Abstract
Abstract Spent fuel from commercial nuclear reactors consists mainly of uranium oxide. However, the changes that occur during reactor operations have a profound effect on chemical and physical properties of this material. Heat build-up in the fuel pellet during reactor operations can cause redistribution of fission products. The fission products may aggregate in one of three types of precipitates; gaseous, metallic, or oxide, depending on the burn-up and in-core treatment. Radiation damage and variations in fission and neutron capture yields across the fuel pellets lead to Pu enrichment and increased porosity with increasing burn-up. A more porous surface may make the fuel more susceptible to oxidative dissolution. As the level of actinides and fission products increases, the fuel may become more resistant to oxidation. These changes may limit the usefulness of natural uraninite (UO 2 ) analogues for predicting the geological behaviour of spent fuel disposed in a high-level waste (HLW) repository. In this Chapter, an overview of spent fuel microstructure, radiolytic effects, and alteration processes is presented. Evidence for Np incorporation into U 6+ phases, the nature of Pu surface precipitates on spent fuel, and evidence for the preferential removal of 4d-metals from ε-particles in corroded spent fuel is discussed. Understanding the potential mechanisms of radionuclide attenuation through sorption and/or incorporation requires techniques with both high spatial resolution and excellent elemental sensitivity.
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