Abstract

The microstructural evolution of Dy2O3-TiO2 powder mixtures during ball milling and post-milled annealing was investigated using XRD, SEM, TEM, and DSC. At high ball-milling rotation speeds, the mixtures were fined, homogenized, nanocrystallized, and later completely amorphized, and the transformation of Dy2O3 from the cubic to the monoclinic crystal structure was observed. The amorphous transformation resulted from monoclinic Dy2O3, not from cubic Dy2O3. However, at low ball-milling rotation speeds, the mixtures were only fined and homogenized. An intermediate phase with a similar crystal structure to that of cubic Dy2TiO5 was detected in the amorphous mixtures annealed from 800 to 1000 °C, which was a metastable phase that transformed to orthorhombic Dy2TiO5 when the annealing temperature was above 1050 °C. However, at the same annealing temperatures, pyrochlore Dy2Ti2O7 initially formed and subsequently reacted with the remaining Dy2O3 to form orthorhombic Dy2TiO5 in the homogenous mixtures. The evolutionary mechanism of powder mixtures during ball milling and subsequent annealing was analyzed.

Highlights

  • High-energy ball milling has been widely used to prepare various types of materials, such as supersaturated solid solutions, metastable crystalline materials [1], quasicrystal phases [2], nanostructured materials [3], and amorphous alloys [4]

  • A large amount of mechanical energy is transformed into intrinsic energy in the target materials, which induces the formation of numerous defects in the crystal structure, such as vacancies, interstitials, cavities and dislocations, which are always in a non-equilibrium state [7,8,9]

  • Bulk Dy2 TiO5 prepared by ball milling and sintering has been used in Russian power plant water reactors, such as MIR and VVER-1000 RCCAs [12,13], because of the excellent nucleon characteristics of the element dysprosium, as natural dysprosium consists of five stable isotopes with high thermal neutron absorption cross sections

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Summary

Introduction

High-energy ball milling has been widely used to prepare various types of materials, such as supersaturated solid solutions, metastable crystalline materials [1], quasicrystal phases [2], nanostructured materials [3], and amorphous alloys [4]. The defects and structural disorders will increase the mobility of atomic diffusion and induce chemical reactions amongst components that are not present under equilibrium conditions [10]. Based on its excellent characteristics, ball milling was used to prepare bulk Dy2 TiO5 , which can be used as a neutron absorber in control rods in nuclear power plants. Control rods are very important in both operating and accident conditions because the nucleon reactivity must be controlled in order to safely operate a nuclear reactor [11]. Bulk Dy2 TiO5 prepared by ball milling and sintering has been used in Russian power plant water reactors, such as MIR and VVER-1000 RCCAs [12,13], because of the excellent nucleon characteristics of the element dysprosium, as natural dysprosium consists of five stable isotopes with high thermal neutron absorption cross sections.

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