The effect of pre-treatment parameters on the quality of glass-ceramic wasteforms for plutonium immobilisation, consolidated by hot isostatic pressing
Glass-ceramics with high glass fractions (70 wt%) were fabricated in stainless steel canisters by hot isostatic pressing (HIP), at laboratory scale. High (600 C) and low (300 C) temperature pre-treatments were investigated to reduce the canister evacuation time and to understand the effect on the ph...
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Zusammenfassung: | Glass-ceramics with high glass fractions (70 wt%) were fabricated in stainless steel canisters by hot
isostatic pressing (HIP), at laboratory scale. High (600 C) and low (300 C) temperature pre-treatments
were investigated to reduce the canister evacuation time and to understand the effect on the phase
assemblage and microstructure of the hot isostatically pressed product. Characterisation of the HIPed
materials was performed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), coupled with energy dispersive Xray
analysis (EDX) and powder X-ray diffraction (XRD). This analysis showed the microstructure and
phase assemblage was independent of the variation in pre-treatment parameters. It was demonstrated
that a high temperature pre-treatment of batch reagents, prior to the HIP cycle, is beneficial when using
oxide precursors, in order to remove volatiles and achieve high quality dense materials. Sample
throughput can be increased significantly by utilising a high temperature ex-situ calcination prior to the
HIP cycle. Investigation of glass-ceramic wasteform processing utilising a glass frit precursor, produced a
phase assemblage and microstructure comparable to that obtained using oxide precursors. The use of a
glass frit precursor should allow optimised throughput of waste packages in a production facility,
avoiding the need for a calcination pre-treatment required to remove volatiles from oxide precursors. |
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DOI: | 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2016.12.028 |