2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.vacuum.2009.02.010
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Ion bombardment of Poly-Allyl-Diglycol-Carbonate (CR-39)

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Cited by 64 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, the values of the indirect band gap are found to be lower than the corresponding value of the direct band gap. Similar studies have been also reported in other materials [40,43,[47][48][49].…”
Section: Uv Visible Spectroscopysupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Furthermore, the values of the indirect band gap are found to be lower than the corresponding value of the direct band gap. Similar studies have been also reported in other materials [40,43,[47][48][49].…”
Section: Uv Visible Spectroscopysupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This may be due to superimposition of vibrational and rotational levels on top of the electronic levels due to irradiation. The reason of broadening of absorption edge is the formation of extended system of conjugated bonds i.e., the formation of defects after irradiation [46][47][48]. At higher fluences, the latent damage tracks get overlapped which leads to polymer degradation to higher level [25].…”
Section: Uv-visible Spectroscopymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When the incident ion beam transfers its energy to the host material, C-H bonds are broken and hydrogen molecules are ejected. As a result, unsaturated bonds, containing carbonenriched domains, are formed [39].…”
Section: Energy Band Gapmentioning
confidence: 99%