High Voltage Electron Beam Welding of W-RE Thermocouples (open access)

High Voltage Electron Beam Welding of W-RE Thermocouples

A series of W-5 Re/W-26 Re thermocouples have been electron beam welded at the Hamilton Standard Division at our request. This technical report is a summary of our evaluation of these joints. These weldments did exhibit incomplete fusion in cap welds and some porosity in undesirable lead junction shapes. In fairness, this was a single attempt to make a difficult joint, and the objective of ungrounded 1/16 OD clad joints was met. As noted by Hamilton, two changes are necessary to improve this joint design: (1) swaging to forming the clad end rather than crimping prior to cap welding. (2) using a fixture with rotary motion on a tilting axis.
Date: December 13, 1962
Creator: Doyle, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Producibility of an Alloy of Columbium with One Percent Zirconium (open access)

Producibility of an Alloy of Columbium with One Percent Zirconium

Abstract. Proven mineral resources show that niobium is the most abundant of the refractory metals and extraction capacity is adequate to meet foreseeable requirements. Approximately four tons of Nb-1% Zr alloy were melted, forged, drawn, and rolled to produce various mill forms and relatively large die impression forgings. It was demonstrated that the Nb-1% Zr alloy is readily amenable to melting, primary working, and secondary working using standard equipment available in the specialty steel and nickel alloy industries. In general, the hot malleability of the alloy is significantly better than that of the more refractory nickel base high temperature alloys and is comparable to the stainless steels. Methods were successfully developed to protect the alloy against contamination during hot working. Cold fabricability proved to be outstanding. Reductions up to 90% were achieved during cold rolling of sheet with no intermediate stress relief or annealing treatment. Tube drawing reductions up to 50% were normal with no intermediate annealing. Over-all, the cold workability of this alloy was superior to that of the stainless steels. There was no problem of embrittlement over the full range of working temperatures which were used during the course of this work, namely from room temperature to 2350 …
Date: December 9, 1959
Creator: Raring, L M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Self-Shielding Cross Sections : a Bibliography (open access)

Self-Shielding Cross Sections : a Bibliography

This bibliography contains 37 references on self-shielding cross sections. The bibliography is limited to the period from 1951 through November 1959 with the references arranged alphabetically by title. The sources used in compiling this bibliography were: Abstracts of Classified Reports Nuclear Science Abstracts
Date: December 29, 1959
Creator: Cernak, Elizabeth A.
System: The UNT Digital Library