Fabrication and Testing of Doped Uranium Nitride as an Accident Tolerant Fuel Alternative
Doktorsavhandling, 2023

Nuclear energy is a carbon-free energy source often considered less harmful to the environment than fossil fuels. However, accidents have shown that there are some safety concerns regarding nuclear energy that need to be continuously assessed and further improved. Research into new types of improved fuels, also known as Accident Tolerant Fuels, has therefore become of great importance. Different alternative claddings and fuel materials have been explored in recent years. Amongst these fuels, uranium nitride (UN) has very attractive thermomechanical properties. Nonetheless, UN is easily oxidized in thepresence of air or water, making it undesirable for water-cooled reactors.

In this thesis, UN microspheres were manufactured through a sol-gel method, followed by carbothermic reduction and nitridation. The as-produced microspheres were pressed and sintered into pellets using spark plasma sintering. Thorium, chromium, and aluminum were studied as additives to improve the oxidation resistance of UN. It was observed that Th produced a homogeneous solid solution with UN between 0 % and 20 mol-% thorium metal content. Chromium showed that there was a solubility limit in the UN. Depending on the synthesis conditions, the resulting material can be manufactured to either contain a ternary phase (U2CrN3) or metallic chromium. No solubility of aluminum nitride was detected in the UN matrix.

Doping with Th and Cr proved to be efficient in improving the oxidation in air, by increasing the onset oxidation temperatures and decreasing the reaction rates of the pellets. In most cases, the high porosity of the microspheres counterbalanced any protective effect caused by the dopant. Aluminum-containing samples showed the worst oxidation resistance in air due to poor solubility of AlN in the UN. Steam interaction of Cr-doped pellets also showed a delay in the hydrolysis of the UN when Cr is present. The last exposure environment was water, and it was shown that undoped UN pellets can survive at 100 °C and 1 bar pressure with zero mass change. However, at higher temperatures and pressures, 200 °C and 15 bar or 300 °C and 85 bar, pellet disintegration into a UO2 powder was observed. An incomplete reaction was also observed for the Th-doped pellet in the exposure test at 200 °C, indicating that no improvement in the corrosion resistance of UN in water was achieved by doping with thorium. On the other hand, Cr-doped pellets exposed to water at 200 and 300 °C showed partial crumbling. The resulting material was unreacted UN with some UO2 byproduct.

internal gelation

density

Uranium nitride

sintering

microspheres

doping

waterproofing.

ATF

10:an, Kemivägen 4, Göteborg
Opponent: Professor Manuel Pouchon, Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), Switzerland

Författare

Luis Guillermo Gonzalez Fonseca

Chalmers, Kemi och kemiteknik, Energi och material

Preparation of Chromium doped uranium nitride via Sol-Gel and Carbothermic reduction

Journal of Nuclear Materials,; Vol. 574(2023)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Oxidation and hydrolysis of thorium doped uranium nitride fuel for use in LWR

Journal of Nuclear Materials,; Vol. 555(2021)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Application of SPS in the fabrication of UN and (U,Th)N pellets from microspheres

Journal of Nuclear Materials,; Vol. 536(2020)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Gonzalez Fonseca, L.G.; Hedberg, M.; Retegan Vollmer, T.; Effect of Chromium Doping in the Oxidation and Hydrolysis of Uranium Nitride

Gonzalez Fonseca, L.G.; Axhage, E. Hedberg, M.; Retegan Vollmer, T. STUDIES IN DUAL DOPING OF URANIUM NITRIDE FOR USE AS ADVANCE TECHNOLOGY FUELS

Electricity prices have been increasing steadily in the recent years due to the high demand and globalization. Nuclear power has had an important role in producing energy. It is now considered a green energy alternative which can provide stable, constant, and reliable energy. In some countries, such as France, nuclear power plants provide more than 50% of the energy needs while in Sweden this share is about 30%. The risk of nuclear accidents stills remains to be the driver against nuclear power expansion. The experience gained after the last severe nuclear accident in Fukushima led to the improvement of safety measurements to avoid a repetition of such disaster.

The effort by some universities in Sweden was combined to find an alternative type of fuel concept to be burnt in nuclear power plants that are currently active in the country. This concept uses a new compound of uranium, called uranium nitride (UN), which is known to have better physical properties than the uranium dioxide (UO2) used today. However the poor corrosion resistance of UN means that it cannot be used in the reactors. This work was therefore focused on improving the stability of the UN. The results in this thesis showed how the doping of UN with thorium or chromium had a beneficial effect on the corrosion and oxidation of UN. Longer research will still be needed, however, these results are a step forward into changing the perspective on nuclear energy.

Infrastruktur

Chalmers materialanalyslaboratorium

Ämneskategorier

Kemi

Styrkeområden

Materialvetenskap

ISBN

978-91-7905-776-3

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5242

Utgivare

Chalmers

10:an, Kemivägen 4, Göteborg

Online

Opponent: Professor Manuel Pouchon, Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), Switzerland

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Senast uppdaterat

2023-05-11