Pipeline corrosion research at Sandia National Laboratories: From nanoscale science to structural engineering and piping applications
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Journal of Materials Research
Irradiation resistance of metallic nanostructured multilayers is determined by the interactions between defects and phase boundaries. However, the dose-dependent interfacial morphology evolution can greatly change the nature of the defect-boundary interaction mechanisms over time. In the present study, we used atomistic models combined with a novel technique based on the accumulation of Frenkel pairs to simulate irradiation processes. We examined dose effects on defect evolutions near zirconium-niobium multilayer phase boundaries. Our simulations enabled us to categorize defect evolution mechanisms in bulk phases into progressing stages of dislocation accumulation, saturation, and coalescence. In the metallic multilayers, we observed a phase boundary absorption mechanism early on during irradiation, while at higher damage levels, the increased irradiation intermixing triggered a phase transformation in the Zr-Nb mixture. This physical phenomenon resulted in the emission of a large quantity of small immobile dislocation loops from the phase boundaries.
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Journal of Materials Science
The ability of nanoporous metals to avoid accumulation of damage under ion beam irradiation has been the focus of several studies in recent years. The width of the interconnected ligaments forming the network structure typically is on the order of tens of nanometers. In such confined volumes with high amounts of surface area, the accumulation of damage (defects such as stacking-fault tetrahedra and dislocation loops) can be mitigated via migration and annihilation of these defects at the free surfaces. In this work, in situ characterization of radiation damage in nanoporous gold (np-Au) was performed in the transmission electron microscope. Several samples with varying average ligament size were subjected to gold ion beams having three different energies (10 MeV, 1.7 MeV and 46 keV). The inherent radiation tolerance of np-Au was directly observed in real time, for all ion beam conditions, and the degree of ion-induced damage accumulation in np-Au ligaments is discussed here.
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This study was initiated to quantify and characterize the uncertainty associated with the degradation mechanisms impacting normal dry storage operations for used nuclear fuel (UNF) and normal conditions of transport in support of the Spent Fuel and Waste Science & Technology Campaign (SFWST) and its effectiveness to rank the data needs and parameters of interest. This report describes the technical basis and guidance resulting from the development of software to perform uncertainty quantification (UQ) by developing and describing a holistic model that integrates the various processes controlling Atmospheric Stress Corrosion Cracking (ASCC) in the specific context of Interim Spent Fuel Storage Installations (ISFSIs). These processes include the daily and annual cycles of temperature and humidity associated with the environment, the deposition of chloride-containing aerosol particles, pit formation, pit-to-crack transition, and crack propagation.
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International High-Level Radioactive Waste Management 2019, IHLRWM 2019
For long-term storage, spent nuclear fuel (SNF) is placed in dry storage systems, commonly consisting of welded stainless steel canisters enclosed in ventilated overpacks. Choride-induced stress corrosion cracking (CISCC) of these canisters may occur due to the deliquescence of sea-salt aerosols as the canisters cool. Current experimental and modeling efforts to evaluate canister CISCC assume that the deliquescent brines, once formed, persist on the metal surface, without changing chemical or physical properties. Here we present data that show that magnesium chloride rich-brines, which form first as the canisters cool and sea-salts deliquesce, are not stable at elevated temperatures, degassing HCl and converting to solid carbonates and hydroxychloride phases, thus limiting conditions for corrosion. Moreover, once pitting corrosion begins on the metal surface, oxygen reduction in the cathode region surrounding the pits produces hydroxide ions, increasing the pH under some experimental conditions, leads to precipitation of magnesium hydroxychloride hydrates. Because magnesium carbonates and hydroxychloride hydrates are less deliquescent than magnesium chloride, precipitation of these compounds causes a reduction in the brine volume on the metal surface, potentially limiting the extent of corrosion. If taken to completion, such reactions may lead to brine dry-out, and cessation of corrosion.
Safety basis analysts throughout the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) complex rely heavily on the information provided in the DOE Handbook, DOE-HDBK-3010, Airborne Release Fractions/Rates and Respirable Fractions for Nonreactor Nuclear Facilities, to determine radionuclide source terms from postulated accident scenarios. In calculating source terms, analysts tend to use the DOE Handbook's bounding values on airborne release fractions (ARFs) and respirable fractions (RFs) for various categories of insults (representing potential accident release categories). This is typically due to both time constraints and the avoidance of regulatory critique. Unfortunately, these bounding ARFs/RFs represent extremely conservative values. Moreover, they were derived from very limited small-scale bench/laboratory experiments and/or from engineered judgment. Thus, the basis for the data may not be representative of the actual unique accident conditions and configurations being evaluated. The goal of this research is to develop a more accurate and defensible method to determine bounding values for the DOE Handbook using state-of-art multi-physics-based computer codes. This enables us to better understand the fundamental physics and phenomena associated with the types of accidents in the handbook. In this fourth year, we improved existing computational capabilities to better model fragmentation situations to capture small fragments during an impact accident. In addition, we have provided additional new information for various sections of Chapters 4 and 5 of the Handbook on free fall powders and impacts of solids, and have provided the damage ratio simulations for containers (7A drum and standard waste box) for various drops and impact scenarios. Thus, this work provides a low-cost method to establish physics-justified safety bounds by considering specific geometries and conditions that may not have been previously measured and/or are too costly to perform during an experiment.
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Computational Materials Science
We performed a systematic study of the threshold displacement energy (Ed) in metallic uranium as a function of both the recoil direction and temperature using Molecular Dynamics simulations. We developed a novel orientation sampling scheme that utilizes crystallographic symmetrical geodesic grids to select directions from the orientation fundamental zone to study the directional dependency. Additionally, we studied the temperature dependency by considering both the α-uranium phase, corresponding to the ground state for temperatures ranging from 0 K to 600 K, and the γ-uranium phase, corresponding to high-temperature state for temperatures above 900 K. In this study, we compared several definitions of the threshold energy: a direction-specific threshold displacement energy (Ed (θ,Φ)), an angle-averaged threshold energy ($E_d^{ave}$), a production probability threshold displacement energy ($E_d^{pp}$), and a defect count threshold displacement energy ($E_d^{dc}$). The direction-specific threshold displacement energies showed large angular anisotropy and variations in Ed results in accordance with crystallographic considerations. Specifically, preferred defect channeling directions were observed in the [120], [1$\bar{2}$0], [1$\bar{1}$1] directions for the α-uranium, and [001], [111] directions for the γ-uranium. The production probability threshold displacement energy ($E_d^{pp}$) is calculated as approximately 99.2659 eV at 10 K (α-U), 103.4980 eV at 300 K (α-U), 76.0915 eV at 600 K (α-U), and 42.9929 eV at 900 K (γ-U). With exception of those calculated at 10 K, threshold displacement energies decrease with increasing temperature. Analyses of the stable defect structures showed that the most commonly observed interstitial configuration in α-uranium consists of a ( 0 1 0 ) dumbbell-like interstitial; while in γ-uranium no preferential defect configuration could be identified due to thermally-induced lattice instabilities at the elevated temperatures.
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Computational Materials Science
Semi-coherent cube-on-cube miscible U–Zr interfaces were studied using molecular dynamics simulations. The misfit accommodation of such semi-coherent phase boundaries was characterized by a two-dimensional dislocation network model utilizing a combination of theoretical predictions and analysis of the atomic system. The dislocation networks were discussed for various stacking orientation of the adjoining phases in terms of the composition of the dislocation sets, the partitioning between edge and screw components and the associated residual elastic fields. These analyses showed that the patterning of the network of dislocations forming these phase boundaries results from the competition between a structurally-driven process (i.e., function of the lattice misfit) and a chemically-driven process (i.e., due to the miscibility between U and Zr).