Corrosion and hydrogen pick-up mechanisms in zirconium nuclear fuel cladding alloys in active environments

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Materials

Abstract

In the past few years a new phase of nuclear materials research has started in many developed and developing countries since nuclear power is seen to play a vital role in reducing CO2 emission and securing energy supply. It is recognized that while the supply of energy from renewable sources will increase, the need for both energy security and carbon emission reduction in the UK and elsewhere will only be achieved if the current percentage of nuclear generation capacity is maintained or expanded. The most common fission reactor type worldwide is the pressurised water reactor (PWR). Over the last 2 decades improved PWR designs have been developed (often termed Gen 3+ reactors) to reduce the construction costs and improve operating efficiency. It is reactors of this type that will be the first new generating plant installed in the UK for 25 years when construction begins at Hinkley. Advanced Boiling Water Reactors are also under consideration for other sites like Wylfa. The fuel assemblies for both these reactor designs are based on zirconium alloys, and one of the main drivers to improve the efficiency of future reactors is to design fuel to operate under more severe fuel duty cycles, including longer in-core residence times to achieve higher burn-up fraction and so increase the energy extracted from the uranium fuel. Fuel vendors have responded to the need of more corrosion resistant cladding material by introducing new zirconium based alloys to meet the needs of high performance fuel. However, this alloy development has been based almost wholly on empirical research rather than any general model of what controls the oxidation rate - especially under irradiation. This understanding is particularly important from the point of view of the commercial operators, since only physically-based predictions of the corrosion process under real service conditions will give them the confidence to operate fuel assemblies to the very high degrees of burn-up needed to reduce the life-time costs of a reactor and minimise the volume of nuclear waste generated per GWh of power.

We have in previous work on zirconium oxidation made contributions to understanding the microstructure of the oxide scales formed under autoclave conditions, using for the first time the latest generation of analytical techniques to answer longstanding questions on the nature of the phases present at the oxide/metal interface and what the critical steps might be in controlling the transition behaviour where the corrosion rate accelerates abruptly at specific times for different alloys. This involved the development of new sample preparation techniques, new analytical protocols and reporting some of the most detailed analyses of what is happening at the rate-determining metal/oxide interface at different stages of the oxidation process. It is these techniques that we now intend to apply to zirconium samples from real reactor environments where neutron damage may alter many of the key mechanisms, with the aim of suggesting how these alloys can be designed to give better degradation performance in service.

Planned Impact

Our primary path to impact is based on extremely close interactions with our industrial partners in the MUZIC2 project. Rolls-Royce, Westinghouse, AMEC, the National Nuclear Laboratory, EPRI and EDF are leaders in the exploitation of civil nuclear power, and so our results on the mechanisms of failure of the current generation of fuel cladding alloys will be of direct and immediate relevance to these partners. An improved understanding of the corrosion of Zr alloys is also applicable outside the nuclear industry (e.g. for high-temperature zirconium heat exchangers in the chemical industry).

We will manage this impact by having formal project meetings every 3 months to which representatives of our industrial partners will be invited to ensure rapid and effective knowledge transfer throughout the industrial sector. We also have an excellent record of dissemination to the wider scientific community through publications in high impact, international journals and by regular attendance at the appropriate conferences. Presentations will be made at the 18th International Symposium on Zirconium in the Nuclear Industry (Japan), the primary and most prestigious forum for work in this area, at the 2016 Microscopy of Oxidation meeting in the UK and at the regular Nuclear Materials session at the Fall MRS meetings in Boston.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description We have shown unambiguously for the first time that in service hydrogen preferentially penetrates through the oxide on zirconium fuel cladding through nanopores. This has significance in the design of new alloys for nuclear applications.
Exploitation Route The implication is that alloy chemistry needs to be adjusted specifically to lower the porosity in the growing oxide.
Sectors Energy

 
Description MIDAS - Mechanistic understanding of Irradiation Damage in fuel Assemblies
Amount £7,226,655 (GBP)
Funding ID EP/S01702X/1 
Organisation Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 02/2019 
End 01/2024
 
Title NanoSIMS analysis of PV materials 
Description NanoSIMS analysis was under this grant shown to be uniquely powerful in analysing dopants of different kinds in both CdTe and perovskite solar cell materials - data that has proved difficult to obtain by other techniques, and will influence the processing of these device materials. These new methods have been reported in high impact papers. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact It is too early to point to specific impact in the commercial PV sector 
 
Description Corrosion and hydrogen pick-up mechanisms in zirconium nuclear fuel cladding alloys in active environments 
Organisation Canadian Nuclear Laboratory (CNL)
Country Canada 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Analysing active samples by advanced techniques the partners do not have
Collaborator Contribution Providing active samples for analysis
Impact Too early in the project to have outcomes
Start Year 2011
 
Description Corrosion and hydrogen pick-up mechanisms in zirconium nuclear fuel cladding alloys in active environments 
Organisation Westinghouse
Country United States 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Analysing active samples by advanced techniques the partners do not have
Collaborator Contribution Providing active samples for analysis
Impact Too early in the project to have outcomes
Start Year 2011
 
Description Interview for French national news 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact In Dec 2019 I was awarded the first Excellence in Nuclear Reactor Science in the UK Award by Framatome. The ceremony took place in the French Embassy in London and I was interviewed by the French TV, by Framatome for their podcast and by the written press. Extracts from these interviews can be found in YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. I talked about our advances in understanding materials properties and problems by looking at atoms and how important the contribution from academia was for such important industrial challenges.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sY739SUBgY4