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Characterisation of Deuterium Distributions in Corroded Zirconium Alloys Using High-Resolution SIMS

29 Pages Posted: 1 Jun 2020 Publication Status: Accepted

See all articles by Junliang Liu

Junliang Liu

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Kexue Li

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

James Sayers

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Thomas Aarholt

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Guanze He

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Helen Hulme

The University of Manchester - School of Materials

Alistair Garner

The University of Manchester - Materials Performance Centre

Michael Preuss

The University of Manchester - Department of Materials

Heidi Nordin

Atomic Energy of Canada Limited - Canadian Nuclear Laboratories

Jonna M. Partezana

Westinghouse Electric Sweden

Magnus Limbäck

Westinghouse Electric Sweden

Sergio Lozano-Perez

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Susan Ortner

Culham Science Centre - National Nuclear Laboratory

Chris Grovenor

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Abstract

Hydrogen diffusion through the oxide grown on Zr alloys by aqueous corrosion processes plays a critical role in determining the rate of hydrogen pickup which can result in embrittlement of fuel cladding and limit the burnup of the nuclear fuel it encapsulates. Mapping the hydrogen/deuterium distributions in these oxide layers, especially in the barrier layer close to the metal/oxide interface, is a powerful way to understand the mechanism of both oxidation and hydrogen pickup. Here we have characterised by high-resolution SIMS analysis the deuterium distribution in oxide layers on a series of Zr alloys, including autoclave-oxidised Zircaloy-4, Zr-1Nb and Zr-2.5Nb alloys, and in-flux and out-of-flux corroded Zr-2.5Nb samples. Pre-transition Zircaloy-4 samples show a high deuterium trapping ratio in the oxide and a higher diffusion coefficient than in oxides on the Nb-containing samples. Neutron irradiation increases the deuterium diffusion coefficient, the deuterium concentration in the oxide and the pickup fraction in Zr-2.5 Nb samples. Comparative NanoSIMS and EDX/SEM analysis demonstrates that the deuterium is not preferentially trapped at SPPs in the oxides on any of the alloys studied, but there is direct evidence for trapping at the surfaces of small oxide cracks especially in Zircaloy-4 samples. The high resolution mapping of these hot-spots in 3D can provide unique information on the mechanisms of hydrogen uptake, and suggests that the development of interconnected porosity in the oxide may be the critical rate-determining mechanism that controls HPU in the aqueous corrosion of zirconium alloys in water-cooled reactors.

Keywords: Zirconium alloys, Corrosion, Hydrogen diffusion, NanoSIMS, Transmission electron microscopy (TEM)

Suggested Citation

Liu, Junliang and Li, Kexue and Sayers, James and Aarholt, Thomas and He, Guanze and Hulme, Helen and Garner, Alistair and Preuss, Michael and Nordin, Heidi and Partezana, Jonna M. and Limbäck, Magnus and Lozano-Perez, Sergio and Ortner, Susan and Grovenor, Chris, Characterisation of Deuterium Distributions in Corroded Zirconium Alloys Using High-Resolution SIMS. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3604594 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3604594

Junliang Liu (Contact Author)

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3PH
United Kingdom

Kexue Li

University of Oxford - Department of Materials ( email )

Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3PH
United Kingdom

James Sayers

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3PH
United Kingdom

Thomas Aarholt

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3PH
United Kingdom

Guanze He

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3PH
United Kingdom

Helen Hulme

The University of Manchester - School of Materials

United Kingdom

Alistair Garner

The University of Manchester - Materials Performance Centre

Manchester
United Kingdom

Michael Preuss

The University of Manchester - Department of Materials ( email )

Manchester
United Kingdom

Heidi Nordin

Atomic Energy of Canada Limited - Canadian Nuclear Laboratories

Chalk River, Ontario ON K0J1J0
Canada

Jonna M. Partezana

Westinghouse Electric Sweden

Sweden

Magnus Limbäck

Westinghouse Electric Sweden

Sweden

Sergio Lozano-Perez

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3PH
United Kingdom

Susan Ortner

Culham Science Centre - National Nuclear Laboratory

Abingdon, OX14 3DB
United Kingdom

Chris Grovenor

University of Oxford - Department of Materials

Parks Road
Oxford, OX1 3PH
United Kingdom

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