Tailored Microstructure and Properties in UO{sub 2}
Journal Article
·
· Transactions of the American Nuclear Society
OSTI ID:22992163
- Department of Mechanical, Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy NY 12180 (United States)
Advanced fuels with enhanced safety margin and accident tolerance are of vital importance for safe operation of current light water reactor fleet and the development of future reactor systems. The current UO{sub 2} fuel for LWRs has low thermal conductivity, which will be further reduced upon burn-up. The intrinsically low thermal transfer efficiency of the oxide fuels results in a large temperature gradient within the fuel pellet and high center-line temperature. Thermal swelling of the pellets and fission product accommodation and retention limit the lifetime of UO{sub 2} fuel in the reactor, presenting the great challenges for extending burn-up, effective utilization of nuclear resources and minimization of nuclear waste accumulation. Critical needs also exist in developing accident tolerant fuels that can tolerate loss of coolant accident or improve fuel performance under regular operation or beyond design scenario. Key properties of advanced fuels include high thermal conductivity, oxidation resistance, high temperature mechanical properties, fission gas retention capability and thus improved accident tolerance. The US Nuclear Energy Advanced Modeling and Simulation (NEAMS) program is developing science-based next generation fuel performance modeling capability as part its Fuel Product Line in order to facilitate the predictive capability of nuclear fuel performance and assist the design and analysis of reactor systems. Critical experimental data are needed to validate MARMOT models, particularly on effective thermal transport, fracture mechanisms, grain growth kinetics and fission gas behavior. The fabrication of sintered fuel pellets with well-controlled microstructure is prerequisite to establish the correlation of the microstructure features and fuel behavior in order to develop high fidelity fuel performance models. In this talk, recent advancements on developing advanced UO{sub 2} fuels and properties improvement are overviewed with the emphasis on different accident tolerant fuel (ATF) concepts and tailoring microstructures for MARMOT validation. Current efforts on ATFs include composite fuels and high-density fuels to improve thermal-mechanical properties and fission gas retention capabilities. Different composite UO{sub 2} fuels are fabricated with heterogeneous phases as sintering additives for microstructure and property control, and the potential application of the composites as advanced fuels with enhanced accident tolerance will be discussed. In addition, recent progresses of using field-assisted sintering technologies, specifically spark plasma sintering (SPS), in tailoring and engineering fuel matrix as the target systems for validating MARMOT physics models will be highlighted. Particularly, monolithic UO{sub 2} with tailored microstructure including grain size across multiple length scales from nano-metered to micron-sizes, porosity and stoichiometry can be sintered. The impacts of tailored microstructure on thermal-mechanical properties and grain growth kinetics are discussed within the context of the MARMOT modeling. (authors)
- OSTI ID:
- 22992163
- Journal Information:
- Transactions of the American Nuclear Society, Journal Name: Transactions of the American Nuclear Society Journal Issue: 1 Vol. 114; ISSN 0003-018X
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
11 NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE AND FUEL MATERIALS
36 MATERIALS SCIENCE
ACCIDENT-TOLERANT NUCLEAR FUELS
BURNUP
DESIGN
FISSION PRODUCTS
FUEL PELLETS
GRAIN GROWTH
GRAIN SIZE
LOSS OF COOLANT
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
OXIDATION
RADIOACTIVE WASTES
SIMULATION
SINTERING
SWELLING
THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY
URANIUM DIOXIDE
WATER COOLED REACTORS
WATER MODERATED REACTORS
36 MATERIALS SCIENCE
ACCIDENT-TOLERANT NUCLEAR FUELS
BURNUP
DESIGN
FISSION PRODUCTS
FUEL PELLETS
GRAIN GROWTH
GRAIN SIZE
LOSS OF COOLANT
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
OXIDATION
RADIOACTIVE WASTES
SIMULATION
SINTERING
SWELLING
THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY
URANIUM DIOXIDE
WATER COOLED REACTORS
WATER MODERATED REACTORS