To reduce the polluted areas caused by the migration of radioactive or toxic matter, a clear understanding of soil matrix stability, especially the lattice, is essential under irradiation conditions like those of β-ray irradiation. In reality, the matrix of soil or clay is silicate, with talc being one of the most simple species with a similar structure to that matter, exhibiting "2 : 1" stacking and a complete crystal. Therefore, in this work, it was irradiated by an electron beam in air with dose up to 1000 kGy. Then, variations in lattice and the intrinsic microstructural transformation process, especially in terms of defect formation and transformation, were explored. The main results show that irradiation led to talc lattice plane shrinkage and amorphization. Shrinkage and amorphization levels in the -axis were more serious than those in the -axis. For a 1000 kGy-irradiated sample, the shrinkage level of the (002) lattice plane was close to 2% near 0.2 Å and that of (020) was close to 1.3% near 0.06 Å. Variation in the (002) lattice plane was more obvious than that of (020). The main mechanisms involve the cleavage of tetrahedral Si-O and linkage of tetrahedra and octahedra. Tetrahedral Si-O cleavage was visible, leading to serious amorphization. Nevertheless, lattice plane shrinkage, especially in the -axis, was mainly caused by linkage cleavage in this direction. In addition to linkage cleavage, dehydroxylation and HO volatilization occurred, coupled with HO radiolysis. Nevertheless, those factors are secondary to lattice variation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9034090PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra04012jDOI Listing

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