Second part of Sadman’s PhD thesis work, the paper on in-situ ion irradiation induced nanograin growth in a spent UO2 fuel has been published by Journal of Nuclear Materials (JNM). We thank our collaborators at INL and ANL, as well as INL LDRD for financial support and NSUF for facility support.
This study investigates the irradiation-driven evolution of nanograins in the early-stage restructured rim region of medium burnup spent uranium dioxide (UO2) fuel. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) lamellas prepared from Belgium Reactor 3 (BR-3) fuel were subjected to in-situ 300 keV Xe ion irradiations under varying doses, fluxes, and temperatures to evaluate their effect on the evolution of the nanograins. Our results reveal that the nanograins grow during ion irradiation. Additionally, the growth is most pronounced at elevated temperatures (300 °C), moderate at room temperature, and negligible at cryogenic temperature (−223 °C). This behavior indicates that thermal activation, alongside irradiation effects, is essential to overcome grain boundary pinning by fission gas bubbles, metallic precipitates, and porosity. Furthermore, while nanograins (<200 nm) consistently coarsened under irradiation, larger grains did not undergo further restructuring, which can be attributed to the strong defect annihilation at TEM lamella surfaces combined with the limited electronic stopping power of low energy Xe ions used in this work. These findings highlight the roles of thermal spike effects, defect mobility, and impurity pinning in governing grain evolution in the rim region of spent UO2 fuel during ion irradiation, providing key insights for predictive models of restructuring and performance of the high burnup nuclear fuel.