Thickness Vibrations in Long Rods of Barium Titanate (open access)

Thickness Vibrations in Long Rods of Barium Titanate

A theoretical analysis of the thickness vibrations in long thin rods of barium titanate is presented. The theoretical results are checked experimentally and their meaning discussed.
Date: July 29, 1955
Creator: Stephenson, C. V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
After Shutdown Heating in the HFIR (open access)

After Shutdown Heating in the HFIR

After shutdown heating rates have been calculated for the target, control plates, and the beryllium reflector of the HFIR. Hilvety previously calculated the after shutdown heating rates in the element and his results are reported in ORNL CP-60-4-110. Decay times of 1.0 10, 10^2, 10^3, 10^4, and 10^5 seconds have been considered, and heat fluxes have been computed for all of the mentioned components. The greatest heat fluxes were found to be at the surfaces of the control plates and the permanent beryllium reflector.
Date: December 29, 1960
Creator: McLain, H. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress Report for August-September 1960 (open access)

Progress Report for August-September 1960

A chemical flowsheet is proposed for recovery of strontium and rare earths from Purex wastes. The iron in the waste is first complexed with tartrate and the pH is adjusted with caustic. Strontium and rare earths are extracted by a solvent comprised of di(2-ethylhexyl)phosphoric--sodium di (2-ethylhexyl) phosphate--tributyl phosphate -- Amsco 125-82. and are stripped with nitric acid. Processing the strip product through additional solvent extraction cycles yields isolated, concentrated strontium and rare earth fractions.
Date: December 29, 1960
Creator: Brown, K. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Time Dependence of the Beam in the 86-Inch Cyclotron (open access)

Time Dependence of the Beam in the 86-Inch Cyclotron

In the preliminary stages of getting up a time-of-flight system for measuring neutron spectra from proton reactions, a study of the time dependence of the beam in the 86Inch Cyclotron was made. This study revealed the expected bunching of the protons to produce a short burst of beam on each cycle of the 13.4 Mc/s accelerating voltage. In addition to the 13.4 Mc/s structure, however, there was a 360 c/sec modulation of the beam pulses and a complicated pattern built upon that.
Date: July 29, 1959
Creator: Goodman, C. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uranium Anion Exchange Equilibria on Dowex 21K (open access)

Uranium Anion Exchange Equilibria on Dowex 21K

Equilibrium loading of uranium on Dowex 21K has been studied in a sulfate system for uranium concentrations from 0.0005 M to 0.0005 M, total sulfate concentrations of 0.45 M to 0.6M, and sulfuric acid concentration of 0.020 M. Loading data have been fitted to Langmuir adsorption isotherms and Langmuir constants have been evaluated. Resin was equilibrated with uranium feed solutions by flowing the feed through a shallow fixed bed of resin.
Date: June 29, 1959
Creator: Dunn, W. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrosion Status: Sulfex-Thorex (Ni-o-nel) and Darex-Thorex (Titanium) as of June 12, 1959 (open access)

Corrosion Status: Sulfex-Thorex (Ni-o-nel) and Darex-Thorex (Titanium) as of June 12, 1959

Either system appears to be fairly satisfactory from a containment standpoint. Current results indicate probable over-all rates of about 0.2mils/mo for titanium vs. 1.5-3.0 mils/mo for Ni-o-nel. Tests are not 100% comparable due to changes made in flowsheet conditions, but have been of sufficient variation and length as to allow good predictions to be made. Both metals show some tendency toward local attack in Thorex solutions. These tendencies are increased by poor welding techniques.
Date: June 29, 1959
Creator: Clark, W. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Process Design for Leak Detector System for Special Flanges (open access)

Final Process Design for Leak Detector System for Special Flanges

The leak detector system consists of one gas pressurized reservoir containing heavy water, a tubing manifold connecting the pressurizer to six separate lines each connected to one of the flanges, tubing lines leading from the second hole on each of three flange pairs (dome and heat exchanger flanges) back into the instrument room, plus required valves and fittings. A schematic diagram of the system in included.
Date: May 29, 1957
Creator: Mason, Edward A. (Edward Allen), 1926-1994
System: The UNT Digital Library
Possibility of Oxygen Depletion in Stagnant Uranyl Sulfate Lines (open access)

Possibility of Oxygen Depletion in Stagnant Uranyl Sulfate Lines

It is concluded that an excess of O2 must be added to the HRT fuel circulating stream in amounts sufficient to recombine the D2 in dead-end lines and serve as corrosion protection.
Date: April 29, 1957
Creator: Gift, E. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report of Slurry Blanket Test Run SM-2 (open access)

Report of Slurry Blanket Test Run SM-2

Run SM-2 was run to determine whether a sulfated ThO2 slurry could be handled in a hydrodynamic system similar to the HRT test blanket. It was found that the ThO2 concentration circulating in the pipes was consistently 50% or less of the expected concentration based on the quantity of the oxide changed. The run lasted 1730 hours. It was terminated because of a slurry leak a few days before a shutdown had been scheduled. Severe erosion was found in the pump impeller and flow nozzle . Chloride concentration high enough to cause concern over possible stress corrosion cracking occurred on several occasions in the pressurizer.
Date: April 29, 1957
Creator: Parsly, L. J., Jr.; Falkenberry, H. L. & Miller, I. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Preliminary Study of Molten Salt Power Reactors (open access)

A Preliminary Study of Molten Salt Power Reactors

A preliminary study of molten salt power reactors was made. The most promising fuel carrier salts were the fluorides and chlorides of the alkali metals, zirconium, and beryllium. The chlorides were found to have lower melting points but were less stable and more corrosive than the fluorides. A Li/sup 7/ F- - BeF/sub 2/ mixture with ThF/sub 4/ and UF/sub 4/appeared to perform best. Of the numerous alloys tested as container material, Inconel and a nickel-- molybdenum alloy INOR-8 appeared to be the most resistant to corrosion. To study the performance, safety, economics, and construction costs of a typical molten salt reactor, a reactor of specific type and size was chosen for study. The reference design reactor was a two-region homogeneous converter with a core salt of 70 mole% Li/sup 7/F and 30% BeF/sub 2. ThF/sub 4/ and enough VF/sub 4/ for criticality were added. Study indicated that a molten salt reactor would produce economical power, but the problem of developing a salt core and a container metal which would last for many years of operation needed further study. (M.C.G.)
Date: April 29, 1957
Creator: MacPherson, H. G.; Alexander, L. G.; Carrison, D. A.; Estabrook, J. Y.; Kinyon, B. W.; Mann, L. A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cracks in HRT Flange Bolts and Ferrules (open access)

Cracks in HRT Flange Bolts and Ferrules

When it was discovered that two HRT flange bolts of a lot of 16 spares contained serious cracks, a program was launched to (1) determine the cause for the cracking, and (2) find methods for non-destructive testing the remainder of the 672 bolts shipment, a large portion of which had been installed in the HRT. Concurrently, inspection of 8 ferrules removed from an HRT flange revealed hairline cracking in 4 of them. Magnaglo, a magnetic particle inspection method using a fluorescent dye, proved to be the only definitive method for inspecting the bolts. The evidence gathered on the bolts pointed to quench cracking as the cause for the defects. Nothing abnormal was disclosed in regard to the bolt material. The alloy and heat treatment at present prescribed for the HRT bolts and ferrules are considered suitable. However, recommendations are made for plating with zinc, instead of formerly prescribed cadmium, to a thickness of 0.0002 inch, followed by a hydrogen relief treatment and a final bichromate chemical dip.
Date: January 29, 1957
Creator: Hammond, J. P.; Adamson, G. M. & Kegler, T. M., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Chemical Processing of Two-Region Aqueous Homogenous Reactors (open access)

The Chemical Processing of Two-Region Aqueous Homogenous Reactors

A promising scheme for the chemical processing of a thorium breeder reactor of the two-region aqueous homogeneous type consists of the following operations: concentration of insoluble fission and corrosion products from the core system into a small volume of fuel solution, combining this slurry with irradiated thorium oxide slurry taken from the blanket, recovery of D2O by evaporation, dissolution of the thorium and uranium in HNO3, and, after a suitable cooling period, recovery of the uranium and thorium by solvent extraction for return to the reactor. The use of a hydroclone and underflow container arrangement for concentrating insoluble fission and corrosion products under simulated reactor conditions has been successfully demonstrated on dynamic loops. Solids concentration factors greater than 103 were demonstrated, and equilibrium solids concentration in the circulating solution less than 1 ppm was attained in these tests. Present data indicate that proper design and operation will minimize solids deposition in the reactor system and that the insoluble impurities can be effectively removed by the hydroclone. An alternate method of processing the slurry removed from the core system by the hydroclone consists of removing the room temperature insolubles by centrifugation, recovering the uranium from the supernatant by peroxide precipitation, thermal …
Date: January 29, 1957
Creator: Ferguson, D. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reactor Irradiation of Thorium and Uranium Oxides Slurries (open access)

Reactor Irradiation of Thorium and Uranium Oxides Slurries

Thorium and thorium-uranium oxide slurries were irradiation in the Low Intensity Test Reactor (LITR) at temperatures up to 300C in small stirred autoclaves. Stirring was accomplished by means of an electromagnetically operated lunger. Stirrer operations was monitored suing an oscilloscope. Relative slurry viscosities were determined both in and out-of-pile using calibration curves of apparent viscosity versus stirrer rise time. Post-irradiation examination of selected slurries indicated no gross changes occurred in the particulate properties.
Date: January 29, 1957
Creator: Krohn, N. A. & McBride, J. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uranium Recovery for Spent Fuel by Dissolution in Fused Salt and Fluorination (open access)

Uranium Recovery for Spent Fuel by Dissolution in Fused Salt and Fluorination

A promising nonaqueous process for the recovery of uranium from spent fuel elements is under development at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. This process consists of dissolution of the fuel element in a fluoride melt by hydrofluorination at 600 to 700°C, direct fluorination with fluorine for the production and volatilization of UF6, with further decontamination of the product UF6 from fission product activity being secured in a NaF absorption-desorption step. Good decontamination is obtained in the fluorination step due to the low volatility of most of the fission product fluorides. An over-all decontamination factor greater than 106 with adequate uranium recovery has been demonstrated in laboratory scale tests using a double bed procedure for the NaF step. A pilot plant has been constructed for testing the process with various heterogeneous fuel elements. The engineering and operational features of the pilot plant are described
Date: January 29, 1957
Creator: Cathers, G. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Submicron Particle Sized by an Activation Analysis - Centrifugation Method (open access)

Determination of Submicron Particle Sized by an Activation Analysis - Centrifugation Method

The feasibility of determining particle sizes in the submicron range by employing an activation analysis - centrifugation method has been demonstrated. It is believed that this method is now applicable to the analysis of thorium oxide for submicron particles. The same techniques are, in most instance, usable in determining particle sized in other sample materials.
Date: January 29, 1957
Creator: Bate, L. C. & Leddicotte, G. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catalysts for Recombination of Radiolytic Gases Over Thorium Oxide Slurries (open access)

Catalysts for Recombination of Radiolytic Gases Over Thorium Oxide Slurries

Catalysts for use in recombining the gases produced by the radiolytic decomposition of water in thorium oxide slurries under neutron irradiation were investigated in out-of-pile tests using stoichiometric mixtures of hydrogen and oxygen. Most favorable results were obtained with a molybdenum oxide catalyst. Satisfactory rate also were attained with palladium and silver oxides. Copper, nickel, vanadium and chromium compounds were less effective.
Date: January 29, 1957
Creator: Morse, L. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Fluoride Fuel In-Pile Loop Experiment (open access)

A Fluoride Fuel In-Pile Loop Experiment

An inconel loop circulating fluoride fuel (62 1/2 make [unintelligible] NaF, 12 1/2 make [unintelligible] ZrF4, 25 make [unintelligible] UF4, 92 [unintelligible] enriched) was operated at 1485°F with a temperature difference of about 35°F in the Low Intensity Test Reactor for 645 hr. For 475 hr of this time the reactor was at full power, and fission power generation in the loop was 2.7 kw, with a max length power density of 0.4 kw/cc. The total volume of fuel was 1290 cc (5.o kg [unintelligible] and the the flow through the irradiated section was 8.6 fps (Reynolds number 5500). The loop has been disassembled and has been examined by chemical and metallographic analyses. Ne acceleration of corrosion of decomposition of fuel by irradiation was noted, although deposition of fission-product ruthenium was absorbed. Ne mass transfer of Inconel was formed, and the corrosive [unintelligible] was general and relatively light. The average corrosive generation, in the usual form of subsurface yields, was 0.5 [unintelligible], the maximum penetration was 2 to 3 miles.
Date: January 29, 1957
Creator: Sisman, Q; Brundage, W. E.; Parkinson, W. W.; Boumann, C. D.; Correll, R. M; Morgen, J. G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project CGC-830 Plant Modifications for Reprocessing Non-Production Reactor Fuels (open access)

Project CGC-830 Plant Modifications for Reprocessing Non-Production Reactor Fuels

Facilities are to be designed for installation at Hanford for the reprocessing of irradiated, low enrichment fuels from non-production reactors, see Reference 1 and 2. The initial design of the processing facilities is to be based on processing the fuels discharged from the Dresden, Yankee, Piqua, Pathfinder and Shippingport (blanket elements only) reactors. Properties of the fuels and cladding make it impossible to completely process them in existing equipment, although the separation and decontamination can be performed in existing facilities once the fueks have been placed in solution form.
Date: July 29, 1960
Creator: Bierman, S. R.; Graf, W. A.; Kass, M.; Kligfield, G.; McKee, R.W.; Patridge, L. F. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of the PRTR Fuel Elemental Rupture Test Facility on Plutonium Recycle Program Objectives. (open access)

Effect of the PRTR Fuel Elemental Rupture Test Facility on Plutonium Recycle Program Objectives.

To insure a full evaluation of the effects of in-reactor loops with respect to all phases of the Plutonium Recycle Program, a separate study of each loop has been undertaken. An initial study was carried out which analyzed the effects of in-reactor loops using the design criteria for the gas loop as a basis. As soon as the design criteria for the H2O high pressure loop became available, a more detailed evaluation was completed for that loop. Recent completion of the scope description of the PRTR fuel element rupture test loop now permits an individual evaluation of this loop.
Date: January 29, 1960
Creator: Peterson, R. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diffraction Studies of Possible Ordering in α-brass (open access)

Diffraction Studies of Possible Ordering in α-brass

Recently, there has been some evidence to point to possible ordering in the α-brasses. Masumoto et al. have concluded from their specific heat measurements that there is a possibility of ordering in the α-brasses. In particular they observed an anomaly in the specific heat curves for the α-brasses for the temperature range from 200 to 260°C and explained these results upon the basis of a change in local or short range order in α-brasses at these temperatures. In connection with the study of radiation damage effects in α-brass ordering has been suspected. Rosenblatt has annealed 70-30 α-brass previously annealed at 350°C and cooled to room temperature at 190°C for six weeks. He observed a decrease of .90 ± .03% in the electrical resistivity of α-brass measured at -196°C after the anneal at 190°C.
Date: March 29, 1954
Creator: Keating, David, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Serial Reports on Start-Up Experiments. No. 1 The Hot Rod Experiment (open access)

Serial Reports on Start-Up Experiments. No. 1 The Hot Rod Experiment

The purpose of this new series of reports is to present in roughly finished form the results of the various start-up experiments on the BNL reactor as soon as the analysis of the experimental data is completed.
Date: November 29, 1950
Creator: Chernick, J. & Kunstadter, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Darex Pilot Plant Studies (open access)

Darex Pilot Plant Studies

The Atomic Energy Commission has assigned the Hanford Atomic Products Operation the responsibility of providing the technology and facilities for the interim reprocessing of slightly enriched uranium fuels discharged from power and propulsion reactors. The fuel from the various reactors vary greatly in physical dimensions and in the composition of the core and cladding. For the purposes of chemical reprocessing, the fuels may be divided into the three main categories of aluminum, Zircaloy or stainless steel clad elements. The fuels may be sub-divided by the nature of the core material; e.g. metallic uranium, uranium dioxide, uranium-molybdenum alloys uranium-aluminum alloys, etc.
Date: October 29, 1959
Creator: Shefcik, J. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of the PRTR High Pressure Loop on Plutonium Recycle Program Objectives (open access)

Effect of the PRTR High Pressure Loop on Plutonium Recycle Program Objectives

For purposes of an earlier consideration of the effects of in-reactor test loops on PRTR operation and program, the design of the high pressure, H20 cooled fuel test loop was assumed to be similar to that for the high pressure, gas cooled loop. Detailed design criteria for the H20 loop have recently been completed so that this assumption is no longer necessary. Therefore, to insure that the effects of all proposed in-reactor loops are fully evaluated with respect to Plutonium Recycle Program objectives, the present study has been carried out. Much of the qualitive discussion in the original analysis is still considered valid. Thus, rather than repeating the entire analysis as it pertains to the H20 loop, only those departures resulting from differences between the assumed design and the scope design are presented.
Date: October 29, 1959
Creator: Peterson, R. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
All In-Well Permeability Testing Packer (open access)

All In-Well Permeability Testing Packer

Disposal of liquid radioactive wastes to ground requires knowledge of the area ground-water hydrology. Information is desired on direction and velocity of ground-water flow. Direction of flow can be determined from maps showing contours on the water table surface, such contours being derived from well water elevations. Ground-water velocity is more difficult to ascertain.
Date: September 29, 1959
Creator: Raymond, J. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library