TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of small defects and dislocation loops on phonon scattering and thermal transport in ThO2
AU - Jin, Miaomiao
AU - Dennett, Cody A.
AU - Hurley, David H.
AU - Khafizov, Marat
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is supported by the Center for Thermal Energy Transport under Irradiation, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy , Office of Science, United States, Office of Basic Energy Sciences. This research made use of Idaho National Laboratory computing resources which are supported by the Office of Nuclear Energy of the U.S. Department of Energy and the Nuclear Science User Facilities under Contract No. DE-AC07-05ID14517.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2022/8/1
Y1 - 2022/8/1
N2 - Radiation damage can significantly degrade the thermal conductivity of ThO2 due to enhanced phonon-defect scattering. To quantify the effect of radiation-induced defects on thermal transport, we employ non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations to estimate the thermal conductivity in the presence of various types of defects. For each defect species, the phonon-defect scattering cross-section is extracted based on analytical models. In addition, the impact from two types of experimentally-observed dislocation loops (perfect and faulted) on thermal transport is examined with respect to the loop size and orientation. Notably, simulation cell size effects are analytically and quantitatively addressed via a phonon-mean-free-path-resolved analysis. It can be concluded that, for a given total number of defect sites per unit volume, agglomerating defects into larger clusters improves thermal conductivity compared to isolated defects. Importantly, this work provides quantitative information towards the defect-specific thermal conductivity, and phonon-defect scattering cross-sections, which can serve as inputs to large-scale transport models to quantify the evolution of overall thermal conductivity of ThO2 under irradiation.
AB - Radiation damage can significantly degrade the thermal conductivity of ThO2 due to enhanced phonon-defect scattering. To quantify the effect of radiation-induced defects on thermal transport, we employ non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations to estimate the thermal conductivity in the presence of various types of defects. For each defect species, the phonon-defect scattering cross-section is extracted based on analytical models. In addition, the impact from two types of experimentally-observed dislocation loops (perfect and faulted) on thermal transport is examined with respect to the loop size and orientation. Notably, simulation cell size effects are analytically and quantitatively addressed via a phonon-mean-free-path-resolved analysis. It can be concluded that, for a given total number of defect sites per unit volume, agglomerating defects into larger clusters improves thermal conductivity compared to isolated defects. Importantly, this work provides quantitative information towards the defect-specific thermal conductivity, and phonon-defect scattering cross-sections, which can serve as inputs to large-scale transport models to quantify the evolution of overall thermal conductivity of ThO2 under irradiation.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2022.153758
DO - 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2022.153758
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85129698100
SN - 0022-3115
VL - 566
JO - Journal of Nuclear Materials
JF - Journal of Nuclear Materials
M1 - 153758
ER -