General information
Organisation
The French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) is a key player in research, development and innovation in four main areas :
• defence and security,
• nuclear energy (fission and fusion),
• technological research for industry,
• fundamental research in the physical sciences and life sciences.
Drawing on its widely acknowledged expertise, and thanks to its 16000 technicians, engineers, researchers and staff, the CEA actively participates in collaborative projects with a large number of academic and industrial partners.
The CEA is established in ten centers spread throughout France
Reference
2025-37135
Description de l'unité
The Fuel Studies and Simulation Service is responsible for the following tasks:
- designing the fuel elements and assemblies that make up the core of nuclear reactors;
- designing, monitoring and performing irradiation experiments to test fuel behaviour under irradiation;
- developing, validating and maintaining calculation tools within the PLEIADES nuclear fuel behaviour simulation platform ;
- developing and maintaining the databases relating to fuel behaviour;
- developing the models to describe both manufacturing processes and fuel behaviour under irradiation in order to inform fuel performance codes used in behaviour studies.
- various theoretical approaches for the simulation of irradiation effects are performed using separate-effects studies to improve knowledge of the behaviour of fuel under irradiation. This is achieved using data from large experimental facilities (synchrotrons and accelerators) or high-performance computing (GENCI, CCRT).
Position description
Category
Materials, solid state physics
Contract
Internship
Job title
Internship: Simulating the impact of irradiation defects upon the nuclear fuel thermal conductivity
Subject
During irradiation in a reactor, nuclear fuel undergoes significant perturbations. In particular, irradiation defects alter its thermal conductivity, which is a key factor in determining safety characteristics. The aim of the internship is to evaluate the impact of these defects using various simulation methods.
Contract duration (months)
6
Job description
When a uranium nucleus splits, the two fission fragments race through the fuel material at nearly 15,000 km/s, releasing all their energy in just a few picoseconds. The crystal lattice is shaken violently before almost returning to its initial state—except for one crucial detail: hundreds of thousands of atoms remain displaced from their sites. These irradiation defects are not just microscopic curiosities; they have a profound impact on the material’s properties. Most importantly, they disrupt the propagation of phonons, the vibrations that carry heat, thereby altering thermal conductivity.
The goal of this internship is to quantify the impact of irradiation defects on the thermal conductivity of UO₂, the standard fuel used in nuclear reactors.
Your work will involve several key steps:
- Quantify irradiation defects: Using a cluster dynamics code (Skorek thesis), you will simulate the evolution of defect populations under different irradiation conditions.
- Linking defects to heat transport: You will combine the simulated defect concentrations with conductivity variation coefficients, some of which are being calculated as part of an ongoing PhD project using classical and ab initio molecular dynamics. You will also extend this dataset by performing similar simulations for missing defect types.
- Developing physical insight: Beyond raw calculations, you will contribute to a theoretical understanding of how defects interact with phonons and reduce heat transport.
- Predicting fuel behavior: Finally, you will simulate how thermal conductivity evolves in real fuel under various temperature and flux histories.
This project is part of a long-term, multi-scale physics program that brings together atomic-scale simulations, mesoscale models, and fuel rod-level studies. The ultimate aim is to develop predictive tools that can guide both research and industrial applications in nuclear energy.
By the end of this internship, you will not only have deepened your expertise in materials science, irradiation physics, and heat transport, but also gained first-hand experience in how different modeling techniques and experiments come together to solve real-world challenges in nuclear technology.
Methods / Means
Atomistic calculations: ab inito (ABINIT, VASP) and/or classical (LAMMPS)
Applicant Profile
- You follow a Master 2 cursus in solid state physics, materials physics, computational physics
- You have a taste for and skills in theory (statistical, quantum and solid state physics) and simulation.
- You are motivated by upstream research applications and would like to work in a rich, multidisciplinary environment (theory, simulation, software, experiments).
Position location
Site
Cadarache
Job location
France, Provence-Côte d'Azur, Bouches du Rhône (13)
Location
Saint Paul lez Durance
Candidate criteria
Recommended training
Master 2 or equivalent in solid state physics, materials physics, computational physics
PhD opportunity
Oui
Requester
Position start date
01/11/2025