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An exciting opportunity awaits in a dynamic research environment focused on nuclear decommissioning and materials science. As part of a collaborative PhD program, you will tackle significant challenges related to the safe disposition of plutonium. This role offers access to state-of-the-art facilities and the chance to work with leading experts in the field. You will gain invaluable experience through hands-on research, technical training, and opportunities for local and international collaboration. Join a supportive team dedicated to advancing knowledge and innovation in nuclear waste management.
About Us
The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) has established the Plutonium Ceramics Academic Hub at the Universities of Manchester and Sheffield (PUMaS), focused on underpinning the development of ceramic materials and technologies for the safe and secure disposition of the UK’s inventory of plutonium. This represents one of the most significant challenges facing the UKs programme of remediation and restoration of the Sellafield site, expected to be complete in the 2100s.
The PUMaS hub will support ~20 PhD students along with research staff, creating a vibrant and dynamic research environment with PhD cohort training, skills and networking events built into the PhD programmes. As a member of the PUMaS hub you will be based within state-of-the-art facilities such as the Henry Royce Institute, the UKs centre for advanced materials science, giving access to and training on leading materials science and engineering techniques.
This PhD will include industrial supervision from either NDA, Sellafield Ltd. or Nuclear Waste Services (NWS) to provide focus on tackling industrially significant issues with regards to the safe and secure disposition of the UKs inventory of plutonium and this will permit exchange of your work directly to the industry partners. Furthermore, there will be extensive opportunities to travel and attend conferences and meetings within the UK and internationally as well as collaborate with our academic and industry partners – accessing national or international facilities, for example at the UK National Nuclear Laboratory (UKNNL), Diamond Light Source (DLS) or the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF).
About the Project:
Disposal mixed uranium and plutonium oxide (D-MOx) is a potential candidate for disposition of the UKs Pu inventory, immobilising it within a stable form prior to disposal in a geological disposal facility, a highly engineered subterranean structure designed to store the waste for >100,000 years. Historically, two industrial scale powder processing routes have been used to manufacture MOx materials, the micronized master blend (MIMAS) and the Short Binderless Route (SBR). Due to the differences in the powder mixing the resultant MOx pellets contain varying levels of Pu homogeneity in the final product, for D-MOx the addition of neutron poisons during the different powder processing stages may also lead to variation in their homogeneity through the pellet. It is unclear the effect that these Pu rich islands and the degree of neutron poison homogeneity will affect the performance under disposal conditions, where issues such as aqueous durability are a key concern due to groundwater penetration. Thus, to inform D-MOx manufacturing processes an understanding of the effect of the Pu and neutron poison homogeneity on performance this project will look to answer the following using surrogate (non-active) and uranium active trials;
For this project, you will be based at the University of Manchester within the Nuclear Fuels and Radioactive Waste and Environment research groups. You will have access to state-of-the-art nuclear laboratories within the Henry Royce Institute and National Nuclear User Facilities (NNUF) for Radioactive waste managing and environmental remediation (RADER). You will utilise (where necessary), radioactive materials handling facilities, advanced materials characterisation techniques such as scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) to study the materials at the micro and nanoscale and analytical techniques such as mass spectrometry (MS) as well as access to national and international facilities for example synchrotron based experiments.
Expectations and Rewards
During the PhD you will be expected to:
There will be many rewards: