C. Dufour et al., Experimental evidence of the irradiation temperature effect in bismuth under swift heavy-ion irradiation, EUROPH LETT, 45(5), 1999, pp. 585-590
Bismuth has been irradiated with swift xenon and tantalum ions at several t
emperatures between 20 K and 300 K, in the electronic stopping power regime
. From in situ electrical resistivity measurements as a function of the ion
fluence, damage efficiency and track radii have been deduced. It is shown
in this paper that the damage efficiency and the track radii are all the hi
gher as the irradiation temperature is high. This fact is in agreement with
the thermal spike model: the energy deposited by a given ion on the target
electrons is independent of the target temperature, but the energy necessa
ry to melt a material depends on its initial temperature especially in the
case of low melting point materials. The thermal spike is shown to be able
to describe quantitatively the evolution of the track radii as a function o
f the irradiation temperature. The values used for the electronic thermal d
iffusivity (38 cm(2) s(-1) at 300 K) and for the electron-phonon coupling (
1.3.10(11) W cm(-3) s(-1)) are in agreement with the semi-metallic characte
ristic of bismuth, i.e. its small number of electrons participating in the
energy transport.