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Electron radiation induced nickel nanoparticles formation in ZnCl2-KCl eutectic molten salt using X-ray absorption spectroscopy

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-07, 19:49 authored by N Patra, A. Ramos Ballesteros, K. Iwamatsu, K.K. Bawane, R. Gakhar, J.A. LaVerne, A.I. Frenkel, J.F. Wishart, S.K. Gill
Understanding the speciation and local structure of metal solutes in molten salts is essential for predicting thermal properties and the redox and corrosion potentials of molten salts for next-generation nuclear reactors and concentrated solar power plant applications. We employ X-ray absorption spectroscopy combined with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements to investigate the effects of electron irradiation on 0.1 wt % NiCl2 dissolved in molten eutectic KCl-ZnCl2 salt. Radiation-driven reduction of Ni2+ leading to nucleation and growth of Ni nanoparticles is studied as a function of electron dose (3–15 MGy) and temperature. Quantitative X-ray absorption near edge structure and linear combination fitting are utilized to investigate the extent of reduction as a function of the electron dose and temperature. A multiple-scattering (MS) approach is used for extended X-ray absorption fine structure analysis to deduce the size of the Ni nanoparticles formed and to understand the effect of the dose on the local structure of the nanoparticles. EPR studies on solidified NiCl2 dissolved in molten eutectic KCl-ZnCl2 salt show the formation of magnetic Ni nanoparticles.

History

Temporal Coverage

2024

Extent

Page 9105-9115

Publisher

J. Phys. Chem. C

Source

Volume 128

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    Radiation Laboratory

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