Our present understanding of surface dissolution of nuclear fuels such as uranium dioxide (UO2) is limited by the use of non-local characterization techniques. Here we discuss the use of state-of-the-art scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) to reveal atomic–scale changes occurring to UO2 thin films subjected to anoxic dissolution in deionised water. No amorphisation of the UO2 ?lm surface during dissolution is observed, and dissolution occurs preferentially at surface reactive sites that present as surface pits which increase in size as the dissolution proceeds. Using a combination of STEM imaging modes, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (STEM-EDS), and electron energy loss spectroscopy (STEM-EELS), we investigate structural defects and oxygen passivation of the surface that originates from the filling of the octahedral interstitial site in the centre of the unit cells and its associated lattice contraction. Taken together, our results reveal complex pathways for both the dissolution and infiltration of solutions into UO2 surfaces.
Revised: October 13, 2020 |
Published: September 2, 2020
Citation
Popel A., S.R. Spurgeon, B.E. Matthews, M.J. Olszta, B.T. Tan, T. Gouder, and R. Eloiridi, et al. 2020.An Atomic-Scale Understanding of UO2 Surface Evolution During Anoxic Dissolution.ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 12, no. 35:39781–39786.PNNL-SA-152605.doi:10.1021/acsami.0c09611