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Scaling Up Dislocation Dynamics Simulations for the Study of Nuclear Material Aging


Thesis topic details

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

SL-DES-26-0428  

Thesis topic details

Category

Engineering science

Thesis topics

Scaling Up Dislocation Dynamics Simulations for the Study of Nuclear Material Aging

Contract

Thèse

Job description

Materials used in nuclear energy production systems are subjected to mechanical, thermal, and irradiation condition, leading to a progressive evolution of their mechanical properties. Understanding and modeling the underlying physical mechanisms involved is a significant challenge.

Dislocation Dynamics simulation aims to understand the behavior of the material at the crystal scale by explicitly simulating the interactions between dislocations, microstructure, and crystal defects induced by irradiation. The CEA, CNRS, and INRIA have been developing the NUMODIS calculation code for this purpose since 2007 (Etcheverry 2015, Blanchard 2017, Durocher 2018).

More specific work on zirconium alloys (Drouet 2014, Gaumé 2017, Noirot 2025) has allowed the validation and enhancement of NUMODIS's ability to handle these individual physical mechanisms by directly comparing them with experiments, through in situ tensile tests under a transmission electron microscope. However, these studies are limited by the current inability of the NUMODIS code to handle a sufficiently high and representative number of defects, and thus to obtain the mechanical behavior of the grain (~10 microns).

The objective of the proposed work is to implement new algorithms to extend the functionalities of the code, propose and test new numerical algorithms, parallelize certain parts still processed sequentially, and ultimately demonstrate the code's ability to simulate the deformation channeling mechanism in an irradiated zirconium grain.

The work will focus primarily on algorithms for calculating velocities, junction formation, and time integration, requiring both mastery of dislocation physics and the corresponding numerical methods. Algorithms for integration recently proposed by Stanford University and LLNL will be implemented and tested for this purpose.

Significant work will also be devoted to adapting the current code (hybrid MPI-OpenMP parallelism) to new computing machines that favor GPU processors, through the adoption of the Kokkos programming model.

Building on both previous experimental and numerical work, this study will conclude with the demonstration of NUMODIS's ability to simulate the channeling mechanism in an irradiated zirconium grain and to identify or even model the main physical and mechanical parameters involved.

At the interface between several fields, the candidate must have a good foundation in physics and/or mechanics, while being comfortable with programming and numerical analysis.

References:
1. Etcheverry Arnaud, Simulation de la dynamique des dislocations à très grande échelle, Université Bordeaux I (2015).
2. Blanchard, Pierre, Algorithmes hiérarchiques rapides pour l’approximation de rang faible des matrices, applications à la physique des matériaux, la géostatistique et l’analyse de données, Université Bordeaux I (2017).
3. Durocher, Arnaud, Simulations massives de dynamique des dislocations : fiabilité et performances sur architectures parallèles et distribuées (2018).
4. Drouet, Julie, Étude expérimentale et modélisation numérique du comportement plastique
des alliages de zirconium sous et après irradiation (2014).
5. Gaumé, Marine, Étude des mécanismes de déformation des alliages de zirconium
après et sous irradiation (2017).
6. Noirot, Pascal, Etude expérimentale et simulation numérique, à l'échelle nanométrique et en temps réel, des mécanismes de déformation des alliages de zirconium après irradiation (2025).

University / doctoral school

Sciences Mécaniques et Energétiques, Matériaux et Géosciences (SMEMaG)
Paris-Saclay

Thesis topic location

Site

Saclay

Requester

Position start date

01/09/2026

Person to be contacted by the applicant

DUPUY Laurent laurent.dupuy@cea.fr
CEA
DES/DRMP/SRMA/LC2M
CEA Saclay
SRMA bat 455 p123
01.69.08.53.15

Tutor / Responsible thesis director

ONIMUS Fabien fabien.onimus@cea.fr
CEA
DES/DRMP/SRMA/LA2M
Service de Recherches en Matériaux et procédés Avancés, CEA-Saclay
01-69-08-44-29

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