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DESC0023777

Project Grant

Overview

Grant Description
Development of silicon carbide fuel rod cladding having improved impact resistance.
Place of Performance
Lynchburg, Virginia 24501-6953 United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Innovative Technologies International was awarded Project Grant DESC0023777 worth $206,487 from the Office of Science in July 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Lynchburg Virginia United States. The grant has a duration of 9 months and was awarded through assistance program 81.049 Office of Science Financial Assistance Program. The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity FY 2023 Phase I Release 2.

SBIR Details

Research Type
SBIR Phase I
Title
Development of Silicon Carbide Fuel Rod Cladding Having Improved Impact Resistance
Abstract
The zirconium-alloy fuel rod cladding typically found in pressurized water reactor (PWR) fuel assemblies can overheat and burst in a loss of coolant accident, exposing the nuclear fuel, and reacting with steam in the core to form an explosive hydrogen mixture that can challenge containment integrity and threaten public health and safety. Accident-tolerant fuel (ATF) aims to prevent this by replacing the zirconium-alloy fuel rod cladding with alternate, less reactive materials. Silicon carbide (SiC) is one of the leading materials being looked to with advancements that include employing multiple layers of solid and fibrous SiC that are combined to provide circumferential and axial tensile strength, prevention of crack propagation, and hermeticity. However, these processes do not fully overcome the inherent brittleness of SiC, and despite its demonstration of corrosion resistance and steady-state behavior under irradiation at PWR operating conditions, its ability to withstand mechanical shocks remains substantially less than the metallic cladding it would replace. How the Problem is Being Addressed: The purpose of this project is to develop metal-reinforced SiC cladding that will withstand mechanical shock without failure while minimizing the amount of metal added to the ATF. Various ductile metals will be embedded in the SiC composite layers during fabrication of fuel rod test segments by either overwrapping the existing SiC fibers with metal fibers or by coating them with a thin metal layer. Phase I will focus on subjecting these test segments to characterization and a series of thermal and mechanical tests, culminating in metallurgical examination of the segments and reporting of their performance results. In Phase II, the bench-scale fabrication and characterization work will be extended to full scale test hardware culminating in fuel assembly impact tests performed at reactor operating temperatures and a full-lateral-scale, partial-length, long-duration flow test. Reactor test specimens will also be fabricated for follow-on irradiation testing.
Topic Code
C56-40v
Solicitation Number
DE-FOA-0002903

Status
(Complete)

Last Modified 7/31/23

Period of Performance
7/10/23
Start Date
4/9/24
End Date
100% Complete

Funding Split
$206.5K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$206.5K
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to DESC0023777

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
DESC0023777
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
Small Business
Awarding Office
892430 SC CHICAGO SERVICE CENTER
Funding Office
892401 SCIENCE
Awardee UEI
JSG1V985GLH9
Awardee CAGE
093C3
Performance District
VA-05
Senators
Mark Warner
Timothy Kaine

Budget Funding

Federal Account Budget Subfunction Object Class Total Percentage
Science, Energy Programs, Energy (089-0222) General science and basic research Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) $206,487 100%
Modified: 7/31/23