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Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Project Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending June 10, 1952 (open access)

Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Project Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending June 10, 1952

This quarterly progress details ongoing research at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory as a part of the Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Project. Topics discussed include reactor theory and design, [part two is not included], materials research, and appendixes with information on analytical chemical studies.
Date: October 23, 1952
Creator: Briant, R. C.; Buck, J. H.; Miller, A. J. & Cottrell, William B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Chemistry Division Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending March 26, 1951 (open access)

Analytical Chemistry Division Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending March 26, 1951

Technical report covering experiments happening on the Analytical Chemistry Division's sites at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Includes information on ionic analyses, radio-chemical analyses, spectrochemical analyses, service analyses, inorganic preparations, analytical chemical control of homogeneous reactor solution, optical and electron microscopy, and service analyses for the period ending March 26, 1951. [From Abstract]
Date: October 8, 1951
Creator: Kelley, M. T. & Susano, C. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Chemistry Division Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending March 26, 1952 (open access)

Analytical Chemistry Division Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending March 26, 1952

This quarterly progress report discusses in detail the work done by the Analytical Chemistry Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. In particular, this report discusses the research and development work ongoing at the X-10 Site and the Y-12 Site.
Date: October 2, 1952
Creator: Kelley, M. T. & Susano, C. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aqueous Uranium Slurry Studies (open access)

Aqueous Uranium Slurry Studies

A summary of the laboratory development program on aqueous uranium slurry fuels for the Homogenous Reactor Project during the period April 1951 through March 1953 is presented. These investigations were devoted primarily to a study of the uranium oxides in aqueous suspensions. It was concluded that U(VI) was most likely to be the stable valence state in such slurry fuels and it was shown that β-UO3·H2O platelet crystals were the stable modification at 250°C. Very pure slurries of β-UO3·H2O platelets, uranium concentration of 250g/liter and average particle size of about 10 μ, had favorable settling rates and could be easily redispersed. Their viscosity and corrosion rate in stainless steel were comparable with those in water. Exposure of these slurries to pile radiation disclosed that radiolytic hydrogen and oxygen gas pressure comparable in magnitude to those of uncatalyzed uranyl sulfate solutions could be expected. Fission products in the irradiated slurries were predominantly associated with the solids. Radiation also tended to promote caking of these solids on the walls of the radiation bombs. Uranyl phosphate and the magnesium uranates were briefly investigated as alternate system but were not found satisfactory. The program was discontinued before the feasibility of uranium slurries for reactor …
Date: October 20, 1955
Creator: Blomeke, J. O.; Bamberg, J. L.; Blomeke, J. O.; Bruce, F. R.; Fulmer, J. M.; McBride, J. P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Basic Gamma-Ray Data for ART Heat Deposition Calculations (open access)

Basic Gamma-Ray Data for ART Heat Deposition Calculations

In order that fairly accurate thermal stress calculations can be made on the ART, it is necessary to have a reasonable picture of the temperature distribution in the reactor. To get the temperature distributions, and to determine cooling requirements in various parts of the reactor, one must know the heat deposition rates due to alpha particles, beta rays, gamma rays, and neutrons in all parts of the reactor. The present report contains only the basic physical data necessary to determine the heat deposition rates due to gamma rays. Neutron fluxes in the core and reflector regions of the ART are to be obtained from two-dimensional multigroup calculations (performed by the Curtiss-Wright Corporation). These fluxes, in conjunction with the neutron absorption cross sections, determine the neutron capture and inelastic scattering rates in the core and in the reflector. The data in this report permit the calculation of the number of gamma rays originating at various energies at every point in the core and reflector.
Date: October 3, 1956
Creator: Bertini, H. W.; Copenhaver, C. M.; Perry, A. M. & Stevenson, R. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Biocoenetic Process in an Estuarine Phytoplankton Community (open access)

The Biocoenetic Process in an Estuarine Phytoplankton Community

Report discussing "[a]n ecological theory of adaptation at the community level of organization" focused around an estuary and its resident life forms.
Date: October 1966
Creator: Patten, Bernard C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Technology Division Annual Progress Report: for Period Ending May 31, 1969 (open access)

Chemical Technology Division Annual Progress Report: for Period Ending May 31, 1969

Report documenting the ongoing research and development of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Chemical Technology Division.
Date: October 1969
Creator: Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Chemical Technology Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Combination of Hydrogen and Oxygen in Platinum Catalyzed Flow Reactions (open access)

The Combination of Hydrogen and Oxygen in Platinum Catalyzed Flow Reactions

An extension of the concepts advanced by Langmuir regarding the nature of the platinum catalyzed oxidation of hydrogen and the application of the resulting theory to the experimental data observed by Ranschoff and Spiewak for an HRE type recombiner indicates that their data are corrected by the dimensionless equation (see report) equally well, with a mean deviation of 3.8 percent. This expression is recommended as a basis for the design of catalytic recombiners. The catalytic combinations is pictured as consisting of two surface chemical mechanisms, one of which is oxygen diffusion controlled, the other hydrogen diffusion regulated, the mechanism "change-over" occurring at that point in the recombiner where the components are arriving at the catalyst surface by diffusion in stoichiometric proportions. The catalyst volume requirements for three two portions of the bed are shown to be (see report). The hydrogen mole fraction at the mechanism "change-over" point is (see report). And the relationship between the two mass transfer coefficients is (see report). Methods for evaluating the necessary transport properties of the ternary system steam-hydrogen-oxygen for carrying out design calculations are summarized, and the new significant parameters are tabulated and plotted to facilitate these calculations. The question of non-uniform velocity profiles …
Date: October 26, 1954
Creator: Garber, Harold J. & Peebles, Fred N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Decontamination of EGCR Charge and Service Machines (open access)

Decontamination of EGCR Charge and Service Machines

Methods for the noncorrosive removal of volatile fission products and UO2 dust from carbon steel and stainless steel have been developed. Procedures for applying these methods to the decontamination of the EGCR charge and service machines are described.
Date: October 13, 1960
Creator: Meservey, A. B.; Chilton, J. M. & Ferguson, D. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Description of the Ibm-704 Code for the Calculation of Concentration Transients in the HRT (open access)

Description of the Ibm-704 Code for the Calculation of Concentration Transients in the HRT

The calculation of concentration transients caused by mixing in the interconnected three-body system of the fuel dump tanks, core and blanket has been coded for the IBM-704. The system of equations includes material balances, the dependence of critical temperature on core and blanket concentrations, and the effect of temperature (density) changes on flow rates. The controllable flow rates, the fuel dump tank weight and the initial conditions are input variables. Outputs include core and blanket concentrations, critical temperature, concentration ratio and power ratio. The code has been used to compute transients during a number of operating situations.
Date: October 4, 1960
Creator: Piper, H. B. & Haubenreich, P. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Corrosion Products and Additives in Homogeneous Reactor Fuel III. Polarographic Determination of Iron(III) (open access)

Determination of Corrosion Products and Additives in Homogeneous Reactor Fuel III. Polarographic Determination of Iron(III)

An ion-exchange -- polarographic method was developed for the determination of iron(III) in Homogeneous Reactor Fuels. Copper, which interferes, is removed from the fuel by plating it onto a cadmium coil. Iron is oxidized to iron(III) by potassium permanganate, and the iron(III) is separated from interfering metal ions by ion exchange on a Dowex 1 resin column that is in the sulfate form. The iron(III) in the effluent is determined polarographically in 0.5 M sodium citrate solution as supporting electrolyte. A fairly well defined polarographic wave is obtained for the iron(III) → iron(II) reduction at a half-wave potential of approximately -0.15 v. vs. the S.C.E. The relative standard deviation of the data for 2 µg of iron(III) per ml of solution in the polarographic cell was 6.5%; for 10 µg of iron(III) per ml it was 0.6%.
Date: October 24, 1955
Creator: Horton, A. D.; Thomason, P. F. & Raaen, H. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Free Acid in Highly Radioactive Solutions by Remotely Controlled Conductometric Titration (open access)

Determination of Free Acid in Highly Radioactive Solutions by Remotely Controlled Conductometric Titration

A conductometric titration method described by Goldstein was adapted for use in a remote analytical facility. The results obtained by mean of experiments made prior to this adaptation indicated that methanol is the most satisfactory medium in which to determine excess sulfuric acid in uranyl sulfate solutions that stimulate Homogeneous Reactor type fuel. When methanol is used, the complexation of hydrolyzable ions with sodium fluoride, as described by Pepkowitz, Sabol, and Dustin, is not required.
Date: October 13, 1960
Creator: Corcoran*, R. E.; Zittel, H. E.; Dinsmore, S. R. & Koskela, U.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dissolution of Metals in Fused Fluorides (open access)

Dissolution of Metals in Fused Fluorides

In scouting tests, a number of metals used in nuclear reactor fuel elements were dissolved by 44.5-48.5-7.0 mole % ZrF4-KF-NaF fused salt at 675°C through which HF was being passed. These included type 304 stainless steel at 4 mils/hr; type 347Nb stainless steel at 7 mils/hr; thorium at 14 mils/hr; nonirradiated uranium at 17 mils/hr; zirconium at 22-35 mils/hr; titanium at 31 mils/hr; and Zircaloy-2 at 22-46 mils/hr. Only small amounts of volatile fission products formed when irradiated uranium was dissolved. Variables that appear to affect the dissolution rate are the composition of the fused fluoride, the fused fluoride temperature, the HF flow rate, the metallurgical characteristics of the material being dissolved, and the presence of other metals. The low dissolution rate of 0.001 mil/hr observed for nickel suggests that it may be suitable as a material of construction for reaction vessels.
Date: October 12, 1953
Creator: Leuze, R. E.; Cathers, G. I. & Schilling, C. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dry Maintenance Facility for the HRT (open access)

Dry Maintenance Facility for the HRT

A portable shield has been designed, developed, fabricated and shop tested to provide the HRT with a facility for direct dry maintenance operations. It provides temporary replacement for any one of the lower roof plugs and should permit many operations to be performed without flooding the reactor cell with water.
Date: October 11, 1960
Creator: Holz, P. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Gas Film Resistance in Diffusion from a Porous Septum into a Fluid Stream (open access)

The Effect of Gas Film Resistance in Diffusion from a Porous Septum into a Fluid Stream

The theory of mass transfer into a flowing fluid is utilizes to estimate the effect of gas film resistance on overall rates of transfer through a porous septum. The expressions developed for the mass transfer ratio...
Date: October 10, 1960
Creator: Saunders, A. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of Internal Heat Generation on Pot Calcination Rates for Radioactive Wastes (open access)

The Effects of Internal Heat Generation on Pot Calcination Rates for Radioactive Wastes

Review of methods by which the radial deposition mechanism was determined in experiments with simulated waste solutions are briefly reviewed.
Date: October 23, 1961
Creator: Perona, J. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrical Design Standards and Graphical Symbols (open access)

Electrical Design Standards and Graphical Symbols

This manual represents the recommendations of the Instrumentation and Controls Division committee on Electrical and Electronic Symbols and Drawing that have been issued to date, and supersedes the previously issued ORNL Electrical Symbols List and CF-58-12-141, Electrical and Electronic Drawing Standards for Wiring and Device Coding and Applications.
Date: October 1960
Creator: Bates, A.E.G; Bowelle, M.M.; Horton, J. L.; Moore, R. L.; Hyland, R. F. & Brashear, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrodeposition of Aluminum and Zirconium on Uranium (open access)

Electrodeposition of Aluminum and Zirconium on Uranium

Technical report outlining a method for the electrodeposition of adherent deposits of both aluminum and zirconium on uranium. Report finds that current efficiencies are good for aluminum deposition but low for the zirconium baths. [From Abstract]
Date: October 12, 1950
Creator: Lietzke, M. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Estimation of Reaction and Heat Release Rates for Graphite Oxidation (open access)

Estimation of Reaction and Heat Release Rates for Graphite Oxidation

A literature study has been made of rates for the reaction of oxygen with high-purity artificial graphite. Values from a number of sources have been expressed on a common basis which provides approximate correction for the retarding effects of oxygen diffusion in the graphite pores. The corrected rates can be correlated by the equation k = 7.24 x 10^9 exp (-22 100/T), where k has units of weight fraction oxidized per hour and T as in °K. Effects of oxygen concentration, solid and gas-phase contaminants, and radiation on the observed rates are discussed. Methods for estimating rates and spatial distribution of heat release during graphite oxidation are presented. These should be of value in analyzing the hazard of a graphite fire following a coolant system rupture in a gas-cooled, graphite-moderated reactor.
Date: October 19, 1960
Creator: Prados, John W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Ultimate Disposal Methods for Liquid and Solid Radioactive Wastes: Part 2, Conversion to Solid by Pot Calcination (open access)

Evaluation of Ultimate Disposal Methods for Liquid and Solid Radioactive Wastes: Part 2, Conversion to Solid by Pot Calcination

Economic and hazards calculation of pot calcination of Purex and Thorex wastes.
Date: October 16, 1961
Creator: Perona, J. J.; Bradshaw, R. L.; Roberts, J. T. & Blomeke, J. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
EXPIRE - A Reactivity Lifetime Calculation (open access)

EXPIRE - A Reactivity Lifetime Calculation

EXPIRE is a calculation which predicts the reactivity-lifetime, instantaneous and integrated effective multiplication constants and instantaneous and integrated effective multiplication constants and instantaneous conversion ratio for heterogeneous reactors. The concentration of all the isotopes of interest from Th232 to Am243 are calculated as a function of time using the average reactor power density and a uniform flux distribution. The equations have been programmed for the IBM-704 computer and the average running time is approximately two minutes per reactor lifetime.
Date: October 13, 1960
Creator: Jaye, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental Studies in Heat Transfer and Fluid Mechanics, Status Report July 1, 1959- Feb 29, 1960 (open access)

Fundamental Studies in Heat Transfer and Fluid Mechanics, Status Report July 1, 1959- Feb 29, 1960

Experimental determination of heat-transfer coefficients, burnout heat fluxes, and friction factors have been made for swirl flow of low-and moderate-pressure water through electrically heated aluminum, nickel, and copper tubes containing full-length Inconel twisted tapes. For nonboiling conditions, swirl-flow heat-transfer coefficient were successfully correlated with both the Froude modulus (the ratio of inertial to centrifugal forces) and a grouping of the Grashof and Reynolds moduli (ratio of buoyant to inertial forces).
Date: October 4, 1960
Creator: Hoffman, H. W.; Gambill, W. R.; Keyes, J. J., Jr. & Kidd, G. J., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Fused Salt—Fluoride Volatility Process for Recovery and Decontamination of Uranium (open access)

A Fused Salt—Fluoride Volatility Process for Recovery and Decontamination of Uranium

A preliminary chemical flowsheet is presented of a fluoride volatility process for recovering and decontaminating uranium from heterogeneous reactor fuels after dissolution in a fused salt. In laboratory work, a gross β decontamination factor of > 10 4 was obtained in the fluorination of a UF4-NaF-ZrF4 melt by passing the product UF6 through NaF at 650°C. The solubility of UF6 in molten NaF-ZrF4 was shown in kinetic studies to cause a lag in the evolution of UF6 from the fluorinator. Corrosion of nickel in the fluorination step appeared to be 2-4 mils/hr during the time that uranium was present. The average corrosion rate over the process as a whole was less than O.4 mil/hr. Earlier studies were reported in ORNL-1709 and 1877.
Date: October 10, 1955
Creator: Cathers, G. I. & Bennett, M. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health Physics Division Annual Progress Report, July 31, 1961 (open access)

Health Physics Division Annual Progress Report, July 31, 1961

Report documenting research and developments made by the Health Physics Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Date: October 31, 1961
Creator: Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Health Physics Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library