March 29, 2021

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Scientists find explanation for abnormally fast release of gas from nuclear fuel

Example of a computational cell: a crystal lattice of uranium dioxide (gray atoms are uranium, red atoms - oxygen) containing a bubble of xenon (yellow atoms). Uranium atoms displaced to inter-nodal positions are shown in black. Such a cluster of interstitial nodes greatly accelerates bubble diffusion. Provided by the authors of the paper. Credit: MIPT
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Example of a computational cell: a crystal lattice of uranium dioxide (gray atoms are uranium, red atoms - oxygen) containing a bubble of xenon (yellow atoms). Uranium atoms displaced to inter-nodal positions are shown in black. Such a cluster of interstitial nodes greatly accelerates bubble diffusion. Provided by the authors of the paper. Credit: MIPT

Scientists at MIPT have found a possible explanation for the anomalously fast release of gas from nuclear fuel. Supercomputer simulations have uncovered an unexpected mechanism for accelerating the escape of gas bubbles from the uranium dioxide crystal matrix to the surface. The result points the way to eliminate the paradoxical discrepancy of several orders of magnitude between existing theoretical models and experimental results. The paper was published in the Journal of Nuclear Materials.

The of gas bubbles during reactor operation is one of the important topics in nuclear power relating to radiation safety. Bubbles of gaseous fission products (mainly xenon), accumulating in the fuel, affect many of its properties. Therefore, it is important, in the design and operation of reactors, to know how fast the gas escapes from the fuel.

Despite the active work of various scientific groups in this field, there is still no complete understanding of the mechanisms of diffusion of gases in fuels. The recent series of works by French researchers is a striking evidence of this fact. The results shown by their proposed model are dozens of times lower than those measured in special experiments. "The very fact that such contradictory results and, in fact, unworkable theory have been published demonstrates, on the one hand, the scientific community's great interest in this problem and, on the other, the need to find fundamentally new physical mechanisms of ultrafast diffusion," says MIPT professor Vladimir Stegailov.

A crystal lattice of uranium dioxide (grey atoms are uranium, red atoms - oxygen) containing a bubble of xenon (yellow atoms). Uranium atoms displaced to inter-nodal positions are shown in black. Such a cluster of interstitial nodes greatly accelerates bubble diffusion. Credit: MIPT
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A crystal lattice of uranium dioxide (grey atoms are uranium, red atoms - oxygen) containing a bubble of xenon (yellow atoms). Uranium atoms displaced to inter-nodal positions are shown in black. Such a cluster of interstitial nodes greatly accelerates bubble diffusion. Credit: MIPT

The MIPT scientists led by Vladimir Stegailov were able to simulate the diffusion of xenon nanobubbles in uranium dioxide over an atomic-scale time period of up to three microseconds (three billion integration steps). This was made possible by the optimal use of supercomputer power and modern codes. Such record-breaking molecular dynamics calculations have enabled direct observation of the Brownian motion of the bubble and discovery of a fundamentally new diffusion mechanism.

It was thought previously that the higher the gas concentration the slower the diffusion, as the gas interferes with the movement of the dioxide on the bubble's surface. The authors showed that upon reaching a certain concentration the gas pushes the atoms of the crystal lattice to inter-nodal positions.

Only anium atoms displaced to inter-nodal positions are shown. This version illustrates better how mobile a cluster of interstitial nodes is. Credit: MIPT
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Only anium atoms displaced to inter-nodal positions are shown. This version illustrates better how mobile a cluster of interstitial nodes is. Credit: MIPT

"By accumulating, the inter-nodal atoms form clusters that move rapidly around the bubble. The bubble and the cluster periodically push each other and thus move significantly faster than the bubble on its own. Thus appears a new effect—acceleration of diffusion by gas", explains Alexander Antropov, a postgraduate student at FEFM (Phystech School of Electronics, Photonics and Molecular Physics at MIPT) and one of the authors of the study. The discovered effect will help explain the discrepancy between theory and experiment.

More information: Alexander Antropov et al, Ultrafast diffusion of overpressurized gas filled nanobubbles in UO2, Journal of Nuclear Materials (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2021.152942

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