MRS Meetings and Events

 

CH03.09.06 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Investigation of Extended Defect Evolution in UO2 and ThO2 during Ion Irradiation and Post-Irradiation Annealing

When and Where

Apr 26, 2024
11:00am - 11:15am

Room 441, Level 4, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Marat Khafizov1,Joshua Ferrigno1,Mutaz Alshannaq1,Md Minaruzzaman1,Kaustubh Bawane2,Miaomiao Jin3,Yongfeng Zhang4,Boopathy Kombaiah2,Lingfeng He5,David Hurley2

The Ohio State University1,Idaho National Laboratory2,The Pennsylvania State University3,University of Wisconsin–Madison4,North Carolina State University5

Abstract

Marat Khafizov1,Joshua Ferrigno1,Mutaz Alshannaq1,Md Minaruzzaman1,Kaustubh Bawane2,Miaomiao Jin3,Yongfeng Zhang4,Boopathy Kombaiah2,Lingfeng He5,David Hurley2

The Ohio State University1,Idaho National Laboratory2,The Pennsylvania State University3,University of Wisconsin–Madison4,North Carolina State University5
A rate theory model is applied to analyze the kinetics of extended defect evolution revealed by in-situ transmission electron microscopy characterization during ion irradiation and post-irradiation annealing of uranium dioxide (UO<sub>2</sub>) and thorium dioxide (ThO<sub>2</sub>). The objective is to investigate mechanisms governing dislocation loop growth, unfaulting of Frank loops, and extended defect coarsening. In-situ characterization of krypton ion irradiated ThO<sub>2</sub> reveals that loop growth is limited by the mobility of cation interstitial and loop nucleation is influenced by the mobility of both cation and anion interstitials. Similar conclusion has been obtained from ex-situ characterization of proton irradiated ThO<sub>2</sub>. Additionally, we determined that during in-situ experiments utilizing TEM lamellae it is important to include surface as a sink for both extended and point defects. Observed extended defect coarsening under in-situ annealing is best described by coalescence mechanism resulting from migration of extended defects. This detailed understanding of extended defect evolution allows to improve assessment of physical properties important for nuclear fuel performance analysis. The established procedure also allows to infer point defect concentration, which are more impactful in determining several physical properties, such as thermal conductivity and atomic diffusion.

Keywords

radiation effects | transmission electron microscopy (TEM)

Symposium Organizers

Aurelie Gentils, Universite Paris-Saclay
Mercedes Hernandez Mayoral, CIEMAT
Djamel Kaoumi, North Carolina State University
Ryan Schoell, Sandia National Laboratories

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature