Fundamentals of current and future uses of nuclear graphite
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Salford
Department Name: Sch of Computing, Science & Engineering
Abstract
Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
Publications

Buchan J
(2015)
Erratum: "Molecular dynamics simulation of radiation damage cascades in diamond" [J. Appl. Phys. 117 , 245901 (2015)]
in Journal of Applied Physics

Christie H
(2015)
Simulating radiation damage cascades in graphite
in Carbon

Gardiner J
(2016)
Crowd-Sourced Amputee Gait Data: A Feasibility Study Using YouTube Videos of Unilateral Trans-Femoral Gait.
in PloS one

Hinks J
(2014)
Kink Band Formation in Graphite under Ion Irradiation at 100 and 298 K
in MATERIALS TRANSACTIONS

Hinks J
(2012)
Effects of Displacing Radiation on Graphite Observed Using in situ Transmission Electron Microscopy
in MRS Proceedings

Hinks J
(2014)
Dynamic microstructural evolution of graphite under displacing irradiation
in Carbon

Mileeva Z
(2013)
A study of the porosity of nuclear graphite using small-angle neutron scattering
in Carbon


Pan CT
(2014)
In-situ observation and atomic resolution imaging of the ion irradiation induced amorphisation of graphene.
in Scientific reports
Description | This grant formed part of the Fundamentals of graphite research consortium. The overall objective was to bring our understanding of the effects of fast neutron scattering on nuclear graphite up to date. We contributed to several areas of this work. Firstly we demonstrated the use of Small Angle Neutron Scattering to describe the fractal distribution of Mrozowski Cracks in nuclear graphite, their connection to external atmosphere and the temperature at which they are filled due to thermal expansion (Z.Mileeva et al Carbon). Secondly, we developed the use of Molecular Dynamics to simulate the effects of fast neutron irradiation in graphites. This work was done in collaboration with Nigel Marks, Curtin University, Perth, Australia. The calculations reproduced the number of defects produced in a reactor fast neutron spectrum and the distribution of different types of defect produced. Coherent inelastic scattering from polycrystalline graphite was measured, showing the effects of defects on the inelastic scattering |
Exploitation Route | Further EPSRC consortium grant proposal has been submitted (SAFEGUARD) and the results are being used by EDF which is concerned that uncertainties in radiation damage in reactor graphites might force the shutdown of AGR reactors. |
Sectors | Energy |
Description | Understanding on the porosity of graphites and how this changes due to irradiation has been provided to EDF re operation of the remaining AGR reactors. |
First Year Of Impact | 2014 |
Sector | Energy |
Impact Types | Economic |
Description | Collaboration on fitting and software development |
Organisation | Curtin University |
Country | Australia |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | This Salford - led collaboration was responsible for the building, development and testing of the SCATTER and PREFIT software packages. Salford team designed, wrote and developed both software packages (in collaboration with partners), and applied the software to the development of the poly-CINS spectroscopic method. |
Collaborator Contribution | Curtin - 1 PhD student (and time provided by collaborating academic J. D. Gale) on fitting and model construction and development for the magnesium hydride system (and backplane methods developed to make this system accessible) RGU - 1 PhD student (and time provided by collaborating academic H. Gonzalez-Velez) on large scale parallelisation (multi-core, GPU and cloud enabled) of the SCATTER code and GULP's internal eigensolve routines. |
Impact | Multi-disciplinary (computational chemistry, materials science, physics (neutron) and computer science (advanced parallelisation and visualisation) |
Description | Collaboration on fitting and software development |
Organisation | Robert Gordon University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | This Salford - led collaboration was responsible for the building, development and testing of the SCATTER and PREFIT software packages. Salford team designed, wrote and developed both software packages (in collaboration with partners), and applied the software to the development of the poly-CINS spectroscopic method. |
Collaborator Contribution | Curtin - 1 PhD student (and time provided by collaborating academic J. D. Gale) on fitting and model construction and development for the magnesium hydride system (and backplane methods developed to make this system accessible) RGU - 1 PhD student (and time provided by collaborating academic H. Gonzalez-Velez) on large scale parallelisation (multi-core, GPU and cloud enabled) of the SCATTER code and GULP's internal eigensolve routines. |
Impact | Multi-disciplinary (computational chemistry, materials science, physics (neutron) and computer science (advanced parallelisation and visualisation) |
Title | PreFiT - A poly-CINS analysis and workflow toolbox |
Description | PreFiT (written by Garba and Roach) was designed to provide labour saving automation of the time-consuming processes used in poly-CINS. Using PreFiT, a user may view and compare experimental and theoretical neutron scattering data, perform edge detection, build fitting files for use in GULP and many other powerful and time-saving activities (including edge detection, signal processing and intensity filtering functionality). Months of manual analysis can now be accomplished in hours - all packaged in a user friendly and intuitive visual interface. |
Type Of Technology | Software |
Year Produced | 2014 |
Impact | None yet. |
Description | I'm a Scientist - Get me out of here (STFC Nuclear Zone) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | Yes |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | School children got the opportunity to field broad scientific questions to practicing research scientists. Questions were broad, but could be very detailed and enquiring. The outcomes suggested children are interested in science and the participants hoped they had stimulated the desire for careers in science for some of those participating children! Generally, the feedback from the organisers suggest that this kind of outreach activity is very strong at promoting the understanding of what researchers do in their careers, and that it opens up the prospect (to kids from more challenged socio-economic backgrounds) of earning a living doing science! |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2014 |
URL | http://imascientist.org.uk/ |