4.7 Article

Monitoring of alpha-decay radiation damage in a 241Am-doped glass-ceramic material

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MATERIALS
Volume 580, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnucmat.2023.154397

Keywords

Glass -ceramic; Nuclear waste; Alpha -decay radiation; Apatite; Amorphization; Swelling

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The evolution of a 241 Am doped aluminoborosilicate glass-ceramic under alpha-decay radiation was investigated. The excess of solubility limit led to the formation of apatite-like silicate crystals with a hexagonal morphology. Structural and microstructural changes were observed over 8 years, including radiation-induced amorphization and modification of connectivity in the crystals. The transformation from crystalline to amorphous state was accompanied by volume increase and decohesion from the glassy matrix.
The evolution under alpha-decay radiation of a 241 Am doped aluminoborosilicate glass-ceramic was in-vestigated in hot cells DHA-ATALANTE facility in CEA. The cumulative La2O3 -Am2O3 solubility limit was voluntarily exceeded, leading to the formation of apatite-like silicate crystals. The crystals, with a hexagonal-shaped morphology, that is characteristic of apatite crystals, have a composition and a cell pa-rameter close to those expected for an apatite phase of stoichiometric composition Ca2(La,Am)8(SiO4)6O2. Structural and microstructural evolutions under alpha self-irradiation were followed for 8 years by regu-larly analyzing the crystals and the residual glassy matrix. The evolution of the X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) patterns is the result of a progressive radiation-induced amorphization in apatite crystals. The fully amor-phous state is reached at an alpha-decay dose of around 3 x 10 18 alpha/g. Raman analyses suggest a modi-fication of the connectivity of the SiO4 tetrahedra of apatite crystals, with a transition from isolated SiO4 units in the crystalline state to connected SiO4 units in the metamict state. The crystalline-to-amorphous transformation is accompanied by an increase in macroscopic volume (swelling), highlighted by RAMAN imaging. This macroscopic dimensional change is also associated to a decohesion of the crystals from the glassy matrix, observed by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). However, optical and SEM images of the glass-ceramic surface do not reveal any significant cracks in the residual glass under alpha self-irradiation, thus showing a quite good stability of this glass-ceramic material.(c) 2023 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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