Abstract :
In spite of previous extensive studies, the helium behavior in metals still remains an issue in microelectronics as well as in
nuclear technology. A gold–silver solid solution (Au60Ag40: synthetic gold-rich electrum) was chosen as a relevant model to
study helium irradiation of heavy metals. After helium-3 ion implantation at an energy ranging from 4.2 to 5.6 MeV, nuclear
reaction analysis (NRA) based on the 3He(d,p)4He reaction, was performed in order to study the thermal diffusion of helium
atoms. At room temperature, NRA data reveal that a single Gaussian can fit the He-distribution, which remains unchanged after
annealing at temperatures below 0.45 of the melting point. Slow positron implantation spectroscopy, used to monitor the fluence
dependence of induced defects unveils a positron saturation trapping, which occurs for He contents of the order of 50–100 appm,
whereas concentrations larger than 500 appm seem to favor an increase in the S-parameter of Doppler broadening. Moreover, at
high temperature, NRA results clearly show that helium long range diffusion occurs, though, without following a simple Fick
law.
Keywords :
Gold , helium , Silver , NRA , Ion-implantation , positrons