Application of 57Fe emission Mössbauer spectroscopy to the investigation of the physico-chemical consequences of the double radioactive decay 57Ni→57Co→57Fe in the solid state
Abstract
57 Fe emission Mössbauer spectroscopy is shown to be a useful technique for investigating the cumulative recoil and Auger after-effects associated with the double electron capture decay, 57Ni→57Co→57Fe, in the solid state. Experimental results collected in several types of nickel-containing matrices are surveyed: conducting materials (Ni metal), ionic compounds with monoatomic ligands [potassium trifluoronickelate(II)] and coordination compounds with polyatomic ligands (carboxylates). The consequences produced at a molecular level by the two successive decays in 57Ni-labelled nickel compounds can be analysed provided that a strict methodological approach is followed, which compares with the results obtained on the same compounds doped with 57Fe or 57Co. In line with the energetics of the 57Ni radioactive filiation, recoil of nucleogenic 57Co atoms is systematically observed in 57Ni-labelled samples when the decay into 57Co and the subsequent Mössbauer analysis were achieved at low temperatures (<90 K). A pronounced matrix influence related to the stabilization of nucleogenic Fen+ species in a nickel-based host lattice is described. The complexity of the emission Mössbauer spectra obtained in nickel(II) carboxylates is shown to reveal cumulative recoil, electronic and self-radiolytic effects. The influence of the ligands concerned is found to be in line with a ‘double autoradiolysis model’ taking into account the cumulative effects of the two radioactive decays.