirconate, and bismuth ferrite, describing the use of TDPAC experiments to probe the physics of localized defects and the various mechanisms that govern electronic and magnetic interactions, the coupling of the associated degrees of freedom, and the structural, charge, and orbital correlations for these materials.


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