Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5454385 | Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2016 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
Uranium dioxide thin films have been successfully grown on LSAT (Al10La3O51Sr14Ta7) substrates by reactive magnetron sputtering. Irradiation by 92 MeV 129Xe23+ ions to simulate fission damage that occurs within nuclear fuels caused microstructural and crystallographic changes. Initially flat and continuous thin films were produced by magnetron sputtering with a root mean square roughness of 0.35 nm determined by AFM. After irradiation, this roughness increased to 60-70 nm, with the films developing discrete microstructural features: small grains (â¼3 μm), along with larger circular (up to 40 μm) and linear formations with non-uniform composition according to the SEM, AFM and EDX results. The irradiation caused significant restructuring of the UO2 films that was manifested in significant film-substrate mixing, observed through EDX analysis. Diffusion of Al from the substrate into the film in unirradiated samples was also observed.
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Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
A.J. Popel, V.A. Lebedev, P.G. Martin, A.A. Shiryaev, G.I. Lampronti, R. Springell, S.N. Kalmykov, T.B. Scott, I. Monnet, C. Grygiel, I. Farnan,