TY - JOUR
T1 - Morphological Characterization of Uranyl Fluoride Particles via Atomic Force Microscopy
AU - Miskowiec, Andrew
AU - Neu, Jenn
AU - Salvador, Christian
AU - Collins, Liam
AU - Manard, Benjamin T.
AU - Brubaker, Zachary E.
AU - Cheng, Mengdawn
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Nuclear Society.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Uranium hexafluoride (UF6) undergoes a rapid hydrolysis reaction when exposed to atmospheric water. In addition to producing hazardous HF gas, the hydrolysis reaction produces uranyl fluoride (UO2F2), a radioactive solid phase particulate material. Because of the technological utility of UF6 in the nuclear fuel cycle, understanding the transport properties of UO2F2 aerosol produced via UF6 hydrolysis is important for accident scenarios. Moreover, the fundamental chemical and physical properties of the UF6 hydrolysis reaction are not completely understood. Recently, several experiments on the aerosol phase properties of UO2F2 produced in this way have shown that under most relevant conditions, the particle size distribution (PSD) of UO2F2 can be extremely small, approximately 3 to 5 nm, which is well below the threshold that can be routinely observed via scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Although readily observable in the aerosol phase, observation of nanometer-sized particles in the condensed phase (i.e. deposited on surfaces) remains a challenge. Here, we have used atomic force microscopy (AFM) to study the PSD and morphological characteristics of UO2F2 deposited at low and high concentrations under different humidity conditions, a primary variable in the hydrolysis reaction. We find strong agreement between PSD measured in the aerosol phase via scanning mobility particle sizing and PSD measured via AFM, with particle sizes peaked below 4 nm for low-humidity conditions. At higher humidity, the distribution is centered around 5 to 10 nm but extends up to 20 nm. These results are in stark contrast to previous measurements using SEM that show PSD on the order of 300- to 1000-nm particle sizes; moreover, these are the first direct measurements of individual particles of UO2F2 having been produced via UF6 hydrolysis deposited on surfaces. These measurements, therefore, open a new avenue for collecting and detecting UO2F2 in the condensed phase and further refine the PSD, which is critical for environmental transport determinations.
AB - Uranium hexafluoride (UF6) undergoes a rapid hydrolysis reaction when exposed to atmospheric water. In addition to producing hazardous HF gas, the hydrolysis reaction produces uranyl fluoride (UO2F2), a radioactive solid phase particulate material. Because of the technological utility of UF6 in the nuclear fuel cycle, understanding the transport properties of UO2F2 aerosol produced via UF6 hydrolysis is important for accident scenarios. Moreover, the fundamental chemical and physical properties of the UF6 hydrolysis reaction are not completely understood. Recently, several experiments on the aerosol phase properties of UO2F2 produced in this way have shown that under most relevant conditions, the particle size distribution (PSD) of UO2F2 can be extremely small, approximately 3 to 5 nm, which is well below the threshold that can be routinely observed via scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Although readily observable in the aerosol phase, observation of nanometer-sized particles in the condensed phase (i.e. deposited on surfaces) remains a challenge. Here, we have used atomic force microscopy (AFM) to study the PSD and morphological characteristics of UO2F2 deposited at low and high concentrations under different humidity conditions, a primary variable in the hydrolysis reaction. We find strong agreement between PSD measured in the aerosol phase via scanning mobility particle sizing and PSD measured via AFM, with particle sizes peaked below 4 nm for low-humidity conditions. At higher humidity, the distribution is centered around 5 to 10 nm but extends up to 20 nm. These results are in stark contrast to previous measurements using SEM that show PSD on the order of 300- to 1000-nm particle sizes; moreover, these are the first direct measurements of individual particles of UO2F2 having been produced via UF6 hydrolysis deposited on surfaces. These measurements, therefore, open a new avenue for collecting and detecting UO2F2 in the condensed phase and further refine the PSD, which is critical for environmental transport determinations.
KW - atomic force microscopy
KW - imaging
KW - Uranium hexafluoride
KW - uranyl fluoride
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85215423450&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00295639.2024.2440686
DO - 10.1080/00295639.2024.2440686
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85215423450
SN - 0029-5639
JO - Nuclear Science and Engineering
JF - Nuclear Science and Engineering
ER -