Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5454298 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2017 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
This report details the continued investigation of process variables involved in converting sol-gel-derived, urania-carbon microspheres to â¼820-μm-dia. UC1-xNx fuel kernels in flow-through, vertical Mo and W crucibles at temperatures up to 2123 K. Experiments included calcining of air-dried UO3-H2O-C microspheres in Ar and H2-containing gases, conversion of the resulting UO2-C kernels to dense UO2:2UC in the same gases and vacuum, and its conversion in N2 to UC1-xNx (x = â¼0.85). The thermodynamics of the relevant reactions were applied extensively to interpret and control the process variables. Producing the precursor UO2:2UC kernel of â¼96% theoretical density was required, but its subsequent conversion to UC1-xNx at 2123 K was not accompanied by sintering and resulted in â¼83-86% of theoretical density. Increasing the UC1-xNx kernel nitride component to â¼0.98 in flowing N2-H2 mixtures to evolve HCN was shown to be quantitatively consistent with present and past experiments and the only useful application of H2 in the entire process.
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Authors
T.B. Lindemer, C.M. Silva, J.J. Henry, J.W. McMurray, S.L. Voit, J.L. Collins, R.D. Hunt,