Evidence for direct impact damage in metamict titanite CaTiSiO₅.

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER(2012)

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Abstract
We have measured the dose dependence of the degree of amorphization of titanite, CaTiSiO5. Titanite is an often metamict mineral which has been considered as a matrix for the encapsulation of radiogenic waste, such as Pu. The amorphous fraction p of geologically irradiated samples (ages between 0.3 and 1 Ga) follows p = D 1 - exp(-BaD) where D is the total dose and the characteristic amorphization mass is B-a = D 2.7(3) x 10(-19) g. Amorphization follows the direct impact mechanism where each alpha-decay leads to a recoil of the radiogenic atoms (mostly Th and U), which then, in turn, displaces some 5000 atoms of the titanite matrix. The amorphization behaviour is almost identical with that of zircon, ZrSiO4, which has a similar molecular mass. While the recrystallization mechanism and elastic behaviour of the two minerals are very different, we do not find significant differences for the amorphization mechanism. Our samples have undergone little reheating over their geological history, since heating over 800 K would lead to rapid recrystallization for which we have found no evidence.
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molecular mass
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