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An international team of researchers has created a nanoceramic coating that not only can withstand the harsh effects of radiation, but also becomes tougher under radiation.







Next-generation nuclear systems will operate at higher temperatures and radiation fields than ever before, producing energy more efficiently and economically.







Interdisciplinary collaboration



Di Fonzo’s lab has been producing aluminium oxide nanoceramics for a few years. Collaborating with Sridharan’s group, which used transmission electron microscopes to conduct microscopy analysis of the coating, the researchers developed a more thorough understanding of its properties. "Di Fonzo’s lab developed the coating and exposed it to radiation, and we conducted analysis and helped them interpret the result,” says Mairov. "We correlated changes they observed in the mechanical properties with changes in the nanoscale structure.”







New material can withstand harmful effects



Sridharan and collaborators at the Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT) in Milan, Italy, characterised an aluminium oxide nanoceramic coating – a new material that can withstand the harmful effects of these high-temperature liquid metals in advanced reactors. This material could be a huge boon to these systems. Many materials tend to harden and crack when exposed to radiation. However, aluminium oxide nanoceramic coatings toughen, ultimately benefitting from irradiation, says Fabio Di Fonzo, a team leader at the IIT Center for Nano Science and Technology. "The pinpoint of our work is the demonstration that an amorphous or nanoceramic material can improve during irradiation, and this opens the path toward a different view of nuclear materials, specifically where coatings are concerned,” he says.







More effective, but also more corrosive



New coolants, such as liquid metals like sodium and lead, are effective at much higher temperatures, but also are much more corrosive to the materials from which a nuclear reactor is made. "There is a preferred use of metallic materials for structural components, but many of these materials cannot withstand high-temperature corrosion in advanced reactors,” says Kumar Sridharan, a distinguished research professor in engineering physics and materials science and engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "Corrosion is a surface phenomenon, so if you put coating on the surface, you need that coating to withstand high radiation doses without becoming embrittled.”







Water as primary coolant in reactors



Traditionally, water has been used as the primary coolant in reactors, absorbing the heat released from fission reactions. Though water poses fewer risks of corrosion damage to materials, there are also limits to the temperatures up to which water-cooled reactors can operate - and in advanced reactors, increasing their temperature is the best way to increase energy production.







Making next-generation reactors



The researchers anticipate that this unique material will be able to make next-generation reactors more safe and economical overall. "It’s a paradigm shift in the field, because so far there has not been a material that actually exploits radiation,” says García Ferré. "With this new material, we benefit from a radiation environment to tailor the evolution of the mechanical properties of the material. In particular, we are able to have a material that, by the end of its lifetime, has similar mechanical properties as when it was first exposed to radiation.”





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