3 research outputs found

    Protective Cr Coatings with ZrO2/Cr Multilayers for Zirconium Fuel Claddings

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    This article described the protective properties of Cr coatings with a barrier layer composed of ZrO2/Cr multilayers deposited onto E110 zirconium alloy. The coatings with a ZrO2/Cr multilayer thickness of 100, 250, and 750 nm and single-layer (1.5 Β΅m) ZrO2 barrier were obtained by multi-cathode magnetron sputtering in Ar + O2 atmosphere. Then, cracking resistance and oxidation behavior were studied under conditions of thermal cycling (1000 Β°C) in air and high-temperature oxidation at 1200-1400 Β°C in a water steam. The role of the ZrO2/Cr multilayers and multilayer thickness on cracking resistance of the experimental coatings and oxidation resistance of the coated E110 alloy was discussed. It was shown that the coatings with more quantity of the ZrO2/Cr multilayers have higher cracking resistance, but such types of samples have a large amount of coating spallation under thermal cycling. The high-temperature steam oxidation (1200-1400 Β°C) demonstrated that interfaces of the ZrO2/Cr multilayers can act as a source of cavities formed by the Kirkendall mechanism that results in accelerating Cr-Zr interdiffusion for Cr-coated E110 alloy

    Possible explanation of the neutrino signal from SN1987A detected with the LSD

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    On February 23 1987 in 2:52 UT the neutrino telescope LSD under Mont Blanc detected neutrino signal, which could not be explained within the framework of the standard collapse model. We show that the LSD signal could be a consequence of the detection of gamma-quanta emitted from neutron-capture reactions on by iron nuclei contained in the composition of the experimental setup. Neutrons are produced in neutrino-nuclei reactions in the surrounding granite rock and steel structures of the detector

    Possible explanation of the neutrino signal from SN1987A detected with the LSD

    No full text
    On February 23 1987 in 2:52 UT the neutrino telescope LSD under Mont Blanc detected neutrino signal, which could not be explained within the framework of the standard collapse model. We show that the LSD signal could be a consequence of the detection of gamma-quanta emitted from neutron-capture reactions on by iron nuclei contained in the composition of the experimental setup. Neutrons are produced in neutrino-nuclei reactions in the surrounding granite rock and steel structures of the detector
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