The metal fabrication program for the Clinton Engineer Works and the Hanford Engineer Works. Including the Dummy Slug Program and the Unbonded Slug Program -- Project 1553 (open access)

The metal fabrication program for the Clinton Engineer Works and the Hanford Engineer Works. Including the Dummy Slug Program and the Unbonded Slug Program -- Project 1553

The uranium slugs were used as the charge into the pile for the manufacture of minute quantities of plutonium. So little was known of uranium`s commercially adaptable physical properties that it was relegated almost to the category of a laboratory curiosity. A series of experimental and developmental programs were inaugurated to determine not only the extrudability, machinability and other physical properties, but also the influence on these of microscopic quantities of impurities present in the uranium. This historical document describes these early studies in the following sections: exceptional characteristics of the slug program; extrusion; drawing, waging and rolling; outgassing and straightening; Project 1030 (procurement of an additional sixty tons of finished slugs over and above that quantity originally supplied to the Clinton Laboratories) Machining, grinding and grooving; development of canning methods; production of canned slugs; and The Dummy Slug program.
Date: August 1, 1945
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
A visual photographic study of cylinder lubrication (open access)

A visual photographic study of cylinder lubrication

From Summary: "A V-type engine provided with a glass cylinder was used to study visually the lubrication characteristics of an aircraft-type piston. Photographs and data were obtained with the engine motored at engine speeds up to 1000 r.p.m. and constant cylinder-head pressures of 0 and 50 pounds per square inch. A study was made of the orientation of the piston under various operating conditions, which indicated that the piston was inclined with the crown nearest the major-thrust cylinder face throughout the greater part of the cycle. The piston moved laterally in the cylinder under the influence of piston side thrust."
Date: August 1, 1945
Creator: Shaw, Milton C. & Nussdorfer, Theodore
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Effects of Compressibility on the Flow Through Fans and Turbines (open access)

Some Effects of Compressibility on the Flow Through Fans and Turbines

"The laws of conservation of mass, momentum, and energy are applied to the compressible flow through a two-dimensional cascade of airfoils. A fundamental relation between the ultimate upstream and downstream flow angles, the inlet Mach number, and the pressure ratio across the cascade is derived. Comparison with the corresponding relation for incompressible flow shows large differences. The fundamental relation reveals two ranges of flow angles and inlet Mach numbers, for which no ideal pressure ratio exists" (p. 123).
Date: August 1, 1945
Creator: Perl, W. & Epstein, H. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the System Methyl Ether and Methyl Borate-Boron Fluoride Complex (open access)

Investigation of the System Methyl Ether and Methyl Borate-Boron Fluoride Complex

None
Date: August 1, 1945
Creator: McCaulay, D. A. & Rittschof, W. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Slip-Casting of Non-Plastic Refractory Materials (open access)

Slip-Casting of Non-Plastic Refractory Materials

None
Date: August 1, 1945
Creator: Utter, J. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of the Quartz Fiber Balance No. 1 (Information Report) (open access)

A study of the Quartz Fiber Balance No. 1 (Information Report)

This article is a de-classified document produced by Monsanto Chemical Company-Unit III in Dayton, Ohio. The date of the document is August 1, 1945, and the subject is the operation of a quartz fiber microbalance. In particular, the document examines whether temperature fluctuations affect the operation of the instrument. Data was presented to show that the accuracy of the instrument was indeed affected by ambient temperature.
Date: August 1, 1945
Creator: Haring, M. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library