Final Report on Design Tests PR-50 and PR-51: Reactor Piping Seal Testing and Reactor Piping Structural Integrity (open access)

Final Report on Design Tests PR-50 and PR-51: Reactor Piping Seal Testing and Reactor Piping Structural Integrity

A test program conducted to develop high integrity piping and seal components for Plutonium Recycle Test Reactor installation. Methods of preventing leakage of costly D2O coolant and maintaining operational safety were investigated.
Date: June 26, 1959
Creator: Jackson, P. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scratch Depth Measurement Methods (open access)

Scratch Depth Measurement Methods

Judging scratch depth or surface roughness by unaided visual inspection under controlled conditions, while rapid and popular, is not quantitative. Comparison methods improve reproducibility but are generally not applicable to evaluation of depths of single widely spaced scratches. Stylus-type contour recorders yield valuable scratch contour data but may themselves plow through soft materials and fine details. Depth measuring microscopes are particularly applicable to measurement of pinhole depth but do not graphically reveal profiles and provide only a small field of view. The comparatively large field of view and graphic display of contour provided by profile microscopes make them particularly suitable for evaluation scratch depth as well as surface roughness. A HAPO-constructed instrument has demonstrated an accuracy of +/- 50 micro inches in the range of 50 to 15,000 micro-inches scratch depth. It is a pocket-sized, portable, and can be used on horizontal and vertical surfaces by untrained persons with only brief instruction.
Date: February 26, 1959
Creator: Brenden, B.B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Reactivity of Uranium Monocarbide and Uranium Mononitride with Water at 100°C. (open access)

Chemical Reactivity of Uranium Monocarbide and Uranium Mononitride with Water at 100°C.

The monocarbide and the mononitride of uranium are potentially useful ceramic nuclear fuel materials. This paper reports the results of exploratory investigations of the reactions of uranium monocarbide and uranium mononitride with boiling water. Uranium dioxide, chemically stable in deoxygenated boiling water, was used as a control.
Date: February 26, 1959
Creator: Newkirk, H. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trough-Time Dissolver (open access)

Trough-Time Dissolver

Designing a dissolver safe for up to 5 per cent U.235 enriched NPF's and having a one a ton per day capacity is a fundamental problem of Hanford NPF Program. Two basic design concepts have so far evolved, both of which employ a recirculating system in which the fuel elements are placed in the critically safe geometry separated from the bulk of the solution in another vessel. In one concept the fuel elements are charged to a set of geometrically safe cylinders or tubes and solution is circulated through them/ In the other concept the fuel elements are placed on a flat tray while solution is sprayed over them. In the latter system, nuclear safety is obtained by avoiding submerged dissolution and the resulting neutron moderation by the solution.
Date: June 26, 1959
Creator: McKee, R.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library