Book Description
The objective of this paper is to summarize the results of the latest observations performed at Paul Scherrer Institut on irradiated fuel claddings, to characterize their corrosion and hydrogen-uptake behavior. Two categories of studies have been performed. (1) A series of destructive tests were achieved on the fuel rods irradiated in a boiling-water reactor (BWR), including hydrogen concentration by hot-gas extraction. These results provided the hydrogen content of the cladding at different stages of irradiation, at different elevations along the rod. (2) Another series of examinations using a correlative microscopy method, i.e., using different techniques, including transmission electron microscopy (TEM), electron probe microanalysis (EPMA), and secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), on the same material and in the same region of the metal-oxide interface have provided useful data regarding the oxide layer combining the signals from oxides and from hydrides. Furthermore, the effect of the type of alloying element has been examined for in-reactor oxidation. These studies are subsequently combined with the findings from out-of-pile studies, using techniques, such as neutron radiography, to confirm the in-reactor observations. Results have shown that: (i) the hydrogen pickup fraction varies at different conditions and could even decrease as the oxide thickness increases; (ii) the distribution of hydrogen in the cladding is usually inhomogeneous; (iii) the most determining parameter for hydrogen uptake seems to be the microstructure of the oxide, and the nature of the alloying element will influence to a certain extent this parameter; (iv) furthermore, the stress in the oxide layer can modify the crack distribution in the latter, cracks will in turn shorten the route for the hydrogen to access the metal. These results will be discussed as a contribution to the available knowledge about hydrogen uptake and will provide a global support for the models of the uptake phenomenon.