Materials & Design (Mar 2023)

In situ high-temperature 3D imaging of the damage evolution in a SiC nuclear fuel cladding material

  • Guanjie Yuan,
  • J. Paul Forna-Kreutzer,
  • Peng Xu,
  • Sean Gonderman,
  • Christian Deck,
  • Luke Olson,
  • Edward Lahoda,
  • Robert O. Ritchie,
  • Dong Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 227
p. 111784

Abstract

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Silicon carbide (SiC)-based nuclear fission fuel rod cladding has been considered as one of the possible designs for accident tolerant fuels. It is in the form of a SiC fibre reinforced SiC matrix composite tube (SiCf-SiCm) with monolithic SiC outer and/or inner coating layers. This study focuses on the deformation and fracture processes in this material using in situ X-ray micro-computed tomography (XCT) at room temperature (RT) and 1200 °C in an inert gas environment in a C-ring compression loading configuration. Prior to testing, local properties and residual stresses were characterised using nanoindentation and Raman spectroscopy since they can impact the mechanical behaviour of the material. The 3D strain distribution, crack formation and propagation processes including the toughening mechanisms (e.g., crack deflection, micro-cracking, crack bridging and bifurcation) are investigated in the coating and underlying composites at RT and 1200 °C. There is no particular sequence which toughening mechanism occurs first – this is very different from the conventional toughening theory in ceramic-matrix composites under uniaxial tension loading. Indeed, no evidence of fibre pull-out or fibre fracture was observed in this SiCf-SiCm nuclear cladding material in the current C-ring compression configuration. The correlation between local measurements and bulk mechanical behaviour are discussed.

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