Synchrotron micro-computed tomography analysis of neutron-irradiated U-Mo fuel
•Multi-modal synchrotron µ-computed tomography (Sr-µCT) of neutron irradiated U-Mo.•Absorption and phase contrast Sr-µCT measured 3D porosity, swelling and composition.•A multilayered pore structure forms parallel to U-Mo/Zr interface at high-burnup.•Large interconnected and oriented pores form ∼5 µ...
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Published in: | Journal of nuclear materials Vol. 597; no. C; p. 155132 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Netherlands
Elsevier B.V
15-08-2024
Elsevier |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Multi-modal synchrotron µ-computed tomography (Sr-µCT) of neutron irradiated U-Mo.•Absorption and phase contrast Sr-µCT measured 3D porosity, swelling and composition.•A multilayered pore structure forms parallel to U-Mo/Zr interface at high-burnup.•Large interconnected and oriented pores form ∼5 µm from the U-Mo/Zr interface, which can lead to delamination.•Average local thickness of the Zr diffusion barrier was reduced by 53 %.
The three-dimensional (3D) microstructure of neutron-irradiated uranium-10 wt.% molybdenum (U-10Mo) fuel with a burn-up of 9.8 × 1021 fissions/cm3 was characterized using a novel, multi-modal synchrotron micro-computed tomography approach combining propagation-based phase-contrast enhanced and absorption contrast techniques. The porosity development, porosity interconnectedness, swelling, composition, local thickness of the zirconium (Zr) diffusion barrier, and the influence of the fuel–cladding interaction on the local composition and pore morphology, were uniquely determined in 3D. Two cuboids were produced using a focused ion beam-scanning electron microscope at the Zr diffusion barrier–fuel interface and in the bulk fuel. The bulk fuel sample swelled by 53.3 [+9.7/−3.1]%, while the fuel near the Zr–fuel interface swelled by 63.3 [+14.7/−7.2]%. The average local thickness of the Zr diffusion barrier decreased by 53 %, compared to the expected pre-irradiated thickness. Four pore morphology regions were identified initiating parallel to the fuel–Zr interaction region: (1) an interaction layer of suppressed porosity, (2) a layer of elongated and interconnected porosity, (3) a transition zone of low porosity, and (4) a layer of unoriented porosity representative of the bulk fuel behavior. The increase in porosity near the diffusion barrier corresponded to a higher U concentration compared to that in the bulk fuel. The interconnected porosity in the fuel near the diffusion barrier was extensive and oriented parallel to the diffusion barrier, while the bulk fuel had more compact and isolated pore networks. The interaction layer, despite having suppressed porosity, was nearly 100 wt.% U. Porosity suppression at the diffusion barrier corresponds to the expected reduction in radiation-driven diffusion of Xe at the interface despite the anticipated increase in fission product nucleation originating from a higher U concentration. The novel 3D insights of the porosity, swelling, and compositional variations characterized herein can improve the fidelity of fuel performance codes for proliferation-resistant fuels for research and test reactors.
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Bibliography: | USDOE Office of Nuclear Energy (NE) |
ISSN: | 0022-3115 1873-4820 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2024.155132 |