TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigation of δ zirconium hydride morphology in a single crystal using quantitative phase field simulations supported by experiments
AU - Simon, P. C.A.
AU - Aagesen, Larry K.
AU - Jokisaari, Andrea M.
AU - Chen, Long Qing
AU - Daymond, Mark R.
AU - Motta, Arthur T.
AU - Tonks, Michael R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research made use of the resources of the High Performance Computing Center at Idaho National Laboratory, which is 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. We gratefully acknowledge the support of INL Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program under project # 16-013: “Micromechanistic approach and critical experiments for quantitative predictions of delayed hydride cracking in zirconium alloys.” This work was authored by Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC07-05ID14517 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
Funding Information:
This work was performed with the support of the DOE NEUP IRP-17-13708 project “Development of a Mechanistic Hydride Behavior Model for Spent Fuel Cladding Storage and Transportation”.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021
PY - 2021/12/15
Y1 - 2021/12/15
N2 - In light water nuclear reactors, waterside corrosion of the cladding material leads to the production of hydrogen, a fraction of which is picked up by the zirconium cladding and precipitates into brittle hydride particles. These nanoscale hydride particles aggregate into mesoscale hydride clusters. The principal stacking direction of the nanoscale hydrides precipitated in the cladding tube changes from circumferential in the absence of applied stress to radial under circumferential applied stress. A quantitative phase field model has been developed to predict the hydride morphology observed experimentally and identify the mechanisms responsible for nanoscale hydride stacking. The model focuses on nanoscale hydride precipitation in a single zirconium grain with a detailed description of the anisotropic elastic contribution. The model predictions concerning the shape, orientation, and stacking behavior of nanoscale hydride are analyzed and compared with experimental observations. The model accurately accounts for the experimentally observed elongated nanoscale hydride shape and the stacking of hydrides along the basal plane of the hexagonal zirconium matrix. When investigating the role of applied stress in hydride morphology, the model challenges some of the mechanisms previously proposed to explain hydride reorientation. Although hydride reorientation has been hypothesized to be caused by a change in nanoscale hydride shape, the current study shows that these mechanisms are unlikely to occur.
AB - In light water nuclear reactors, waterside corrosion of the cladding material leads to the production of hydrogen, a fraction of which is picked up by the zirconium cladding and precipitates into brittle hydride particles. These nanoscale hydride particles aggregate into mesoscale hydride clusters. The principal stacking direction of the nanoscale hydrides precipitated in the cladding tube changes from circumferential in the absence of applied stress to radial under circumferential applied stress. A quantitative phase field model has been developed to predict the hydride morphology observed experimentally and identify the mechanisms responsible for nanoscale hydride stacking. The model focuses on nanoscale hydride precipitation in a single zirconium grain with a detailed description of the anisotropic elastic contribution. The model predictions concerning the shape, orientation, and stacking behavior of nanoscale hydride are analyzed and compared with experimental observations. The model accurately accounts for the experimentally observed elongated nanoscale hydride shape and the stacking of hydrides along the basal plane of the hexagonal zirconium matrix. When investigating the role of applied stress in hydride morphology, the model challenges some of the mechanisms previously proposed to explain hydride reorientation. Although hydride reorientation has been hypothesized to be caused by a change in nanoscale hydride shape, the current study shows that these mechanisms are unlikely to occur.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2021.153303
DO - 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2021.153303
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85116562530
SN - 0022-3115
VL - 557
JO - Journal of Nuclear Materials
JF - Journal of Nuclear Materials
M1 - 153303
ER -