Reduced yield stress for zirconium exposed to iodine: reactive force field simulation

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Abstract

Iodine-induced stress-corrosion cracking (ISCC), a known failure mode for nuclear fuel cladding, occurs when iodine generated during the irradiation of a nuclear fuel pellet escapes the pellet through diffusion or thermal cracking and chemically interacts with the inner surface of the clad material, inducing a subsequent effect on the cladding’s resistance to mechanical stress. To complement experimental investigations of ISCC, a reactive force field (ReaxFF) compatible with the Zr-I chemical and materials systems has been developed and applied to simulate the impact of iodine exposure on the mechanical strength of the material. We show that the material’s resistance to stress (as captured by the yield stress of a high-energy grain boundary) is related to the surface coverage of iodine, with the implication that ISCC is the result of adsorption-enhanced decohesion.

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Rossi, M. L., Taylor, C. D., & van Duin, A. C. (2014, December 1). Reduced yield stress for zirconium exposed to iodine: reactive force field simulation. Advanced Modeling and Simulation in Engineering Sciences. Springer. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40323-014-0019-z

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