dc.description | Using electron-gamma perturbed angular correlations (PAC) experiments working
side-by-side with gamma-gamma PAC on the same isomeric transitions, besides structural
properties, additional information can be unambiguously obtained by following the
electronic recombination at the atomic shells and the neighbor atoms after the emission of
the conversion electron from the probe nuclei K, L, or M atomic shells. Such experiments
can be envisaged, as well, to clear out gamma-gamma PAC experiments where the probing
state is fed by electron capture decay. There, one K, L, M orbital electron is absorbed by a
proton creating a hole when the atomic number changes from Z to Z-1. This causes a severe
electronic rearrangement of the atomic shells accompanied by the emission of x-rays and
Auger electrons. The atom is left in a highly ionized state and the recombination time ??? fast
or slow ??? depending on the availability and mobility of host electrons determines if a
transient effect is observed within the lifetime of the nuclear state used for PAC. This is the
so called ???after effect???, that if properly understood, can further contribute to learn about
the interaction of the impurity probe with the host, eventually observing ionized states and
determining electron mobility [1]. Illustrating this problematic we present and discuss in
this work the study of TiO2 doping [2] using different PAC isotopes (111In/111Cd, 181Hf/181Ta,
111mCd/111Cd, 117Cd/117In). | |