Both naturally occurring isotopes of europium, europium-151 (47.8%) and europium-153 (52.18%), can be used for Mössbauer spectroscopy. Since the review of europium-151 Mössbauer spectroscopy by Barton and Greenwood1 in 1973, many papers have appeared on the subject. Hence, after iron-57 and tin-119, europium-151 is one of the most studied Mössbauer isotopes. Europium-153 is much less well studied, with only a few reports on this nucleus having appeared since 1973, and this chapter will present only limited details about work with europium-153.
CITATION STYLE
Grandjean, F., & Long, G. J. (1989). Mössbauer Spectroscopy of Europium-Containing Compounds. In Mössbauer Spectroscopy Applied to Inorganic Chemistry (pp. 513–597). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-2289-2_11
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