Urine Analysis for Tritium Oxide (open access)

Urine Analysis for Tritium Oxide

This report analyzes a procedure based on the production of acetylene from the active water, with subsequent measurement of the ionization caused by the tritium beta particle. This eliminates the troublesome absorption on the chamber walls when hydrogen is used, and provides a rapid method for the preparation of the urine samples.
Date: July 27, 1949
Creator: Healy, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beta-Counting Methods Applied to the Determination of Uranium in Low-Grade Ores (open access)

Beta-Counting Methods Applied to the Determination of Uranium in Low-Grade Ores

The following report covers investigations on the application of the beta counter as an analytical tool for use in experiments on the extraction and concentration of uranium from low-grade (.005-.02 % uranium) shale and phosphate rock ores.
Date: July 1947
Creator: Doig, J. R.; Igelsrud, Iver; Nelson, H. R. & Schwartz, C. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Isolation and Properties of Curium (open access)

The Isolation and Properties of Curium

From introduction: "The discovery of element number 96, curium, was realized by the preparation and identification of the isotope Cm-242 by G. T. Seaborg, R. A. James and A. Ghiorso by cyclotron bombardment of Pu-239 with helium ions."
Date: July 28, 1948
Creator: Werner, Louis Bernard
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Note on the Use of Ion Exchange Resins for the Purification of Urinary Purines, Kynurenic Acid, and Coproporphyrin: (Preliminary Report) (open access)

A Note on the Use of Ion Exchange Resins for the Purification of Urinary Purines, Kynurenic Acid, and Coproporphyrin: (Preliminary Report)

Abstract: "Preliminary studies are reported on the use of the ion exchange resins for the adsorptions of purines, uracil, nucleotides, kynurenic acid, and coproporphyrin. Adenine and guanine are adsorbed on IR-100 resin from neutral solution and eluted by HCl. Kynurenic acid and coproporphyrin are adsorbed from neutral solution on IR-4 resin and eluted by HCl. Coproporphyrin is strongly adsorbed on IR-100 resin from either acid, alkaline, or neutral solution. Kynurenic acid is poorly adsorbed on IR-100 resin from neutral aqueous solution. The preliminary application of these procedures to the spectro-photometric study of urine is described."
Date: July 1946
Creator: Schwartz, Samuel; Wattenberg, Lee & Zagaria, Ralph
System: The UNT Digital Library
Artificial Radioactive Isotopes of Cerium and Lanthanum (open access)

Artificial Radioactive Isotopes of Cerium and Lanthanum

The following document describes some studies of the radioactive isotopes of cerium and lanthanum lying on the light or neutron-deficient side of stability.
Date: July 20, 1948
Creator: Chubbuck, James B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Influence of Total Surface Beta Irradiation on the Gross Metabolic Pattern of Rats (open access)

Influence of Total Surface Beta Irradiation on the Gross Metabolic Pattern of Rats

The following report records the study of albino rats subjected to beta rays and analyzes the skin reactions and metabolic patterns.
Date: July 30, 1946
Creator: Anderson, Elizabeth
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mound Laboratory Liquid Waste Disposal Research Quarterly Report for April 1 - June 30, 1949 (open access)

Mound Laboratory Liquid Waste Disposal Research Quarterly Report for April 1 - June 30, 1949

The following report is a quarterly report by the Monsanto Chemical Company for liquid waste disposal research, covering the period between April 1 to June 30, 1949.
Date: July 1, 1949
Creator: Monsanto Chemical Company
System: The UNT Digital Library
The General Picture of Irradiation Damage to Tissues (open access)

The General Picture of Irradiation Damage to Tissues

The following report is divided into two parts, both parts center around the effects of radiation on skin tissue. Part one focuses on superficial radiation, or Beta rays, while part two is on penetrating radiation, or neutrons and gamma rays.
Date: July 8, 1947
Creator: Henshaw, Paul S. & Snider, Ray S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Factors Affecting the Penta-Ether Extraction Uranium (open access)

Factors Affecting the Penta-Ether Extraction Uranium

This report discusses the contributions of the workers at Tennessee Eastman Corporation in the investigation of limiting conditions in the application of penta-ether (aka. dibutoxytetraethylene).
Date: July 25, 1947
Creator: Musser, D. F.; Krause, D. P. & Smellie, Robert H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Frequency Pulse Generator (open access)

High-Frequency Pulse Generator

Introduction: "The purpose of this work was to develop a high-frequency pulse generator that could be used in conducting research on high-rate trigger pairs and scaler circuits. The need for an instrument of this type arose because there was no parallel commercial instrument having this type arose because there was no parallel commercial instrument having a pulse recurrence frequency over approximately 200,000 pulses per second."
Date: July 3, 1947
Creator: Ohmart, Philip E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Factors Affecting the Extraction of Uranium with Dibutyl Carbitol (open access)

Factors Affecting the Extraction of Uranium with Dibutyl Carbitol

Abstract: "This is a compilation of the material in several reports on the extraction of uranium from aqueous solutions with dibutyl carbitol. Data is presented concerning the optimum conditions for the extraction of the uranium and elimination of impurities."
Date: July 8, 1946
Creator: Weaver, Boyd S. & Larson, C. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Factors Affecting the Precipitation of Uranium Peroxide (open access)

Factors Affecting the Precipitation of Uranium Peroxide

Abstract: "This is a compilation of the data on uranium peroxide precipitations appearing in several reports. The solubility product is measured. The effect of many individual ions on the hydrogen peroxide decomposition rate and the complexing of uranium is demonstrated. Studies on plant and other highly contaminated solutions are not included."
Date: July 8, 1946
Creator: Mogg, D. W. & Larson, C. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Dibutyl Carbitol Extraction Procedure for the Separation of Tubanyl and Phosphate Ions (open access)

The Dibutyl Carbitol Extraction Procedure for the Separation of Tubanyl and Phosphate Ions

"This report is concerned with the effectiveness of this washback procedure in reducing the phosphate concentration and also with other methods by which the simultaneous extraction of phosphate along with tuballoy may be minimized."
Date: July 12, 1945
Creator: Lord, E. J.; Andrews, L. J. & Gates, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fluorocarbons : Final Report on O.S.R.D. Research at Purdue University (open access)

Fluorocarbons : Final Report on O.S.R.D. Research at Purdue University

This report follows research done at the Purdue Research Foundation and Department of Chemistry on fluorocarbons done by the Office of Scientific Research and Development.
Date: July 1943
Creator: McBee, Earl Thurston
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contributions to the Water Problem (open access)

Contributions to the Water Problem

Technical report describing the investigation of the short-lived activities produced in oxygen compounds by irradiation with pile neutrons. The most prominent of these activities in cooling water is a beta and gamma emitting activity of about 8 second half-life. Because of its production by epicadmium neutrons it was believed to be the 8 second N16 produced in the pile by n,p on O16. The identification has been accomplished and it is established that the 8 second activity is N16. Part 2 of the report deals with the determination of the recoil range of the Al28 atoms formed by pile n,p reaction on Al27.
Date: July 3, 1944
Creator: Novey, Theodore B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Healing of Fast-Neutron-Induced Changes in Graphite. II. The Effect of Heating During Exposure, Interim Report on Problem 323 MLC 2301 (open access)

Healing of Fast-Neutron-Induced Changes in Graphite. II. The Effect of Heating During Exposure, Interim Report on Problem 323 MLC 2301

Technical report. The effect of temperature during pile exposure on the fast-neutron-induced change in properties of graphite was studied. Temperatures up to 125 degrees C have no effect upon the rate of increase of elastic modulus; pieces exposed at 300 degrees C on the other hand show no change at all in elastic modulus. The increase in electrical resistance s an inverse function of the temperature of exposure at all temperatures in the range 60 to 300 degrees C.
Date: July 10, 1944
Creator: Neubert, Thomas A.; Novick, A.; Schenck, R. & Shapiro, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Radiation on the Corrosion of Metals by Water (open access)

The Effect of Radiation on the Corrosion of Metals by Water

Technical report. Long-time tests have been made on the effect of various types of radiation on the corrosion of 2S aluminum in simulated W water. In no case was any acceleration of corrosion by the radiation observed; the effect of radiation, if any, appeared to be a protective one. Deuteron irradiation did accelerate the corrosion of mild steel at low flow rates in hot water of pH 6 to 7, but no appreciable effect was observed with copper, stainless steel, or tuballoy. The general theory of the effect of radiation on corrosion is discussed, with the conclusion that no acceleration of corrosion by radiation is to be expected in most cases of practical interest.
Date: July 6, 1944
Creator: Allen, A. O. (Augustine O.); Bowman, M. C.; Goldowski, Nathalie; Larson, R. G. & Treiman, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical Report for the Months of April, May and June, 1944; Chemical Research - General (open access)

Technical Report for the Months of April, May and June, 1944; Chemical Research - General

Technical report. Quite pure anhydrous ThCl4 in small quantity (8-10 g charge) has been prepared by the action of a mixture of Cl2 and CCl4 vapor on ThO2 at 675 degrees to 725 degrees C.
Date: July 29, 1944
Creator: Kraus, Charles A. (Charles August), 1875-1967
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metallurgical Laboratory, Chemical Research - Radiation Chemistry, Report for the Month Ending June 30, 1944 (open access)

Metallurgical Laboratory, Chemical Research - Radiation Chemistry, Report for the Month Ending June 30, 1944

Technical report with short reports on (1) P-9 recovery from UO2F2 solution; (2) Correlation of theories on action of radiation on matter; (3) Literature surveys on organic compounds and on chemistry of UO2F2; (4) effect of radiation on organic compounds; and (5) Effect of radiation on 100 area construction materials.
Date: July 14, 1944
Creator: Hogness, T. R. (Thorfin Rusten), 1894- & Burton, Milton, 1902-
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Behavior of Some Solid Materials Under Pile Operating Conditions (open access)

The Behavior of Some Solid Materials Under Pile Operating Conditions

Technical report abstract. The present state of knowledge concerning the effect of pile radiation on a variety of solid materials is reviewed. Radiation corrosion will not be a serious hazard for aluminum or stainless steel but it can be for iron or lead if either are exposed to water. Apart from corrosion the principal uncertainty is in regard to the Wigner effect on the behavior of metals. There is at present no ground for optimism regarding the behavior of tuballoy. The effect on aluminum or a bonding material while less severe must also be considered serious. The expectation in regard to graphite is that its behavior will not cause trouble during the first 100 days of operation although serious troubles will probably arise within two years of operation. Organic materials can be used safely only in regions of limited exposure.
Date: July 20, 1944
Creator: Burton, Milton, 1902- & Seitz, Frederick, 1911-2008
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sealing of Holes in Aluminum Sheet by Oxidation (open access)

Sealing of Holes in Aluminum Sheet by Oxidation

Aluminum oxide occupies a larger volume than the aluminum it contains would fill as metal, consequently, the assumption has been made that holes in metallic aluminum would close by a sufficient amount of oxidation. Therefore, we were asked to investigate the rate of plug formation under conditions to be expected in the pile. For the latter we were requested to approach the pile conditions as nearly as we could by employing the Chicago cyclotron. It seems to us that the problem divides itself into two separate questions: (1) under what conditions may holes be expected to close? (2) if holes do close how much corrosion of uranium may be expected before the closure becomes impervious to water vapor? In this report only the first question is considered. The experiments and theory coupled with the data collected by other workers on the project definitely define the limits within which pores in the aluminum cans may be expected to close by an oxidation process. Under the most favorable conditions only small holes may be sealed in this manner. In the large majority of the cases the holes not only fail to close but become larger.
Date: July 15, 1944
Creator: Anderson, S. & Goldowski, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extrusion of Compound Tubes of Aluminum and B4C (open access)

Extrusion of Compound Tubes of Aluminum and B4C

Various experimenters have shown (H.H. Gersman U.S. Patent 2,335,590, Nov. 30, 1943; Aluminum Co. of America, various technical papers; also CT-482) that when a billet is extruded by proper technique into a rod (or tube by a floating mandril) that flow of material is streamline and and the extruded article is essentially a space replica of the billet, with linearly distorted coordinates. Advantage is taken of this fact in the manufacture of alclad tubing in which a billet containing an inner core of one alloy with the outer part of another alloy cast around it is extruded together into an integral tube, e.g., to combine high corrosion resistance with high strength. The following experiments were carried out because of the desirability of obtaining a control rod which can be water cooled (or immersed in P9) and which contains boron. For some pile structures it may be desirable to have the major portion of the energy released by the neutron absorption of the control rod be spend in the rod itself by the nuclear reactions [formula] rather than in the surrounding media as is the case when absorption of neutrons is by cadmium according to the reaction [formula]. In the later …
Date: July 1, 1944
Creator: Creutz, E. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Stopping Power of Metals (open access)

The Stopping Power of Metals

Summary. The effect of the conduction electrons on the stopping power of metals has been considered from two essentially different points of view. No numerical calculations have been carried out, because we have found no completely satisfactory was of computing Z'e, the effective charge on the moving ion. A rather crude estimate made on the basis of the Thomas-Fermi atomic model indicates that Z'2/E is roughly constant. Using this relation one finds that the stopping power of the conduction electrons is of the same order of magnitude as the stopping power due to bound electron excitation, and is important for the greater part of the range of the particle.
Date: July 2, 1945
Creator: Goldberger, Marvin L.
System: The UNT Digital Library