Abstract.
Swift heavy ions cause material modification along their tracks, changes primarily due to their
very dense electronic excitation. The available data for threshold stopping powers indicate
two main classes of materials. Group I, with threshold stopping powers above about
10 keV nm−1, includes some metals, crystalline semiconductors and a few insulators. Group II,
with lower thresholds, comprises many insulators, amorphous materials and high
Tc
oxide superconductors. We show that the systematic differences in behaviour
result from different coupling of the dense excited electrons, holes and excitons
to atomic (ionic) motions, and the consequent lattice relaxation. The coupling
strength of excitons and charge carriers with the lattice is crucial. For group II, the
mechanism appears to be the self-trapped exciton model of Itoh and Stoneham (1998
Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. B 146 362): the local structural changes occur
roughly when the exciton concentration exceeds the number of lattice sites. In
materials of group I, excitons are not self-trapped and structural change requires
excitation of a substantial fraction of bonding electrons, which induces spontaneous
lattice expansion within a few hundred femtoseconds, as recently observed by
laser-induced time-resolved x-ray diffraction of semiconductors. Our analysis addresses a
number of experimental results, such as track morphology, the efficiency of track
registration and the ratios of the threshold stopping power of various materials.
Print publication: Issue 47 (25 November 2009)Received 16 March 2009, in final form 19 May 2009
Published 5 November 2009
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