Return to search

Thermal Transport in Irradiated Thorium Dioxide

<p>  </p>
<p>This dissertation focuses on predictive modeling of phonon-mediated thermal transport in thorium dioxide (ThO2) with defects. ThO2 has lately gained attention as it is a suitable model system for more complex nuclear reactor materials such as uranium dioxide and its mixed oxides. The reduction in thermal conductivity of the fuel as a result of irradiation-induced lattice defects is arguably the most important fuel performance metric in regard to reactor efficiency and safety. For this reason, the present work presents a theoretical investigation of thermal conductivity reduction seen in defect-bearing ThO2 and compares directly with experimental measurements. Thermal transport in irradiated ThO2 is first modeled here by a non-transport solution of the linearized Boltzmann transport equation (BTE) within the single-mode relaxation time approximation. Classic models for phonon-defect scattering rates are used to model point defects, voids, and dislocation loops in irradiated ThO2, and the resultant thermal conductivity is directly compared to experimental measurements of irradiated specimens. Our predicted conductivity values agree well with measured values near room temperature. However, discrepancy between our predictions and experimental values exist at lower temperatures where experimentally measured conductivity values seem to reach a saturation level while the model predicts further reduction in thermal conductivity. This discrepancy is most notable in higher irradiation dose samples where the thermal conductivity is almost completely controlled by the dislocation loop density. This hints at the conclusion that classic models for phonon-defect scattering rates which integrate out local variation of the defect strain field and replace this by a defect density may not be adequate to capture all physics of phonon-defect scattering, especially for dislocation loops at low temperatures. This motivated us to model defects through their spatially resolved lattice distortion fields and investigate phonon scattering in those fields in an explicit fashion. A transport solution of the phonon BTE is implemented based upon the Monte Carlo (MC) method, which explicitly tracks the phonon population as it evolves in space and time according to phonon group velocities and scattering rates. An expression for the scattering rate of phonons from an arbitrary strain field is derived from a generalized form of Grüneisen’s law of thermal expansion, and applied to the case of dislocations in ThO2. It is found that the localized strain in the material, resulting from the presence of a crystal defect, leads to a net heat flux into the strained region. This provides evidence for thermal fluxes in the absence of a temperature gradient, a phenomenon that cannot be captured via Fourier’s law. This evidence for material heating owing to the imposed strain of material defects would be immediately applicable to the field of thermoelectrics and defect engineering where large temperature gradients are desirable to improve the thermoelectric efficiency.  Although the model is applied specifically to the case of dislocations in ThO2, the derived phonon scattering rate expression is general and may be applied to any defect for which a strain field may be generated.</p>

  1. 10.25394/pgs.23750577.v1
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:purdue.edu/oai:figshare.com:article/23750577
Date04 August 2023
CreatorsWalter Ryan Deskins (16648893)
Source SetsPurdue University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis
RightsCC BY 4.0
Relationhttps://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Thermal_Transport_in_Irradiated_Thorium_Dioxide/23750577

Page generated in 0.0021 seconds