March 3, 2013
Journal Article

Charge distribution and oxygen diffusion in hyperstoichiometric uranium dioxide UO2+x (x=0.25)

Abstract

Quantum-mechanical techniques were used to determine the charge distribution of uranium atoms in UO2+x (x = 0.25) and to calculate activation-energy barriers to oxygen diffusion. Upon optimization, the reduction in unit-cell volume relative to UO2, and the shortest and bond-lengths (0.22 and 0.24 nm, respectively) are in good agreement with experimental data. The addition of interstitial oxygen to the unoccupied cubic sites in the UO2 structure deflects two nearest-neighbor oxygen atoms along the body diagonal of uranium-occupied cubic sites, creating lattice oxygen defects. In (1×1×2) supercells, the partial oxidation of two U4+ atoms is observed for every interstitial oxygen added to the structure, consistent with previous quantum-mechanical studies. Results favor the stabilization of two U5+ over one U6+ in UO2+x. Calculated activation energies (2.06-2.73 eV) and diffusion rates for oxygen in UO2+x support the idea that defect clusters likely play an increasingly important role as oxidation proceeds.

Revised: April 9, 2013 | Published: March 3, 2013

Citation

Skomurski F.N., J. Wang, R.C. Ewing, and U. Becker. 2013. Charge distribution and oxygen diffusion in hyperstoichiometric uranium dioxide UO2+x (x=0.25). Journal of Nuclear Materials 434, no. 1-3:422-433. PNNL-SA-75956. doi:10.1016/j.jnucmat.2011.09.003