Joint National Institute for Health-Atomic Energy Commission Zonal Centrifuge Development Program, Semiannual Report for Period January 1 - June 30, 1963 (open access)

Joint National Institute for Health-Atomic Energy Commission Zonal Centrifuge Development Program, Semiannual Report for Period January 1 - June 30, 1963

This technical report describes development work done on method of particle separation by the Biology Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant during the period January 1 to June 30, 1963, under the Joint National Institute for Health-Atomic Energy Commission Zonal Centrifuge Development Program. The central effort has been to develop zonal centrifuge systems for the separation of cells and sub-cellular particles, including viruses, and bio-colloids, including proteins and nucleic acids.
Date: October 11, 1963
Creator: Anderson, N. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two Group Calculations for Flux Distribution and Critical Mass in Clean Cold ORR Cores (open access)

Two Group Calculations for Flux Distribution and Critical Mass in Clean Cold ORR Cores

A series of two-group calculations has been made on the Oracle for the purpose of obtaining critical-mass and flux distribution data for various ORR core configurations. The 3G3R code of Bate, Einstein, and Kinney was used, together with the RSP code developed by Nelson. This made it possible to obtain results for the three-dimensional case. The results, which are presented graphically, are intended to serve as a guide for the design of experiments until such time as actual measurements are available. The calculations were performed for the "clean cold" case, and it should be realized that the presence in the core of experiments and of fission products built up during operation will materially alter the flux patterns found. It is believed that the critical-mass data are accurate to within 10%. Within the fuel region it is believed that the thermal-flux patterns are the also accurate to this degree. Comparison of the results with MTR critical experiments, however, indicates that the thermal flux in the reflector in the vicinity of the fuel-reflector interface may have been underestimated by a factor of as much as 1.3. It should also be recalled that in a two-group calculation the "fast flux" is often a …
Date: March 11, 1958
Creator: Binford, F. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
ORNL Mortal Recovery Plant: Processing of ORNL Graphite Reactor Fuel Elements During the Period July and August, 1955 (open access)

ORNL Mortal Recovery Plant: Processing of ORNL Graphite Reactor Fuel Elements During the Period July and August, 1955

From July 7 to August 31, 1955, 20 tons of uranium and 1,200 g of plutonium were recovered in 47 days of plant operation at an average rate of 833 lb/day of uranium and at a cost of $2.60/lb of uranium. Uranium and plutonium recoveries were, respectively, 99.9 and 95.5 per cent.
Date: November 11, 1955
Creator: Brooksbank, R. E.; Chandler, J. M. & Hylton, C. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Removal of Fission Product Gases from reactor Off-Gas Streams by Adsorption (Presented at American Nuclear Society Meeting, Detroit, Michigan, December 10, 1958) (open access)

Removal of Fission Product Gases from reactor Off-Gas Streams by Adsorption (Presented at American Nuclear Society Meeting, Detroit, Michigan, December 10, 1958)

In the operation of nuclear reactors, nuclear fuel reprocessing plants and in-pile experiments, special provision must be made for disposal of gaseous fission products to prevents contamination of the atmosphere to an unacceptable degree. A disposal process is described in which the noble gas fission products, krypton and xenon, are delayed relative to the sweep gas by physical adsorption as they pass through an adsorbent such as activated charcoal. A theoretical plate analysis, and has been verified experimentally. The retention time for a gas present in trace concentration is proportional to the amount of charcoal in the adsorber bed and to the adsorption coefficient which is evaluated experimentally for a particular combination of materials and conditions. The retention time is inversely proportional to the volume flow rate if the sweep gas.
Date: June 11, 1959
Creator: Browning, W. E.; Adams, R. E. & Ackley, R. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of Shield Induced Gamma Radiation Escaping Through Openings in a Biological Shield -- Application to the HRT (open access)

Calculation of Shield Induced Gamma Radiation Escaping Through Openings in a Biological Shield -- Application to the HRT

A method was developed for calculating shield induced gamma radiation escaping through openings in a biological shield. The method was applied to the HRT and the results indicated that the contribution to the dose from induced activity in the HRT shield was around 0.1 r/hr and was insignificant in comparison to to other mechanisms contributing to the escape of gamma rays through shield openings.
Date: January 11, 1957
Creator: Claiborne, H. C. & Fowler, T. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reprocessing of ARE Fuel, Volatility Pilot Plant Runs E-1 and E-2 (open access)

Reprocessing of ARE Fuel, Volatility Pilot Plant Runs E-1 and E-2

After two batches (~ 340 kg) of fluoride salt from the ARE were reprocessed, pilot plant operations were terminated because of a leak through which an estimated 780 g of uranium (as UF6) escaped. Of the 21 kg of highly enriched uranium in the feed, 93.12% was collected as UF6 product, 0.13% represented measured losses, and 3.72% was unaccounted for (leak). An additional 3.03% was reclaimed from NaF beds and equipment washes. The product met both chemical purity and activity specifications for product level UF6. Decontamination from fission products was essentially complete. A gross gamma D.F. was apparently limited by the low activity of the feed salt.
Date: May 11, 1959
Creator: Culler, F. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Brief Review of thermal Gradient Mass Transfer in Sodium and NaK Systems (open access)

A Brief Review of thermal Gradient Mass Transfer in Sodium and NaK Systems

The fact that material transport does occur under conditions of finite temperature difference in a flowing molten metal system was established. The rate mass transfer was thought to be either diffusion limited or solution rate limited. It is believed that the mass transfer of structural materials in Na or NaK systems is solution rate limited. The limiting process has not been qualitatively or quantitatively confirmed for the Inconel-Na or Inconel-NaK system. Increasing the maximum system wall temperature increases the amount of mass transfer, at least above 1300 deg F. The effect of the total temperature difference across the system on the amount of mass transfer was determined.
Date: February 11, 1957
Creator: DeVan, J. H. & West, J. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of Temperature and Composition on the Mercury Vapor Pressure in the Uranium-Mercury System (open access)

The Effects of Temperature and Composition on the Mercury Vapor Pressure in the Uranium-Mercury System

The use of mercury as a solvent in the recovery of uranium from spent fuels is of the interest at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The vapor pressure of mercury is lowered by increased concentration of uranium. By dew-point measurements, the vapor pressure at 175°C was found to very between 2 and 8mm of mercury, and at 375°C, between 300 and 1100 mm of mercury, depending upon composition as described below. Plots of the log of mercury vapor pressure vs. the reciprocal of absolute temperature gave a family of straight lines. Each line corresponded to one of the composition: UHg2, UHg3, UHg4, and a saturated solution of UHg4 in Hg. No Mutual solubility of the intermetallics was indicated.
Date: June 11, 1959
Creator: Forsberg, H. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design Study of a Pebble-Bed Reactor Power Plant (open access)

Design Study of a Pebble-Bed Reactor Power Plant

Sanderson & Porter have carried out a series of studies over the last four years which indicate that the pebble-bed reactor way be an attractive way to obtain low-cost power. At the request of the Atomic Energy Commission, two design studies have been carried out on this concept at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The first of these a preliminary design of a 10-Mw(t) reactor experiment, the PRRE, was initiated September 10, and a report on the study was issued November 1960. The second phase of the work, a conceptual design study of a 330-Mw (e) central station, was initiated November 1, and is the subject of this report.
Date: May 11, 1961
Creator: Fraas, A. P.; Carlsmith, R. S.; Corum, J. M. & Foster, J.
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
Methods of Analysis of Anisole-BF3 Solution (open access)

Methods of Analysis of Anisole-BF3 Solution

The methods of analysis given in this report are those which were used in the Analytical Chemistry Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory for analyzing samples which were derived from the experimental work on the separation of the isotopes of boron by chemical exchange. The samples consisted principally of boron trifluoride solutions in anisole (methyl phenyl ether, CH30C6H5). The boron concentration ranged from a few parts per million to 5 or 6 per cent. Boron was determined on all samples. During the early stages of the project, iron and copper were occasionally determined, while a limited number of aqueous solutions and water extracts of anisole solutions of BF3 were analyzed for fluoboric and hydroxyfluoboric acids, boric acid, total boron, and total fluoride. Boron was determined by the use of either a spectrophotometric or volumetric method, depending on the amount available. Initially, if the amount of sample and boron concentration were such as to provide a total of at least 2 to 4 mg of boron, the volumetric method was utilized and found to be satisfactory. For smaller amount, the spectrophotometric method was used. Later, because of its greater speed and simplicity, the spectrophotometric method was used for samples in …
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: House, H. P.; Lund, J. R.; French, J. R.; Meyer, A. S., Jr.; Lynn, E. C.; Brady, L. J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Local Reactivity "Worth" in the HRT (open access)

Local Reactivity "Worth" in the HRT

The effect of adding small quantities of fuel or poison to the HRT has been estimated using perturbation theory. The results have been reduced to a single relation and a set of graphs which make the estimation of added reactivity relatively simple. The perturbation theory results are compared with multigroup results and reasonable agreement is demonstrated; however, there is some question concerning the prompt neutron lifetime.
Date: October 11, 1960
Creator: Jaye, S. & Vondy, D. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Preliminary Study of Pre-Solvent Extraction Treatment of Stainless Steel-Uranium Fuels with Dilute Aqua Regia (open access)

A Preliminary Study of Pre-Solvent Extraction Treatment of Stainless Steel-Uranium Fuels with Dilute Aqua Regia

The continuous dissolution of 304 stainless steel and stainless steel-UO2 alloy in dilute aqua regia was studied with subsequent stripping of the dissolver product to remove chloride ion. The process has the advantage of producing, by means of a simple head end treatment, a solvent extract feed in a conventional nitric acid medium so that existing solvent extraction processes, materials of construction and waste disposal methods can be used. The purposes of this study were to investigate the variables affecting the dissolution process and to obtain dissolver scale-up data, and to investigate the removal of chloride from the dissolver product and the variables affecting the stripping operation. A continuous flooded pot dissolver was used. It has the advantages of stability of operation and ease of control in comparison with column dissolvers and requires a minimum of mechanical processing prior to dissolution. Stripping of the dissolver product to remove chloride ion was studied in a 4-in. diameter Pyrex bubble-cap column containing 12 single bubble cap plates. Continuous dissolution rates and dissolver product stainless steel loading were correlated with aqua regia feed composition, acid feed rate and surface area exposed to reaction. Profiles of chloride concentration down the stripping column were obtained …
Date: October 11, 1957
Creator: Kitts, F. G. & Perona, J. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Thermal Comparator Apparatus for Thermal Conductivity Measurements from 50 to 400 [degrees] C (open access)

A Thermal Comparator Apparatus for Thermal Conductivity Measurements from 50 to 400 [degrees] C

The experimental details, mathematical models, and typical data for a rapid comparative method for thermal conductivity measurements are presented. The method consists of measuring the temperature change of a small silver sphere after it is brought in contact with a small disk-shaped specimen which was initially at ta higher temperature. This temperature change was calibrated in the range of 50 to 400 degrees C by making measurements on samples of know thermal conductivity. The accuracy of this technique was shown to be between than +-10% with a reproducibility of at least +-2.5%. Using known transport mechanisms for heat conduction in solids and the temperature dependency of the electrical conductivity, a means to judiciously extrapolate thermal conductivity data obtained between 50 and 400 degree C to high temperature is presented.
Date: August 11, 1964
Creator: Kollie, T. G.; McElroy, D. L.; Graves, R. S. & Fulkerson, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Curve Plotting Routine for the Oracle (open access)

Curve Plotting Routine for the Oracle

A general program has been written to plot curves on the Oracle curve plotter. A description of the code and complete instructions for preparation of input tapes and operation of the code are given. The code tape is available from the Mathematics Panel or from the author.
Date: April 11, 1957
Creator: Lietzke, M. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-Liquid-Phase Temperature Limits for the Homogeneous Reactor Fuel Solution and its Concentrates; Comments on Solid-Liquid Equilibria. (open access)

Two-Liquid-Phase Temperature Limits for the Homogeneous Reactor Fuel Solution and its Concentrates; Comments on Solid-Liquid Equilibria.

Temperatures are given at which two liquid phases form in a synthetic homogeneous reactor fuel solution and its concentrates. The data show a two-liquid-phase boundary temperature of 332°C for the Particular HRT Fuel composition and a flat minimum temperature of 305°C for the initial solution concentrated between 300 and 329°C are presented to indicate solution stability in this temperature region. Some related comments on current HRT operations are given.
Date: August 11, 1959
Creator: Marshall, W. L.; Gill, J. S. & Moore, R. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Frequency Titration as Applied to the Determination of Thorium, Uranium, Sulfate, and Free Acid. Parts I Through V. (open access)

High-Frequency Titration as Applied to the Determination of Thorium, Uranium, Sulfate, and Free Acid. Parts I Through V.

The technique of high-frequency titrimetry has been applied to the determination of thorium, uranium, sulfate, and free acid. In Part I of this report, the reproducibility of the method for the titration of standard solutions which contained 50mg of thorium in the absence of interferences is established. The coefficient of variation of the method, under these conditions, was found to be less than one per cent. In Part II, the effect of uranium on the high-frequency titration of thorium, as well as the application of the method to actual samples, is discussed. Uranium in a ratio of 5 to 1 to thorium can be tolerated. When the method is applied to the analysis of representative samples, the coefficient of variation is one per cent.
Date: May 11, 1959
Creator: Menis, Oscar
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Properties of Grade CGB Graphite (open access)

Thermal Properties of Grade CGB Graphite

Grade CGB graphite is a nuclear graphite which is basically an extruded petroleum coke bonded with coal tar pitch. No carbon blacks are used and the low-permeation graphite is finished through a series of impregnations and heat treatments with a final heat treatment of all components to 2800 degrees C. A listing of the results obtained is given in Table 1. The results at 51 degrees C are considered questionable. There was a slight contamination of the 90% Pt 10% Rh-Pt thermocouples at 910 degrees C but it was not sufficient to doubt the validity of the 910 degrees C results. However, the results obtained at 1015 degrees C should be disregarded because of severe thermocouple instabilities. In addition, the electrical resistance of the core heater at 603 degrees C indicated the thermocouples had a -10 to -15 degree error which is sufficient justification to disregard the 605 degrees C data.
Date: August 11, 1964
Creator: Moore, J. P. & Godfrey, T. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of the Thermal Conductivity, Electrical Resistivity, and Seebeck Coefficient of a Hight-Purity Iron and Armco Iron to 1000 [degrees] C (open access)

Comparison of the Thermal Conductivity, Electrical Resistivity, and Seebeck Coefficient of a Hight-Purity Iron and Armco Iron to 1000 [degrees] C

The thermophysical properties of Armco iron such as thermal conductivity, electrical resistivity, and Seebeck coefficient have been extensively investigated and reviewed up to 1000 degrees C. Few investigations of such properties have been made on high purity iron. If such a study is made using the same apparatus to determine the properties of two purity levels of iron, then several significant intercomparisons can be made which add meaning to data on a single material. The systemic errors for a single apparatus are the same, therefore comparison of a property of two similar materials is more significant. A comparison of the property changes with temperature and purity can show the effects of impurities on the mechanisms contributing to a property and allows prediction of the properties of iron as a function of purity. For these reasons a study was initiated on the high-purity iron for comparison to Armco iron.
Date: August 11, 1964
Creator: Moore, J. P.; Fulkerson, W. & McElroy, D. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Control System for HRT Cooling Water (open access)

Control System for HRT Cooling Water

The circuits described herein and shown functionally in Fig. 1 are to be added to the HRT control circuit to provide control and protection for the revised HRT cooling water system. The circuitry will provide protection against excess pressure in the demineralized cooling water loop and cooling water activity, will initiate action to insure containment of activity in event of an explosion and will provide emergency cooling water from the tower basin when required.
Date: February 11, 1957
Creator: Moore, R. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparison of Elementary Criticality Calculations with Experimental Results (open access)

A Comparison of Elementary Criticality Calculations with Experimental Results

Several experiments have been performed at ORNL with light water solutions of uranyl nitrate (highly enriched in either U^233 or U^235) in an essentially bare sphere 27 inches in diameter. This report presents the results of several calculations with elementary bare reactor theory and a discussion of the observed discrepancies between the calculated and experimental results. If the observed critical concentration is used in the calculations, the calculated effective multiplication constant is less than unity' thus a higher critical concentration would be predicted than is actually observed.
Date: June 11, 1959
Creator: Nestor, C. W., Jr
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experiments on the Release of Fission Products from Molten Reactor Fuels (open access)

Experiments on the Release of Fission Products from Molten Reactor Fuels

Experiments in the controlled melting of irradiated fuel specimens, particularly of the APPR, STR, and MTR types, have confirmed that prolonged heating in air at temperatures in excess of the melting point results in the release of a large portion of the radioactivity. On the other hand, a moderate amount of heating in air or steam sufficient only to melt a specimen results mainly in the partial volatilization of rare gases, iodine, bromine, cesium, and rubidium. In the presence of air or water vapor, strontium and other fission products are not released. At trace concentration of fission products, slow melting of the APPR plate at 1525 C in air or steam effected the release of 50% of the rare gases, 33% of the iodine, 9% of the cesium, and traces of strontium. After 25% burn-up, the cesium value increased to about 60%. Aluminum alloy of the MTR type, also at trace concentration, upon melting at 700 C released up to 2% of the iodine, 10% of the rare gases, and negligible portions of other fission products. Zirconium alloy of the STR type after 15% burn-up, when melted at 1850 C, released up to 95% of the rare gases, 90% of …
Date: March 11, 1958
Creator: Parker, George W. & Creek, George E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enthalpies and Heat Capacities of Solid and Molten Fluoride Mixtures (open access)

Enthalpies and Heat Capacities of Solid and Molten Fluoride Mixtures

The enthalpies and heat capacities of seventeen fluoride mixtures in the liquid state have been determined using Bunsen Ice Calorimeters and copper block calorimeters. The fluoride mixtures were composed of the fluorides of two or more of the following metals: lithium, sodium, potassium, beryllium, zirconium, and uranium. The enthalpies and heat capacities of most of these mixtures were studied in the solid state also. Estimates of the heat of fusion have been made. General empirical equations have been developed which represent the enthalpies and heat capacities of the fluoride mixtures in the liquid and in the solid state.
Date: January 11, 1956
Creator: Powers, W. D. & Blalock, G. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cross Sections for OCUSOL-A Program (open access)

Cross Sections for OCUSOL-A Program

The OCUSOL-A program (ORNL-CF-57-6-4) for Univac is a modification of the Eyewash (ORNL-1925) multi-group, multi-region reactor code. The group=energy-lethargy-temperature relationship are given in Table A. The element code numbers are given in Table B. The cross sections now on the sigma-tape are given in tables in the Appendix numbered with the element code number. This technical report explains the bases for choosing the cross sections.
Date: June 11, 1957
Creator: Roberts, J. T. & Alexander, L. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library