Design study GEO-14, Segregation of Redox and TBP UO{sub 3} production, revised March 29, 1951 (open access)

Design study GEO-14, Segregation of Redox and TBP UO{sub 3} production, revised March 29, 1951

Authorization has been received in the form of Modification No. 5 to Directive HW-158, dated March 23, 1951 to provide the necessary equipment and piping in the currently planned UO{sub 3} plant to permit the segregation of UO{sub 3} arising from the processing of stored metal waste (TBP) from that arising from ``current`` pile operation (Redox). In anticipation of this, the S Division, Manufacturing Divisions, requested that a study be made of the feasibility and cost of providing facilities for such segregation. This report is the result of that study. It concludes that by providing additional liquid storage and handling equipment, the desired segregation can be accomplished at a cost estimated to be approximately $128,000. $106,500 would be for Construction and $21,500 for Engineering. The schedule for this work will be reflected in the forthcoming modification to the C-361 Project Proposal. The general method of operation is alternately to store and process solution from TBP and Redox. The solution from TEP will be of a composition equivalent to the formula UNH and will require five days each week to process in the decomposition pots. The solution from Redox is received as 60% UNH and is batch concentrated in the storage …
Date: March 31, 1951
Creator: Ludlow, J. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies on Filtration of Monodisperse Aerosols (open access)

Studies on Filtration of Monodisperse Aerosols

None
Date: March 31, 1951
Creator: La Mer, V K
System: The UNT Digital Library
DR Pile lattice conductance study (open access)

DR Pile lattice conductance study

The start-up of the DR Pile at a time when every effort was being made to increase the power levels of the older piles, suggested the possibility of studying, during the early damage period, some of the conditions which were limiting the operating levels of the old piles. Of the operational limitations restricting the power level of the old piles, the maximum graphite temperature is the most severe and actually determines the operating level of the B, D, and F Piles and, to some extent, the H Pile. Though it was known that irradiation damage of the central part of the old piles had been arrested by the increased temperatures which resulted from the replacement of helium by carbon dioxide as the pile atmosphere, the extent of damage to be expected at the new DR Pile, where graphite temperatures were to be maintained as high as possible from the start, was not known, except for the H Pile startup where conditions were somewhat different. This report is intended to be a summary of the lattice conductance variations at the DR Pile during the first five months of operation. From the recorded conductances an attempt has been made to estimate the …
Date: March 31, 1951
Creator: Wheelock, C. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library