Identifying chemically similar multiphase nanoprecipitates in compositionally complex non-equilibrium oxides via machine learning

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Abstract

Characterizing oxide nuclear fuels is difficult due to complex fission products, which result from time-evolving system chemistry and extreme operating environments. Here, we report a machine learning-enhanced approach that accelerates the characterization of spent nuclear fuels and improves the accuracy of identifying nanophase fission products and bubbles. We apply this approach to commercial, high-burnup, irradiated light-water reactor fuels, demonstrating relationships between fission product precipitates and gases. We also gain understanding of the fission versus decay pathways of precipitates across the radius of a fuel pellet. An algorithm is provided for quantifying the chemical segregation of the fission products with respect to the high-burnup structure, which enhances our ability to process large amounts of microscopy data, including approaching the atomistic-scale. This may provide a faster route for achieving physics-based fuel performance modeling.

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Mao, K. S., Gerczak, T. J., Harp, J. M., McKinney, C. S., Lach, T. G., Karakoc, O., … Edmondson, P. D. (2022). Identifying chemically similar multiphase nanoprecipitates in compositionally complex non-equilibrium oxides via machine learning. Communications Materials, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43246-022-00244-4

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