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Multiscale Approach of Investigating the Density of Simulated Fuel for a Zero Power Reactor

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>20/09/2024
<mark>Journal</mark>Journal of Nuclear Engineering
Issue number3
Volume5
Number of pages16
Pages (from-to)420-435
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

With growing interest in molten salts as possible nuclear fuel systems, knowledge of thermophysical properties of complex salt mixtures, e.g., NaCl-CeCl3, NaCl-UCl3 and NaCl-UCl4, informs understanding and performance modelling of the zero power salt reactor. Fuel density is a key parameter that is examined in a multiscale approach in this paper. In the zero power reactor ‘core’ (cm level), the relative fuel density is estimated for the fuel pin disposition, as well as a function of their pitch (strong effect). Fuel density of the ‘pellet’ (mm–µm level) is first estimated on a geometrical basis, then through tracking pores and cracks using 2D (SEM) and 3D (laser microscopy, LM) techniques. For the nanoscale level, ‘grains’ analysis is done using X-ray diffraction (XRD), revealing the defects, vacancies and swelled grains. Initially, emphasis is on the near-eutectic composition of salt mixtures of CeCl3 with NaCl as the carrier salt. Cerium trichloride (CeCl3) is an inactive surrogate of UCl3 and PuCl3. The results were measured for the specific salt mixture (70 mol% NaCl and 30 mol% CeCl3) in this work, establishing that microscopy and XRD are important techniques for measurement of the physical properties of salts component pellets. This work is of significance, as densities of fuel components affect the power evolution through reactivity and the average neutronic behaviour in zero power salt reactors.