Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8948470 | Ceramics International | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Uranium carbide (UC) ceramic microspheres filled into a cladding are a potential nuclear fuel format for nuclear reactors. Uniform sized ceramic UC microspheres with a diameter of 675â¯Â±â¯10â¯Âµm were successfully prepared by an improved microwave-assisted rapid internal gelation process combined with carbothermic reduction. First of all, the nanoparticle carbon was dispersed into the HMUR stock solution, and the C-UO3·2H2O gelled microspheres were prepared using an improved microwave-assisted internal gelation process without cooling the initial stock solutions. Next, the gelled microspheres were subjected to a carbothermic reduction process to obtain ceramic UC microspheres. TG and XRD investigations indicated that the C-UO3·2H2O microspheres were firstly reduced into UO2 at a temperature of 700â¯Â°C, and were further converted into UC at 1500â¯Â°C in argon atmosphere. Crack-free ceramic UC microspheres with a smooth and metallic shiny surface were obtained at a sintering temperature of 1500â¯Â°C for 5â¯h with an initial C/U molar ratio of 3.5.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Wei Tian, Hangxu Guo, Desheng Chen, M.A. Pouchon, Alina Horwege, Xiaojie Yin, Qinggang Huang, Jieru Wang, Shiwei Cao, Denglei Chen, Jing Bai, Cunmin Tan, Fangli Fan, Xiaolei Wu, Tielong Shen, Zhi Qin,