학술논문

Energetic particle irradiation study of TiN coatings: are these films appropriate for accident tolerant fuels?
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Nuclear Materials. Dec2018, Vol. 512, p239-245. 7p.
Subject
*IRRADIATION
*CORROSION resistance
*COOLANTS
*THIN films
*TITANIUM nitride
Language
ISSN
0022-3115
Abstract
Abstract Coating nuclear fuel cladding alloys with hard thin films has been considered as an innovative solution to increase the safety of nuclear reactors, in particular during a of loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA). In this context, and due to its suitable mechanical properties and high corrosion resistance, titanium nitride thin films have been proposed as candidate coatings for zirconium alloys in new accident tolerant fuels for light water reactors. Although the properties of TiN hard coatings are known to be adequate for such applications, the understanding of how the exposure to energetic particle irradiation changes the microstructure and properties of these thin films is still not fully understood. Herein, we report on heavy ion irradiation in situ within a Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) of magnetron-sputtered TiN thin films. The coatings were irradiated with 134 keV Xe + ions at 473 K to a fluence of 6.7 × 1015 ions⋅cm−2 corresponding to 6.2 displacements-per-atom where significative microstructural alterations have been observed. Post-irradiation analytic characterisation with Energy Filtered TEM and Energy-Dispersive X-ray spectroscopy carried out in a Scanning Transmission Electron Microscope indicates that TiN thin films are subjected to radiation-induced segregation. Additionally, the nucleation and growth of Xe bubbles appears to play a major role in the dissociation of the TiN thin film. Highlights • Nanocrystalline TiN thin films were produced via magnetron sputtering. • The films were irradiated with heavy ions in situ within a TEM. • TEM and STEM characterisation indicates that the TiN dissociates under irradiation. • EFTEM and STEM-EDX showed Ti segregation at grain boundaries and in Xe bubbles. • Ti-rich zones will experience same oxidation reaction as Zr alloys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]