The Mossbauer Effect in Surface Studies Fe57 on W and on Ag

The Mossbauer Effect in Surface Studies Fe57 on W and on Ag
Author: J. W. Burton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 29
Release: 1966
Genre:
ISBN:

The Mossbauer effect at crystal surfaces is discussed. Fe57 on the surface of W and Ag has been measured under ultra-high vacuum. The W experiment yielded Debye temperatures of 406 plus or minus 12, 354 plus or minus 30, and 255 plus or minus 30K in the bulk, along the surface normal, and parallel to the surface, respectively. In Ag the bulk Debye temperature was 253 plus or minus 12K while the surface value was 380 plus or minus 30K and showed no angular dependence. Quadrupole splitting in both experiments indicated surface field gradients of about ( -3 x 10 to the 16th power Volts/cm2). (Author).

The Moessbauer Effect in Surface Studies. Fe57 on Ag

The Moessbauer Effect in Surface Studies. Fe57 on Ag
Author: Robert Paul Godwin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 92
Release: 1966
Genre:
ISBN:

The Mossbauer effect for atoms located at crystal surfaces is discussed. We show that the Einstein model is valid for describing qualitatively the mean square displacement of lattice atoms. The mean square displacement (Mossbauer recoilless fraction) and mean square velocity (Mossbauer second-order Doppler shift) of atoms in one and three-dimensional crystals with free surfaces are treated in a many-body approach. The simple models indicate that at high temperatures surface atom mean square displacements are on the order of twice bulk atom mean square displacements (or equivalently that surface atom Debye temperatures are about 1/square root of 2 times the corresponding bulk values) and that surface effects penetrate only a few atomic spacings into a crystal. A possible temperature dependence of the Mossbauer isomer shift due to anharmonic binding forces at surfaces is pointed out. The experimental difficulties faced in a surface Mossbauer study performed under ultrahigh vacuum conditions and the apparatus used in an attempt to overcome them are described. Mossbauer spectra of Fe(57) on LiF, in Ag, and on Ag have been obtained in the temperature range 100 to 400 K. (Author).

Characterization of Solid Surfaces

Characterization of Solid Surfaces
Author: Philip F. Kane
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 675
Release: 2013-11-27
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1461344905

Until comparatively recently, trace analysis techniques were in general directed toward the determination of impurities in bulk materials. Methods were developed for very high relative sensitivity, and the values determined were average values. Sampling procedures were devised which eliminated the so-called sampling error. However, in the last decade or so, a number of developments have shown that, for many purposes, the distribution of defects within a material can confer important new properties on the material. Perhaps the most striking example of this is given by semiconductors; a whole new industry has emerged in barely twenty years based entirely on the controlled distribu tion of defects within what a few years before would have been regarded as a pure, homogeneous crystal. Other examples exist in biochemistry, metallurgy, polyiners and, of course, catalysis. In addition to this of the importance of distribution, there has also been a recognition growing awareness that physical defects are as important as chemical defects. (We are, of course, using the word defect to imply some dis continuity in the material, and not in any derogatory sense. ) This broadening of the field of interest led the Materials Advisory Board( I} to recommend a new definition for the discipline, "Materials Character ization," to encompass this wider concept of the determination of the structure and composition of materials. In characterizing a material, perhaps the most important special area of interest is the surface.

Surface Studies Using the Mossbauer Effect

Surface Studies Using the Mossbauer Effect
Author: J. W. Burton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 28
Release: 1965
Genre:
ISBN:

The mossbauer effect, because of its sensitivity to strength and angular distribution of binding, to magnetic and electric fields, and to the density of s electrons at the nucleus, is used to study crystal surfaces. The theory involved is sketched, the experimental approach is reviewed, and experimental results are discussed.

Mössbauer Effect Methodology

Mössbauer Effect Methodology
Author: Irwin J. Gruverman
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2013-04-17
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1468431560

This is the fifth volume of a series which provides acontinuing forum for publication of developments in Mossbauer effect methodology and of spectroscopy and its applications. Mossbauer Effect Methodology, Volume 5, records the proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Mossbauer Effect Methodology. The sym posium was sponsored by the New England Nuclear Corporation and was centered on the themes of spectroscopy, new applications, and methodology. The symposium was held in the Mercury Ballroom of the New York Hilton hotel on February 2, 1969. Dr. P. A. Flinn of Carnegie Mellon Institute was chairman of the afternoon and evening sessions. About three hundred participants attended, and this degree of interest leads us to anticipate a sixth symposium early in 1970. Elron Electronic Industries and Reuter-Stokes Electronic Components Company demonstrated lines of equipment for Mossbauer investigators. The evident high quality of the commercial instrumenta tion available is a tribute to the growth of Mossbauer technology and to the manufacturers.