A Sensitive Differential Pressure System For Measuring Cryogenic Liquid Depths (open access)

A Sensitive Differential Pressure System For Measuring Cryogenic Liquid Depths

A system for measuring depths of cryogenic liquids is described. The indicating device is a modified differential pressure gage. The level sensing probes are of various types, either permanent or removable. The heat leak to cryogenic liquids may be made negligibly small.
Date: April 21, 1961
Creator: Pope, William L. & McLaughlin, Edwin F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Remote Area Scintillation Monitoring System (open access)

Remote Area Scintillation Monitoring System

This report was written to describe briefly several possible variations of such systems along with probable cost estimates. Previous work has been shown that the application of scintillation detectors is the simplest and most reliable means for such monitoring. By proper detector selection and measuring methods, the system can be of an approximate gamma dose-rate with gamma energy independence above about 100 Kev. The same system using detector change only is directly applicable to beta, gamma, slow neutron and fast neutron detection. Any type of alarming device desired can be incorporated.
Date: April 21, 1959
Creator: Spear, W. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uranium Cold Extrusion (open access)

Uranium Cold Extrusion

Several hollow uranium cores of "C" size I & E diameters were fabricated by cold extrusion (550 to 750 F) at Hunter Douglas Aluminum Corporation. Results show diameter control and reproducibility are excellent. Preferred orientation induced by this process is completely removed by a single standard beta heat treatment.
Date: April 21, 1959
Creator: Riedeman, G. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Free Nitric Acid in UNH Solutions, Problem Assignment No. 208-X2A, Progress Report (open access)

Determination of Free Nitric Acid in UNH Solutions, Problem Assignment No. 208-X2A, Progress Report

Technical report abstract: Since UNH is a highly dissociated compound which ionizes to NO3 and (UO2), the latter ion being very weakly basic, a solution of pure UNH is quite acid (pH about 3). It is possible to titrate to a phenolphthalein and point with standard caustic solution and obtain a figure which represents the free acid plus the NO3 from the the UNH. However, titration of the free nitric acid alone in such a solution presents quite a problem. By precipitating and removing uranium from solution by means of potassium ferrocyanide, the residual free acid may be titrated directly by means of standard caustic using either methyl red or phenolphthalein indicators, with an error of less than 4%. A method is given to determine formic acid, should that acid be present in the mixture.
Date: April 21, 1944
Creator: Parlour, A. K. & Hammond, C. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Influence of Operation on Tuballoy (open access)

The Influence of Operation on Tuballoy

An attempt is made to estimate the influence of operation upon the mechanical properties of tubealloy. It is to be emphasized that the work is highly speculative, being base upon a set of judicious assumptions regarding the transport material within the metal and should not be used as a substitute for a set of well-planned experiments. The two principal effects considered are the hardening which results from the atomic displacement produced by the fission fragments and the changes in mechanical properties arising from the presence of the fission products. The principal conclusion to be drawn is that the disruption of the metal which accompanies operation takes place at at sufficiently high rate that it could readily cause serious changes in the mechanical properties of the slups. the reversal of the disruption resulting from thermal effects probably is sufficiently high to prevent serious embrittlement as a consequence of displacement through most of the volume of the slug if not at the surface. On the other hand, the migration of atoms also appears to be sufficiently high that the rare gas products may have time to diffuse to cracks and produce embrittlement.
Date: April 21, 1944
Creator: Seitz, Frederick, 1911-2008
System: The UNT Digital Library