Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7962921 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2018 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Tin and antimony are being investigated as potential additives to metallic fuel to control fuel-cladding chemical interaction (FCCI). A primary cause of FCCI is lanthanide fission products moving to the fuel periphery and interacting with the cladding. This interaction can lead to wastage of the cladding and, given enough time or burn-up, eventually to a cladding breach. The current study involves a microstructural characterization of as-cast and annealed U-10Zr-2Sn-2Sb and U-10Zr-2Sn-2Sb-4Ln, where Ln = 53Nd-25Ce-16Pr-6La, all in wt %, as alloys which could prevent FCCI. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis and X-ray powder diffraction indicates the additive-Zr compound in U-10Zr-2Sn-2Sb is Zr5(Sn,Sb)3, while the additive-Ln compound being formed in U-10Zr-2Sn-2Sb-4Ln is Ln5(Sn,Sb)4, with significantly more Sb than Sn (37 at. % versus 6 at. %, respectively). The bulk of the Sn, with a small amount of Sb, remained as Zr5(Sn,Sb)3 precipitates. The potential benefits of a mixed additive system, along with relative stabilities of the intermetallic compounds, are discussed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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