Polyepitaxial grain matching to study the oxidation of uranium dioxide
Although the principal physical behaviour of a material is inherently connected to its fundamental crystal structure, the behaviours observed in the real-world are often driven by the microstructure, which for many polycrystalline materials, equates to the size and shape of the constituent crystal g...
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Zusammenfassung: | Although the principal physical behaviour of a material is inherently
connected to its fundamental crystal structure, the behaviours observed in the
real-world are often driven by the microstructure, which for many
polycrystalline materials, equates to the size and shape of the constituent
crystal grains. Here we highlight a cutting edge synthesis route to the
controlled engineering of grain structures in thin films and the simplification
of associated 3-dimensional problems to less complex 2D ones. This has been
applied to the actinide ceramic, uranium dioxide, to replicate structures
typical in nuclear fission fuel pellets, in order to investigate the oxidation
and subsequent transformation of cubic UO$_{2}$ to orthorhombic U$_{3}$O$_{8}$.
This article shows how this synthesis approach could be utilised to investigate
a range of phenomena, affected by grain morphology, and highlights some unusual
results in the oxidation behaviour of UO$_{2}$, regarding the phase transition
to U$_{3}$O$_{8}$. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2404.14929 |