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Fractionation of Fission Products and Heavy Elements by Volatilization Methods (open access)

Fractionation of Fission Products and Heavy Elements by Volatilization Methods

Technical report describing the attempt to separate the long lived fission product oxides by volatilization methods. A fractionization crucible was used. The fractionations give a fair idea of the relative volatilities of the longer lived fission products and also of the degrees of separation of the plutonium oxide or oxides from the fission products.
Date: August 27, 1946
Creator: Erway, N. D. & Simpson, O. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Thermal Expansion of Five Titanium Carbide Cermets from 68 to 1800F (open access)

The Thermal Expansion of Five Titanium Carbide Cermets from 68 to 1800F

This technical report presents measurements of the thermal expansion of five titanium carbide type cermets from 68 to 1800F. These cermets are designated by Kennametal, Inc., as K 138A, K 150A, K 152B and K 162B. They contain from 64 to 80 weight percent titanium carbide, 10 to 30 weight percent metal binder and 6 to 10 weight percent other carbides. The metal binders are cobalt, nickel, and nickel and molybdenum. An attempt was made to calculate the thermal expansion of each type cermet from thermal expansions of the constituents. The expansion of the mixture was computed by weighting and expansions of the constituents according to (1) weight percent of the constituents, (2) volume percent of the constituents and (3) according to a value developed for mixtures by P. S. Turner. It was found that expansions computed according to volume percent and by Turner's method agreed with measured values with +- 5 percent. The values calculated by weight percent were from 5 to 11 percent higher than the observed values. The thermal expansions of these cermets are compared with the expansions of a group of metals and alloys.
Date: August 17, 1962
Creator: Harrington, L. C. & Rowe, G. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Temperature and Heat Flow in a Graphite Electrode (open access)

Temperature and Heat Flow in a Graphite Electrode

In making various experimental heat studies a power producing metal slug is simulated by a slug with a graphite rod electrode of 3/8" diameter inserted lengthwise through it. There is a helium filled annular space between the graphite and the inner surface of the slug cylinder. Radiant heat passes from the electrode to the metal; with proper adjustment of the electrode current the slug in the steady state will therefor "produce" the same amount of energy from its exterior surface as it would under operating conditions. The question arises, however, as to how uniform the electrode temperature is along its length. And also, in some cases one end of the electrode is embedded in the slug metal; it is then desirable to know how much heat flows by conduction from the electrode into the slug.
Date: August 3, 1944
Creator: Schlegel, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Further End Cap Temperature Calculations (open access)

Further End Cap Temperature Calculations

Abstract. Recently (CP-1989) it has been shown that the neutron density, and thus the heat production, at the end of a slug with an A1 cap may be appreciably higher than that at the middle of the slag. A re-examination of earlier temperature calculations is made in light of this effect.
Date: August 16, 1944
Creator: Karush, William; Monk, A. T. & Wilkins, J. Ernest, Jr., 1923-2011
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Possible Applications of Nuclear Energy to the Mining Industry (open access)

Possible Applications of Nuclear Energy to the Mining Industry

American Mining Congress 9/24/58. Summary. Results of a recent underground test by the Atomic Energy Commission indicate possible applications of nuclear energy in mining and allied industries. The safety, feasibility and economy of nuclear detonations have been demonstrated and further considerations reveal a number of interesting situations which might lend themselves to the use of this new type of explosive. Possible applications include stripping, crushing, quarrying, and the exploitation of petroleum products, water resources, and low-grade ore deposits. The heat reservoir created by the explosion might be used to produce steam (and power) to promote the recovery of oil or tar. The mining industry can supply know-how and test sites for future tests.
Date: August 15, 1958
Creator: Rabb, David D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pulsed Neutron Measurement of Control Rod Worth (open access)

Pulsed Neutron Measurement of Control Rod Worth

Reactivity measurements made by the pulsed neutron technique were compared with results obtained by conventional techniques. The pulsed neutron results were in good agreement with those obtained by stable period measurement and rod drop. Differential effectiveness of partially inserted rods was shown to be well represented by elementary perturbation theory. Finally, the pulsed neutron technique was found to be the only good method for measurement of large reactivity changes.
Date: August 25, 1960
Creator: Kolar, O. C. & Kloverstrom, F. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Nucleon-Nucleon Scattering Experiments (open access)

Analysis of Nucleon-Nucleon Scattering Experiments

Presented at session S-1 of the Tenth Annual International Conference on High-Energy Physics, Rochester, New York, August 25- September 1, 1960. The analysis of the latest experiments on p-p scattering at 210 Mev makes it probable that there is a unique set of phase shifts at this energy. Under reasonable assumptions about continuity of the phase shifts and the behavior of the higher partial waves, it is possible to pick a unique solution also at 310 and 95 Mev. This opens a new era in the analysis of nucleon-nucleon scattering, which should lead to a unique model for the scattering matrix up to 400 Mev. Theoretical attempts to calculate a "meson potential" from field theory have not been successful, and the semi-phenomenological potential models, although now in good qualitative agreement with experiment, are not quantitatively reliable. Instead of using these models as a basis for an energy-dependent parameterization of the scattering matrix, as was done by Breit and his collaborators, it is here argued that the Mandelstam representation offers a more reliable starting point. A formalism is developed which allows the one and two pion exchange interaction to be included exactly and gives a Lorentz-invariant description of the rest of …
Date: August 1960
Creator: Noyes, H. Pierre.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Scattering of Neutrons from Polycrystalline Materials (open access)

The Scattering of Neutrons from Polycrystalline Materials

The cross sections for coherent and incoherent scattering of neutrons from polycrystalline materials are discussed. It is shown that the incoherent elastic, incoherent inelastic, and coherent elastic cross sections may be calculated with negligible error using a simple Debye model to give the phonon spectrum. the criterion determining the correct Debye parameter to use is discussed, and it is emphasized that it is important to allow a temperature dependence in this parameter in order to take account of the temperature dependence of the phonon spectrum. The Debye model is not really adequate to calculate the coherent inelastic cross section and gives results which may be in error by about 15% at very low incident energies.
Date: August 1960
Creator: Marshall, W. ǂq (Walter), 1932- & Stuart, Richard N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect Of Densely Ionizing Radiations On Dry Preparations Of Lysozyme, Trypsin, And DNase (open access)

Effect Of Densely Ionizing Radiations On Dry Preparations Of Lysozyme, Trypsin, And DNase

The present studies are carried out in order to elucidate the effect on enzyme activity of different kinds of radiation. Beams of protons and alpha particles from the Berkeley 60-inch cyclotron and beams of accelerated nuclei of helium, carbon 12, oxygen 16, and neon 20 from the Berkeley Heavy Ion Linear Accelerator (HILAC) have been used. With this variety of particles it has been possible to cover a range of LET 10 times greater than previously utilized in similar studies. The unattenuated energy of the different particles is exactly 10 MeV per nucleon for the HILAC radiation and approximately this value for the cyclotron radiation.
Date: August 1958
Creator: Brustad, Tor
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Unstable Particles As Targets In Scattering Experiments (open access)

Unstable Particles As Targets In Scattering Experiments

A general method is suggested for analyzing the scattering of particle A by particle B, leading to three or more final particles, in order to obtain the cross section for the interaction of A with a particle which is virtually contained in B. Binding complications are absent if a plausible assumption about the location and residues of poles in the S-matrix is accepted. The method is useful for unstable particles from which free targets cannot be made; the special examples of pion and neutron targets are discussed in detail.
Date: August 21, 1958
Creator: Chew, Geoffrey F. & Low, Francis E. (Francis Eugene), 1921-2007
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Equipment And Methods For Automatic Track Analysis (open access)

Equipment And Methods For Automatic Track Analysis

The writer has initiated a comprehensive program of equipment development designed to give the maximum practical aid to the physicists and technicians who are carrying out track measurements. Some attention has also been given to developing systems of data handling using International Business Machine (IBM) equipment and Keysort cards. In addition, some of the steps to insure the accuracy of the emulsion data are taken long before the emulsion is studied under the microscope.
Date: August 14, 1958
Creator: Barkas, Walter H. (Walter Henry), 1912-1969
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Code Listings for the Floss III - Compatible Programs Including Floss Type 3 and Type 12, Nomac, and Dash N (open access)

Code Listings for the Floss III - Compatible Programs Including Floss Type 3 and Type 12, Nomac, and Dash N

FLOSS III is a third-generation version of a digital computer program which solves a one-dimensional difference representation of the momentum, energy, continuity, and state equations for turbulent, compressible gas flow in equivalent hydraulic channels. Extensive use of this program has been employed in the design and performance analyses of Pluto-type nuclear heat exchangers, and in the specific case of the Tory II-A test series, agreement was obtained to better than 5% for all experimentally measured parameters. The NOMAC and DASH-N programs combine the effects of up to thirty varieties of channels with the dependent boundary conditions imposed by a common inlet diffuser and exit nozzle. The resulting calculations yield performance information for blow-down facility and ramjet flight condition application of the heat exchanger.
Date: August 9, 1963
Creator: Mintz, Michael D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Remarks on the Double Dispersion Approach to the Bethe-Salpeter Equation (open access)

Remarks on the Double Dispersion Approach to the Bethe-Salpeter Equation

The following remarks are made on the applicability of the double dispersion approach to the Beth-Salpeter equation introduced previously. 1) Any invariant solution of the Bethe-Salpeter equation in ladder approximation satisfies the double dispersion representation when the total energy-momentum is space-lake. 2) There are some exceptional invariant solutions which are not given by the previous method in the equal-mass case, but the existence of such solutions is very unlikely in the unequal-mass case. 3) In the case of the general separated kernel the previous results give the correct solutions even if the kernel does not reproduce the double dispersion representation.
Date: August 7, 1962
Creator: Nakanishi, Noboru
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Minutes of the Conference of Linear Accelerators for High Energies (open access)

Minutes of the Conference of Linear Accelerators for High Energies

During the past year notable progress was made in several laboratories on design for linear accelerators in the energy range up to and above 1 Bev. Interest in linacs for this energy centers on two possible applications: first, as injectors for 300 to 1000 Bev synchrotrons, and second, as sources of intense meson beams. To review this progress, a conference jointly sponsored by the Brookhaven National Laboratory and Yale University was held at Brookhaven during the week of August 20, 1962.
Date: 1962-08-20/1962-08-24
Creator: Blewett, J. P.; van Steenbergen, A.; Knowles, H. B.; Ohnuma, S. & Sinclair, C. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pion Resonances in π⁻-p Interactions at 4.65 Bev/c (open access)

Pion Resonances in π⁻-p Interactions at 4.65 Bev/c

This note describes some results of the study of single pion production in π⁻-p interactions at 4.65 Bev/c, using the BNL 20" Hydrogen Bubble Chamber. It is well known that the observability of some of the particle resonances (e.g. 33 Isobar and η) varies markedly with the energy of the incident particle. The ρ meson has been observed in π⁻-p interactions at 1.25 Bev/c and 1.9 Bev/c incident pion energies. Evidence will be shown that this resonance persists with the much higher incident pion energy used in the present experiment.
Date: August 9, 1962
Creator: Munir, B.A. & Zorn, G. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theory of Final State Interactions (open access)

Theory of Final State Interactions

Using requirements of analyticity and the unitarity of the S-matrix we obtain the dependence of a transition amplitude on the invariant mass of two particles strongly coupled to other two particle channels. As an example, we consider the production of a Σπ state near the Y*₀ resonance assuming it is coupled to a KN state in an s 1/2 state.
Date: August 20, 1962
Creator: Nauenberg, Michael
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fluorox Moving-Bed Process for Producing UO3, UF4, and UF6: Bibliography (open access)

Fluorox Moving-Bed Process for Producing UO3, UF4, and UF6: Bibliography

A partial bibliography of reports on the Fluorox moving-bed for producing UO3, UF4, and UF6 is given.
Date: August 21, 1956
Creator: Moore, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of Materials for a Water Cooled and Moderated Reactor [Secret Version] (open access)

Investigation of Materials for a Water Cooled and Moderated Reactor [Secret Version]

An investigation of the materials for use in the water-moderated and cooled Aray Package Power Reactor (APPR) operating at about 500°F was made. The available literature was analyzed, and the results of the different investigators were compared and averaged. Twenty different materials, including stainless steels, nickel alloys, Stellites and others, were investigated from the point of view of physical properties, susceptibility to radiation damage, and corrosion resistance. Corrosion rates were established for all the materials under various conditions, such as irradiation, flow, weld, stress, and various water conditions. Type-304 stainless steel was selected as the basic structural material. Operating conditions, to maintain minimum corrosion, were established also.
Date: August 1954
Creator: Scheib, Louis
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Reaction of Tritium and Stopcock Grease (open access)

The Reaction of Tritium and Stopcock Grease

This investigation was begun as a result of a mass spectrometric measurement of two samples of tritium which had been stored for several months in Pyrex glass bulbs using stopcocks. The first of these was originally supposed to be of extremely high isotopic and chemical purity. What was observed at this time was 1.45 H had accumulated, and that tritiated methane, CT4, was also present to the extent of 0.18%. A consistent attempt had been made in this sample to protect the gas from contact with the grease by covering the stopcock with mercury. the second sample was a composite of T2 samples of various degrees of enrichment with an isotopic analysis of 92% T. No protection had been attempted during its storage, and 0.86% CT4 to be present.
Date: August 8, 1950
Creator: McInteer, B. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering Testing of the F-48 Columbium Alloy (open access)

Engineering Testing of the F-48 Columbium Alloy

The F-48 columbium base alloy maintains useful mechanical properties for structural application up to 2600 degree F. Short-time tensile and creep rupture strengths have been determined for four F-48 plates, each from a different heat and with a different work history. Flow testing in a high-temperature, high-pressure air stream has been conducted to study oxidation behavior of the bare meatal. Auto-ignition is found to occur at a stream temperature of 2600 degree F. The phenomenon appears to be temperature dependent only. Development of an oxidation protection coating, utilizing environmental flow test apparatus, is proceeding.
Date: August 2, 1961
Creator: Cox, John W. & Werner, Richard W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Remote Plastic Bag Passout Unit For High-Level Radiochemical Operations (open access)

Remote Plastic Bag Passout Unit For High-Level Radiochemical Operations

This system presents a method for making remote sealed-bag passouts from a multicurie-level chemistry processing enclosure. In addition, the polyethylene bags are changed remotely without exposing contaminated surfaces while always maintaining a low leak-rate seal. Our system employs an interchange box (the Passout Box) attached to the chemistry enclosure. Integrated with the box is a hydraulically operated jack that raises and lowers the bags, and a welder-cutter for sealing them. A single master-slave manipulator teamed with the above units handles all operations.
Date: August 1961
Creator: Fleischer, E. S. & Parsons, T. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adsorption of Radioactive Gases on Activated Carbon (open access)

Adsorption of Radioactive Gases on Activated Carbon

The purpose of this experiment is to study the quantitative adsorption characteristics of a carbon adsorber bed receiving a radioactive inert gas in a helium stream. An objective of the experiment is to measure the equilibrium transmission of the radio-active gas through a carbon adsorber in order to determine if radio-active decay of the adsorbed gas permits additional adsorption.
Date: August 31, 1960
Creator: Madey, Richard; Barker, J. J.; Beebe, M. R. & Stephenson, T. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pebble Bed Friction Factor and Thermal Expansion Tests (open access)

Pebble Bed Friction Factor and Thermal Expansion Tests

Tests were conducted to determine the friction factor of randomly packed beds of 3/4-inch diameter spheres in 8-inch and 15-1/4-inch diameter beds, and of 1-1/2-inch diameter spheres in 15-1/4-inch diameter bed. The bed depths were varied in an attempt to isolate the effects of entrance and exit losses. The bed Reynolds number, base on sphere diameter, was varied from 5,000 to 50,000.
Date: August 31, 1960
Creator: Leeman, C. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Sideband Technique In A Variable Frequency NMR Spectrometer (open access)

The Sideband Technique In A Variable Frequency NMR Spectrometer

The purpose of this Note is to point out the advantages of the sideband technique over the derivative method in wideline NMR spectroscopy. In the sideband technique the absorption spectrum is recorded directly and the modulation amplitude is no longer a determining factor in the resolution.
Date: August 1961
Creator: Acrivos, J. V., 1928-
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library