May 30, 2015
Journal Article

A comparative study on the wear behaviors of cladding candidates for accident-tolerant fuel

Abstract

Accident-tolerant fuels are expected to have considerably longer coping time to respond to the loss of active cooling under severe accidents and, at the same time, have comparable or improved fuel performance during normal operation. The wear resistance of accident tolerant fuels, therefore, needs to be examined to determine the applicability of these cladding candidates to the current operating PWRs because the most common failure of nuclear fuel claddings is still caused by grid-to-rod fretting during normal operations. In this study, reciprocating sliding wear tests on three kinds of cladding candidates for accident-tolerant fuels have been performed to investigate the tribological compatibilities of selfmated cladding candidates and to determine the direct applicability of conventional Zirconium-based alloys as supporting structural materials. The friction coefficients of the cladding candidates are strongly influenced by the test environments and coupled materials. The wear test results under water lubrication conditions indicate that the supporting structural materials for the cladding candidates of accident-tolerant fuels need to be replaced with the same cladding materials instead of using conventional Zirconium-based alloys.

Revised: December 21, 2016 | Published: May 30, 2015

Citation

Lee Y., and T. Byun. 2015. A comparative study on the wear behaviors of cladding candidates for accident-tolerant fuel. Journal of Nuclear Materials 465. PNNL-SA-117477. doi:10.1016/j.jnucmat.2015.05.017