Serial/Series Title

Hanford Use of Experimental Water Filter Plant (open access)

Hanford Use of Experimental Water Filter Plant

An improved method of water plant control has been developed at Hanford which employs a sensitive turbidiy measuring microphorometer and a model water filtration plant. The microphotometer operates on a light scattering principle and is accurate in the range of 0.0 to 0.1 parts per million turbidity. The model filter plant used is a five gallon per minute plant which can simulate the conditions normally occurring in the large water plants. It is the purpose of this report to describe the model filter plant and to demonstrate the value of the model and microphotometer for effective water plant control and water plant design scoping.
Date: August 20, 1956
Creator: Conley, W.R.; Botsford, C. W. & Pitman, R.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Incontamination of Pig Skin Contaminated With a Plutonium Solution (open access)

Incontamination of Pig Skin Contaminated With a Plutonium Solution

Different methods of decontaminating plutonium contaminated skin were studied by contamination localized areas of pig skin and then testing the different decontamination methods. Results indicate that the most effective of the decontamination methods tested involved the application of a plastic adherent material to the skin and its later removal by peeling.
Date: August 20, 1959
Creator: George, L. A.; Dockum, H. L. & Bustad, L. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
709 Program for Reduction of Exponential Pile Data (open access)

709 Program for Reduction of Exponential Pile Data

A multi-purpose program for processing exponential data has been prepared for the 709 computer. The main purposes of the program is to compute the material buckling from raw data (given counts, time, and counter information) or from previously calculated Athermal's. It is also possible to compute only CeCh (end and harmonic corrections) for a given B11 or series if B11's no counting data being entered. In every case, pile measurements must be submitted as input for corrections.
Date: August 20, 1959
Creator: Matsumoto, D. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Techniques for Estimating the Specific Retention Properties of Hanford Soils (open access)

Techniques for Estimating the Specific Retention Properties of Hanford Soils

Disposal on a specific retention basic of certain radioactive liquid waste solutions emanating from separations from separations plants has been practiced at Hanford since 1944. As used at Hanford, the term "specific retention" is defined as that volume of waste liquids that may be disposed to the soil* and be held against the force of gravity by the molecular attraction between sand grains and the surface tension of the water, when expressed as percent of packed soil volume. In practice it represents the volume of liquid that may be discharged to a disposal pit of known dimensions without leakage to the ground, water, expressed as percent of the total volume of a column of soil with the same cross section as the pit, and extending from the bottom of the pit to the water table. It is recognized that some degree of lateral spreading will occur which has the effect of enlarging the volume of soil contacted by the liquid.
Date: August 20, 1959
Creator: Bierschenk, William H.
System: The UNT Digital Library