Modeling of the vacancy diffusion and dislocation motion induced mesoscale-macroscale creep deformations of dense polycrystalline UO2 under irradiation and high temperature conditions
IF 3.2 2区 工程技术Q3 MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
{"title":"Modeling of the vacancy diffusion and dislocation motion induced mesoscale-macroscale creep deformations of dense polycrystalline UO2 under irradiation and high temperature conditions","authors":"Zhexiao Xie, Jing Zhang, Xingdi Chen, Guochen Ding, Shurong Ding","doi":"10.1016/j.jnucmat.2025.156055","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>As a competitive nuclear fuel, UO<sub>2</sub> is widely applicable in various types of nuclear reactors, including both the current and next-generation reactors. Under extreme irradiation conditions, irradiation creep and thermal creep deformations occur within the fuel, significantly influencing the thermo-mechanical behavior evolution of fuel elements and the service safety of nuclear reactors. To predict the macroscale creep deformations and reveal the underlying mechanism for polycrystalline nuclear fuels, the three-dimensional governing equations are established to describe the multi-field coupling behaviors of vacancy diffusion, dislocation motions and the associated mechanical deformations. The corresponding numerical algorithms and codes for the multi-field coupling calculations are developed to simulate the tensile creep tests for polycrystalline UO<sub>2</sub> under different conditions. The good agreement between the predicted macroscale creep rates and various experimental data validates the effectiveness of the developed models and algorithms. The influences of applied stress, temperature, fission rate and grain size on the multi-scale creep behaviors and dominant mechanisms are analyzed. The research results indicate that: (1) the differing stress-related vacancy equilibrium concentrations at various grain-boundary regions lead to the vacancy flux from the tensile boundaries to other boundaries, resulting in the macroscale elongation along the uniaxial creep tension direction; (2) the irradiation-enhanced diffusion coefficient and grain-boundary vacancy equilibrium concentration are responsible for the increased diffusional creep contributions at the temperatures lower than 1200 K, while the fuel fission rates have a minor impact on dislocation creep contributions within the intermediate temperature range from 1000 K to 1400 K; (3) within the low-temperature range below 1000 K, the macroscopic creep deformations of polycrystalline UO<sub>2</sub> are dominantly attributed to irradiation-induced diffusional creep; at temperatures above 1000 K, the creep mechanism becomes more complex and varies with stress, fission rate and grain size; (4) the fuel fission rate affects the transition temperature from irradiation creep to thermal creep; meanwhile, the grain size influences the activation temperature and the stress required to initiate dislocation annihilation-induced creep. This study offers an effective approach to predict the macroscale creep deformations and elucidate the underlying mechanism for nuclear fuels.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":373,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Nuclear Materials","volume":"616 ","pages":"Article 156055"},"PeriodicalIF":3.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Nuclear Materials","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022311525004490","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
As a competitive nuclear fuel, UO2 is widely applicable in various types of nuclear reactors, including both the current and next-generation reactors. Under extreme irradiation conditions, irradiation creep and thermal creep deformations occur within the fuel, significantly influencing the thermo-mechanical behavior evolution of fuel elements and the service safety of nuclear reactors. To predict the macroscale creep deformations and reveal the underlying mechanism for polycrystalline nuclear fuels, the three-dimensional governing equations are established to describe the multi-field coupling behaviors of vacancy diffusion, dislocation motions and the associated mechanical deformations. The corresponding numerical algorithms and codes for the multi-field coupling calculations are developed to simulate the tensile creep tests for polycrystalline UO2 under different conditions. The good agreement between the predicted macroscale creep rates and various experimental data validates the effectiveness of the developed models and algorithms. The influences of applied stress, temperature, fission rate and grain size on the multi-scale creep behaviors and dominant mechanisms are analyzed. The research results indicate that: (1) the differing stress-related vacancy equilibrium concentrations at various grain-boundary regions lead to the vacancy flux from the tensile boundaries to other boundaries, resulting in the macroscale elongation along the uniaxial creep tension direction; (2) the irradiation-enhanced diffusion coefficient and grain-boundary vacancy equilibrium concentration are responsible for the increased diffusional creep contributions at the temperatures lower than 1200 K, while the fuel fission rates have a minor impact on dislocation creep contributions within the intermediate temperature range from 1000 K to 1400 K; (3) within the low-temperature range below 1000 K, the macroscopic creep deformations of polycrystalline UO2 are dominantly attributed to irradiation-induced diffusional creep; at temperatures above 1000 K, the creep mechanism becomes more complex and varies with stress, fission rate and grain size; (4) the fuel fission rate affects the transition temperature from irradiation creep to thermal creep; meanwhile, the grain size influences the activation temperature and the stress required to initiate dislocation annihilation-induced creep. This study offers an effective approach to predict the macroscale creep deformations and elucidate the underlying mechanism for nuclear fuels.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Nuclear Materials publishes high quality papers in materials research for nuclear applications, primarily fission reactors, fusion reactors, and similar environments including radiation areas of charged particle accelerators. Both original research and critical review papers covering experimental, theoretical, and computational aspects of either fundamental or applied nature are welcome.
The breadth of the field is such that a wide range of processes and properties in the field of materials science and engineering is of interest to the readership, spanning atom-scale processes, microstructures, thermodynamics, mechanical properties, physical properties, and corrosion, for example.
Topics covered by JNM
Fission reactor materials, including fuels, cladding, core structures, pressure vessels, coolant interactions with materials, moderator and control components, fission product behavior.
Materials aspects of the entire fuel cycle.
Materials aspects of the actinides and their compounds.
Performance of nuclear waste materials; materials aspects of the immobilization of wastes.
Fusion reactor materials, including first walls, blankets, insulators and magnets.
Neutron and charged particle radiation effects in materials, including defects, transmutations, microstructures, phase changes and macroscopic properties.
Interaction of plasmas, ion beams, electron beams and electromagnetic radiation with materials relevant to nuclear systems.