Post-transient examination of performance of uranium silicide fuel and silicon-carbide composite cladding under reactivity-initiated accident conditions

•First transient testing of accident-tolerant fuel designs under transient nuclear heating reactivity-initiated accident conditions.•Claddings experienced dimensional changes but maintained primary rod-like geometries.•Elemental species diffusion from the U3Si2 fuel to the zircaloy cladding was obse...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of nuclear materials 2022-03, Vol.560 (C), p.153520, Article 153520
Hauptverfasser: Schulthess, Jason, Kamerman, David, Winston, Alexander, Pomo, Alex, Trowbridge, Tammy, Pu, Xiaofei, Woolstenhulme, Nicolas, Imholte, Devin, Jensen, Colby, Wachs, Daniel
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container_end_page
container_issue C
container_start_page 153520
container_title Journal of nuclear materials
container_volume 560
creator Schulthess, Jason
Kamerman, David
Winston, Alexander
Pomo, Alex
Trowbridge, Tammy
Pu, Xiaofei
Woolstenhulme, Nicolas
Imholte, Devin
Jensen, Colby
Wachs, Daniel
description •First transient testing of accident-tolerant fuel designs under transient nuclear heating reactivity-initiated accident conditions.•Claddings experienced dimensional changes but maintained primary rod-like geometries.•Elemental species diffusion from the U3Si2 fuel to the zircaloy cladding was observed.•No elemental species diffusion from the U3Si2 fuel to the silicon-carbide cladding was observed.•Through wall thickness cracking observed in the silicon-carbide cladding resulting from pellet cladding interaction from thermal expansion of the pellet. New fuels are being developed for light water nuclear reactors with the initial goal of improving accident tolerance. More recently, these new fuel systems are also being recognized for their potential to support higher fuel burnups and thus improved economics for reactor plants through improved fuel utilization. Fuel safety testing of these new fuels systems is being conducted under transient irradiation conditions in the Transient Reactor Test facility at Idaho National Laboratory. A test campaign including two rodlets of U3Si2 fuel in Zircaloy-4 cladding and two rodlets of U3Si2 fuel in Silicon-Carbide Composite cladding has been performed to begin the development of fuel-safety criteria in design-basis reactivity-initiated accident conditions. Post-Transient-Irradiation Examinations have been performed and found that the accident tolerant materials maintained their primary rod-like geometry. Elemental species diffusion was found to occur in the Zircaloy rodlets indicating rapid diffusion kinetics at the temperatures achieved. No elemental species diffusion was found in the Silicon-Carbide rodlets. However, through-wall thickness cracks were observed due to displacement loading of the cladding from thermal expansion of the fuel pellets. This work presents the first experimental evidence of the performance of these fuel systems under transient nuclear heating and representative reactivity-initiated accident energy depositions.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2022.153520
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New fuels are being developed for light water nuclear reactors with the initial goal of improving accident tolerance. More recently, these new fuel systems are also being recognized for their potential to support higher fuel burnups and thus improved economics for reactor plants through improved fuel utilization. Fuel safety testing of these new fuels systems is being conducted under transient irradiation conditions in the Transient Reactor Test facility at Idaho National Laboratory. A test campaign including two rodlets of U3Si2 fuel in Zircaloy-4 cladding and two rodlets of U3Si2 fuel in Silicon-Carbide Composite cladding has been performed to begin the development of fuel-safety criteria in design-basis reactivity-initiated accident conditions. Post-Transient-Irradiation Examinations have been performed and found that the accident tolerant materials maintained their primary rod-like geometry. 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Elemental species diffusion was found to occur in the Zircaloy rodlets indicating rapid diffusion kinetics at the temperatures achieved. No elemental species diffusion was found in the Silicon-Carbide rodlets. However, through-wall thickness cracks were observed due to displacement loading of the cladding from thermal expansion of the fuel pellets. This work presents the first experimental evidence of the performance of these fuel systems under transient nuclear heating and representative reactivity-initiated accident energy depositions.</abstract><cop>Amsterdam</cop><pub>Elsevier B.V</pub><doi>10.1016/j.jnucmat.2022.153520</doi></addata></record>
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identifier ISSN: 0022-3115
ispartof Journal of nuclear materials, 2022-03, Vol.560 (C), p.153520, Article 153520
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Accident conditions
Carbides
Cladding
Design-basis accident
Diffusion
Fuel safety
Fuel systems
Fuels
Irradiation
Light water
Nuclear accidents & safety
Nuclear fuel
Nuclear fuels
Nuclear reactors
Nuclear safety
Radiation
Reactivity
Reactivity-initiated accident
Reactors
Safety engineering
Silicide
Silicon
Silicon-carbide
Silicon-carbide composite
Species diffusion
Test facilities
Thermal expansion
Transient Reactor Test Facility
Uranium
Uranium silicide
Zircaloy
Zircaloys (trademark)
Zirconium
title Post-transient examination of performance of uranium silicide fuel and silicon-carbide composite cladding under reactivity-initiated accident conditions
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