June 20, 2020
Journal Article

NSUF Rad-AFM: Nanoscale Material Property Measurements of Radioactive Materials

Abstract

Many advances in our understanding of radiation induced damage mechanisms are due to imaging techniques including transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. However, the effect of these radiation induced defects characterized on the atomic to micrometer scale are often interpreted by changes in bulk material properties measured in the hundreds of microns to cm scale. In order to bridge this gap, additional tools need to be developed for use with radioactive materials. To this end a new Asylum Infinity multimodal atomic force microscope (AFM) has been added to the library of Nuclear Science User Facility (NSUF) instruments for use on radioactive materials. This instrument is housed in the Radiochemical Processing Laboratory (RPL) which is a Department of Energy Hazard Category II Non-Reactor Nuclear Facility operated by Battelle at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. This allows for the handling, sample preparation, and characterization of highly radioactive materials providing a unique capability to understand fundamental properties of nuclear materials and the effects of radiation induced damage.

Revised: October 26, 2020 | Published: June 20, 2020

Citation

Riechers S.L., A.M. Casella, D.J. Senor, and P. Ramuhalli. 2020. NSUF Rad-AFM: Nanoscale Material Property Measurements of Radioactive Materials. Transactions of the American Nuclear Society 122, no. 1:226-229. PNNL-SA-150575. doi:10.13182/T122-32030