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Title: M3MS-19IN0101201 Modeling Intra-granular Fission Gas Bubble Evolution in Uranium Dioxide during Transients

S&T Accomplishment Report ·
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2172/1572396· OSTI ID:1572396

The SciDAC milestone M3MS-19IN0101201 on Modeling Intra-granular Fission Gas Bubble Evolution in Uranium Dioxide during Transients was completed with the development, testing and implementation in the Bison code of an engineering model for intra-granular fission gas bubble evolution that is applicable to transient conditions. The model extends the previous work on modeling bubble evolution during normal operating conditions to include additional complexity that arises during transient situations, in particular, the so-called intra-granular bubble coarsening. This phenomenon refers to the appearance of a second population of coarsened bubbles with diameters of tens to hundreds of nm, which co-exist with nanometric bubbles present also during normal operating conditions and are responsible for a large portion of transient fuel swelling. The developed model considers growth of bubbles along dislocations, associated with the absorption of vacancies available in the dislocation core region, and favored by pipe diffusion of fission gas atoms. The model also utilizes the formulation for the gas atom resolution rate developed in the present SciDAC project through molecular dynamics simulations by other institutions. The present work therefore demonstrates an operational multiscale approach, based on collaboration within the project. The model is validated to an extensive experimental dataset of ramp tested uranium dioxide fuel samples. Additionally, we present new applications of the base model for bubble evolution during normal operating conditions to Bison engineering simulations of Cr2O3-doped fuel rods irradiated in the Halden reactor. Simulation results in terms of integral fission gas release in the fuel rods are compared to the available experimental data, pointing out significant improvements in the engineering predictions compared to application of the empirical model that was available in Bison before the SciDAC developments.

Research Organization:
Idaho National Lab. (INL), Idaho Falls, ID (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Nuclear Energy (NE)
DOE Contract Number:
DE-AC07-05ID14517
OSTI ID:
1572396
Report Number(s):
INL/EXT-19-56019-Rev000
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English