Oxygen potential of uranium--plutonium oxide as determined by controlled- atmosphere thermogravimetry (open access)

Oxygen potential of uranium--plutonium oxide as determined by controlled- atmosphere thermogravimetry

The oxygen-to-metal atom ratio, or O/M, of solid solution uranium- plutonium oxide reactor fuel is a measure of the concentration of crystal defects in the oxide which affect many fuel properties, particularly, fuel oxygen potential. Fabrication of a high-temperature oxygen electrode, employing an electro-active tip of oxygen-deficient solid-state electrolyte, intended to confirm gaseous oxygen potentials is described. Uranium oxide and plutonium oxide O/M reference materials were prepared by in situ oxidation of high purity metals in the thermobalance. A solid solution uranium-plutonium oxide O/M reference material was prepared by alloying the uranium and plutonium metals in a yttrium oxide crucible at 1200$sup 0$C and oxidizing with moist He at 250$sup 0$C. The individual and solid solution oxides were isothermally equilibrated with controlled oxygen potentials between 800 and 1300$sup 0$C and the equilibrated O/ M ratios calculated with corrections for impurities and buoyancy effects. Use of a reference oxygen potential of -100 kcal/mol to produce an O/M of 2.000 is confirmed by these results. However, because of the lengthy equilibration times required for all oxides, use of the O/M reference materials rather than a reference oxygen potential is recommended for O/M analysis methods calibrations. (auth)
Date: October 1, 1975
Creator: Swanson, G.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library