Effects of High Burnup on Natural Uranium

Abstract
Results are given from experiments in which unrestrained specimens of unalloyed natural uranium were irradiated to total atom burnups ranging up to 1.82% (15,500 Mwd/T) at temperatures from 50° to 220°C. A few specimens were also thermally cycled. The specimens represented material with four different fabrication histories: (1) rolled at 300°C, (2) rolled at 300°C and quenched from the beta phase, (3) rolled at 300°C, quenched from the beta phase, and recrystallized in the alpha phase, and (4) rolled at 600°C. It was found that the 300°C rolled specimens in the as-rolled condition grew in length at a rapid rate when subjected to irradiation, although they maintained relatively smooth surfaces. The growth rate of this material appeared to decrease with increasing irradiation temperature. The beta-quenched specimens were much more stable dimensionally but developed roughened surfaces. The 600°C rolled material showed intermediate behavior. It was concluded that 300°C rolled and beta-quenched uranium can wit...

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