npj Materials Degradation (Jul 2024)

Transient behavior of oxide fuels with controlled microstructure and Cr2O3 additive

  • Dong Zhao,
  • Heng Ban,
  • Kun Yang,
  • Andre Broussard,
  • Mingxin Li,
  • Edward J. Lahoda,
  • Jie Lian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41529-024-00486-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Microstructure and Cr2O3 doping profoundly impact the thermal-mechanical properties and fracture of oxides fuels. It is a challenge to study the transient behavior of nuclear fuels under loss-of-coolant-event (LOCA). In this study, the crack behavior of UO2 pellets with controlled grain structure and Cr2O3 doping was tested with rapid power ramping (300−900 °C per min) mimicking a prototypical LOCA heating profile. Dense micron-sized UO2 pellets display well-maintained integrity without cracking with the ramping up to 1500 °C at a heating rate of 8 °C per second. Fracture occurs in both pure and Cr2O3-doped dense nano-sized UO2 pellets. The Cr2O3 doped oxide fuel pellet with a larger grain size (~ 22.2 μm) displays the best performance under LOCA testing due to its highest thermal conductivity under high temperature. FEA calculations suggest a temperature gradient across the fuel pellet during transient testing, resulting in residual stress and cracking, which can be correlated with their thermal-mechanical properties.