Chemical History with a Nuclear Microprobe

A nuclear microprobe cannot give direct information on the chemical state of an element, but the spatial distribution of elements in a specimen is often determined by the chemical history of the sample. Fuel cells and minerals are examples of complex systems whose elemental distributions are determi...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci.; (United States) 1983-01, Vol.30 (2), p.1224-1227
Hauptverfasser: Maggiore, C. J., Benjamin, T. M., Hyde, P. J., Rogers, P. S. Z., Srinivasan, S., Tesmer, J., Woolum, D. S., Burnett, D. S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A nuclear microprobe cannot give direct information on the chemical state of an element, but the spatial distribution of elements in a specimen is often determined by the chemical history of the sample. Fuel cells and minerals are examples of complex systems whose elemental distributions are determined by past chemical history. The distribution of catalyst in used fuel cell electrodes provides direct information on the chemical stability of dispersed catalysts under operating conditions. We have used spatially resolved Rutherford backscattering to measure the migration of platinum and vanadium from intermetallic catalysts and to determine their suitability for use under the extreme operating conditions found in phosphoric acid fuel cells. Geologic materials are complex, heterogeneous samples with small mineral grains. The trace element distribution within the individual mineral grains and between different mineral phases is sensitive to the details of the mineral formation and history. The spatial resolution and sub-100-ppm sensitivity available with a nuclear microprobe open up several new classes of experiments to the geochemist. Geochemistry and electrochemistry are two areas proving particularly fruitful for application of the nuclear microprobe.
ISSN:0018-9499
1558-1578
DOI:10.1109/TNS.1983.4332494