Annual Progress Report of Methods to Increase Burnout Heat Transfer (open access)

Annual Progress Report of Methods to Increase Burnout Heat Transfer

"Acoustic energy generated by mechanical or electrical signals and its effect on pool boiling of isopropanol were studied. Daring the course of the investigation, a method was devised to determine the amount of heat-transfer surface wetted by the boiling isopropanol. Plots of heat flux versus temperature difference for each frequency showed that the acoustic energy did not significantly affect the heat flux at burnout, but slightly increased the critical temperature difference. No general effect of frequency variation was found even at the frequencies of the "boiling songs" of isopropanol. The over- all effect of the acoustic energy was to disturb the vapor tending te coat the heat transfer surface. This was most evident from the absence of film boiling even at temperature differences far above the critical temperature difference. The application of alternating current to the boiling system gives promise of a self-regulating method to increase boiling heat transfer when required, and is the most significant new finding of this investigation. Two pertinent Russian papers were translated and are appended."
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Markels, Michael; Durfee, Robert L. & Richardson, Robert
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diffraction of Hydromagnetic Wave by a Half Plane (open access)

Diffraction of Hydromagnetic Wave by a Half Plane

"In this paper we solve for the diffracted wave which results when a weak hydromegnetic shock impinges on a rigid perfectly conducting half plans."
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Gardner, Clifford S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 1. Thermal & Mechanical Design (open access)

Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 1. Thermal & Mechanical Design

This technical report represents the final design for a sodium to sodium intermediate heat exchanger and a sodium to water steam generator. The intermediate heat exchanger is designed for operation in a nuclear power plant using liquid sodium as the primary and secondary coolant. Since the primary fluid coming fro the reactor is radioactive, the purpose of the IHX is to transfer heat to a nonradioactive fluid which then goes to the steam generator. Because of radioactivity the unit will be enclosed in a concrete pit and will not be accessible during periods of operation. Immediately after shutdown it will be necessary to allow time for radioactive decay before the unit will be accessible to personnel. Because of inaccessibility and possible long periods allowed for decay time, it is imperative that the unit give trouble free operation. During periods of shutdown, the internals should have easy access for inspection and repair if necessary so that down time is held to a minimum. The steam generator is designed to generate superheated steam using liquid sodium from the intermediate heat exchanger as the heat source. Its basic design is a shell and tube unit made up of three difference sections: (1) a …
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Alco Products (Firm).
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 2. Chemical & Stress Analysis (open access)

Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 2. Chemical & Stress Analysis

Introduction: This volume deals principally with the chemical analysis and the stress analysis for a sodium to sodium intermediate heat exchanger and a sodium to water steam generator. The work presented is an extension and modification of the analysis presented in the preliminary design report. The chemical analysis covers the sodium cover gas system and the effects of sodium-water reactions in the event of a leak in the steam generator. Considerable design work was done in an effort to maintain the integrity of the steam generator vessel under maximum leak conditions. The method of sizing relief valves for each unit under varying leak rates is presented in this text and operation of the unit for the various leak rates is resented in the Operation and Maintenance volume. The stress analysis section covers those thermal transients which would be physically possible with this intermediate heat exchanger and steam generator design. Attention has been given to methods of operation which would minimize the magnitude and frequency of thermal shocks. Certain areas have been studied in detail where thermal stresses appear high. This report also includes a structural design basis for handling stress analysis of combined mechanical, hydrostatic and thermal stresses and conditions …
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Alco Products (Firm).
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 3. Specifications (open access)

Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 3. Specifications

Introduction: Sodium Components Material Specifications. Twenty-three material, inspection and welding specification are presented for the various parts of both the intermediate heat exchanger and steam generator. Tables indicate the applicable parts and assemblies to which these specifications shall apply. For other parts, where the material requirements are not severe, the ASTM or other indicated specifications shall apply.
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Alco Products (Firm).
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 4. Operation & Maintenance (open access)

Intermediate Heat Exchanger and Steam Generator Final Design. Volume 4. Operation & Maintenance

This technical report contains the operation and maintenance specifications for the intermediate heat exchanger and the steam generator. The report contains eight sections: (1) General Information, (2) Shipping and Installation, (3) Operation Procedures, (4) Scram and Casualty Shutdowns, (5) Leaks, (6) Instrumentation and Control, (7) Maintenance, and (8) four Appendixes (a) Boiler Water Chemistry Recommendations, (b) Final Concept Drawings, (c) Industrial Nucleonics Literature on Liquid Level Detector, and (d) Sodium Purity Control Recommendations.
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Alco Products (Firm).
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion Energy Distribution, Energy Degradation, and Exponentiation Criteria in a Plasma Formed by Beam Trapping and Charge Transfer (open access)

Ion Energy Distribution, Energy Degradation, and Exponentiation Criteria in a Plasma Formed by Beam Trapping and Charge Transfer

An approximation is derived for the time constant which characterizes the rate of energy loss of fast ions moving through a plasma. Using particle and energy-balance equations a simple approximate criterion is derived for the estimation of the importance of energy degradation during plasma buildup in a DCX type machine. Next, there is derived the steady-state ion energy distribution for a case in which energy losses are to electrons at a given temperature and particle losses are by charge exchange. The distribution function is used to compute loss rate, upper critical current, ionization rate, and other functions of interest. Quantitative application is made to DCX-2 under various conditions of operation of carbon and deuterium arcs.
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Rose, D. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Track Image Intensifier (open access)

Nuclear Track Image Intensifier

"Development of a nuclear track image intensifier which is to have a cathode dia. of 83 in. and an output screen dia. of 1 in. is reported. Spherical faceplates for the intensifier which were etched to a thickness of 0.025 in. over a dia. of 80 in. withstood a pressure differential of 2 atm. Techniques were developed to measure spectral energy distribution, phosphor burn characteristics, phosphor efficiency, and phosphor persistence. Thallium- activated RbI and CsI were evaluated for use in the first stage of the image intensifier system. A color shift toward the yellow was accomplished in rubidium iodide phosphor by increasing the mole % of Th activator. Burn varied widely in different samples."
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: DesRochers, R. D.; Stern, H. A. & Ezard, L. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Seismic Decoupling for Explosions in Spherical Cavities (open access)

Seismic Decoupling for Explosions in Spherical Cavities

Abstract. A series of paired explosions in a salt mine near Winnfield, Louisiana, has been conducted to test a theory by Dr. A. L. Latter concerning seismic decoupling by underground cavities. The theory predicted a decoupling of about 100. Free-field and surface measurements from an explosion in either a 6-ft- or a 15-ft-radius spherical cavity were compared with similar measurements from a completely tamped explosion. Shot sixes were from a 10 lb up to a few tons. Surface measurements were made out to 100 km and covered the frequency range from 0.05 to 100 cpa. The experiment confirmed that decoupling does occur. The actual decoupling factor as a function of frequency is presented and compared with the Latter theory.
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Adams, William M. & Carder, Dean S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermonuclear Plasma Containment in Open-Ended Systems (open access)

Thermonuclear Plasma Containment in Open-Ended Systems

"A survey is presented of the theory of confinement in open-ended systems (such as mirror machines and cusped geometries) together with the slight amount of experimental confrontation with theory that exists at present."
Date: September 30, 1960
Creator: Grad, Harold, 1923-
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Cowboy : Use of Large Cavities to Reduce Seismic Waves From Underground Explosions (open access)

Project Cowboy : Use of Large Cavities to Reduce Seismic Waves From Underground Explosions

This technical report analyzes an experiment designed to test the theory of seismic decoupling of underground explosives proposed by Latter, LeLevier, Martinelli, and McMillan [1959]. The theory calculated the amplitude of a 1.7-kiloton nuclear explosive in a hole in salt and compares it to the measured value of the 1.7-kt Rainier shot in tuff at the same distance. A decoupling factor of about 300 resulted. The experiment, called Cowboy, was designed to test the decoupling principle by carrying out a series of eight high-explosive shots in two spheres made in a salt dome and nine tamped shots for comparison purposes. The seismic data reported here was obtained primarily at 14,000 and 22,000 feet from the shot at frequencies of 10 to 30 cps. A salt-to-salt decoupling factor of 100 was obtained which is consistent wit the predicted 300 tuff-to-salt factor. When the sphere was over-driven so that the walls did not move elastically (a condition which violates the theory), decoupling factors of 10 and 30 were measured. The report interprets the seismic data to give the dependence of decoupling on the various parameters of the experiment. The decoupling deduced from measurements made 80 feet from the shot points is found …
Date: September 29, 1960
Creator: Herbst, Roland F.; Werth, Glenn C. & Springer, Donald L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Vibrational States Of The HD⁺ And HT⁺ Ions (open access)

Vibrational States Of The HD⁺ And HT⁺ Ions

The vibrational eigenvalues belonging to the ground electronic state of the HD<sup>+ and HT<sup>+ ions have been calculated. These calculations have been done for the J = 0 rotational state and neglecting the dynamic corrections to the potential. For the HD<sup>+ ion we find twenty-two bound states, and for the HT<sup>+ ion twenty three bound states.
Date: September 29, 1960
Creator: Cohen, Stanley; Hiskes, John R. & Ridell, Robert J., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Nuclide Hf182 (open access)

The Nuclide Hf182

The nuclide Hf182 has been made by thermal-neutron irradiation of hafnium oxide and has been found to have a half-life of 8.5 x 10(6) years. A preliminary study ha been made of possible radiations associated with the nuclide.
Date: September 28, 1960
Creator: Hutchin, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Statistical Geometry Of Bubble Tracks (open access)

The Statistical Geometry Of Bubble Tracks

An exact treatment of the structure of tracks in nuclear research emulsion recently was attempted with some success. Many of the proofs also appear to be generally valid for bubble tracks in Wilson chambers. This is a summary of the results that are applicable to tracks of charged particles in bubble chambers.
Date: September 28, 1960
Creator: Barkas, Walter H. (Walter Henry), 1912-1969
System: The UNT Digital Library
Additional Miscellaneous Tools in the HRT Core (open access)

Additional Miscellaneous Tools in the HRT Core

This memorandum presents a description of several additional miscellaneous HRT core maintenance tools, not in an earlier report (1). These tools were used in the removal of the cut up diffuser plates, probing the core wall, gauging the size of the holes, and other simple tasks. Function, design, and operation are described for the following items.
Date: September 26, 1960
Creator: Holz, P. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measuring Reactor Neutron Spectra with Threshold Detectors (open access)

Measuring Reactor Neutron Spectra with Threshold Detectors

The use of threshold detector foils to measure the external neutron spectrum of two reactors is described. The foils employed are Pu236 to measure the total fast flux, U238 for the region above 1.5 Mev, S32 above 2.5 Mev, and Au197 for thermal neutrons. Scintillation counters ae used to determine the activity induce din the detectors. The foil-counting system is calibrated by used a Cockcroft-Walton accelerator as a fast neutron source. The results indicate a fission type spectrum at each reactor.
Date: September 23, 1960
Creator: Grader, Roderick J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of the DD2 Amplifier with the RIDL 200-and 400-Channel Analyzers (open access)

Use of the DD2 Amplifier with the RIDL 200-and 400-Channel Analyzers

The use of the DD^3 amplifier with the RIDL 200- and 400-channel analyzers has been found advantageous for certain applications. In order to use the DD2, certain modifications to the input circuits of the Analog-to Digital Converter Unit are necessary. In addition, the modifications improved the linearity of the analyzer in the low channels. Using the analyzer with the RIDL Type 30-7 Scintillation Pulse Amplifier, it was noted that non-linearity of as much as 5 or 6 channels was present below channel 20. With the modifications made and with the use of the DD2, this non-linearity has been reduced to less than 1/2 channel.
Date: September 23, 1960
Creator: Todd, H. A. & Smiddle, R. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feasibility Study of a New Mass Flow System : Quarterly Report No. 1 Covering the Period From June 1 to September 1, 1960 (open access)

Feasibility Study of a New Mass Flow System : Quarterly Report No. 1 Covering the Period From June 1 to September 1, 1960

The following report describes a mass flow system that can measure homogeneous flow, slurries, highly corrosive fluids and multiphase fluids, with the addition of considering pressure drops, measuring external to the flow, ruggedness and reliability.
Date: September 21, 1960
Creator: Burgwald, G. M. & Genthe, William K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Precipitation of Crystalline Uranium and Thorium Peroxide: Applications to Fuel-Element Oxides and Purifications (open access)

Precipitation of Crystalline Uranium and Thorium Peroxide: Applications to Fuel-Element Oxides and Purifications

Departures from the usual precipitation method produced crystalline uranium peroxide in several forms. Three types of segregated needles were used in the preparation of three pellets for pellet-type elements. Densities of the pellets ranged from 93 to 97% of theoretical, depending on conditions of precipitation.
Date: September 21, 1960
Creator: Whetsel, H. B. & Dean, O. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary Analog Computer Study of the Small EGCR In-Pile Loops (open access)

Preliminary Analog Computer Study of the Small EGCR In-Pile Loops

The ORNL analog computer was used to simulate four widely different experiment conditions in the small EGCR in-pile loops. Various control and safety systems were evaluated in each case. Curves are included which show the response to postulated accidents and component failures. The results indicate that one standard control and safety system will probably be adequate for a wide variety of test conditions.
Date: September 21, 1960
Creator: Ball, S. J. & Beasley, E. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Layering Above a Refractor on the Character of the Refraction Arrival (open access)

Effect of Layering Above a Refractor on the Character of the Refraction Arrival

Abstract. The waveform or character of a refraction arrival has become internationally important because of its use in determining source parameters. An approximate theoretical machine calculation has been made to show the effect of layering above a refractor on the character of the refraction arrival. The method is illustrated with a geologic model taken from the Edwards Plateau area of West Texas. The effect of the Edwards limestone, Comanche, and Trinity formations on the refraction from the Pennsylvanian limestone is computed. The conversion of energy in theses upper layers from compressional to shear plays a significant role in forming the refraction character. An anticlinal structure is introduced into the Pennsylvanian limestone and it is argued that, in a first approximation, the wave in the Pennsylvanian limestone follow the structure, refracting off at the critical angle as before. Now, however, the angle of incidence on the base of the Trinity is a function of the angle of the structure. Since the amplitudes of converted waves depends n this angle, The character of the refraction arrival depends in a predictable way on the angle in the structure where the critical refraction has taken lace. These results are theoretical and only approximate, but …
Date: September 20, 1960
Creator: Werth, Glenn C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instruction Manual, Mercury Relay Pulse Generator Model 1-1212C (open access)

Instruction Manual, Mercury Relay Pulse Generator Model 1-1212C

The Model Q-1212C Pulser is a single frequency (60 pps) generator whose output waveform is characterized by a rise-time of less than 4 mµsec and, depending upon the method of termination, an exponential decay having a time constant of 300 or 600µsec. The waveform approximates that produced by a radiation detector. The waveform approximates that produced by a radiation detector. The maximum available output from the instrument is 10 volts, positive or negative polarity, and is continuously adjustable by means of step switches and a 10-turn potentiometer. The potentiometer has a linearity of 0.1%.
Date: September 20, 1960
Creator: Fairstein, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of the Mechanism of Radiation Induced Gelation in Monomer-Polymer Mixtures (open access)

A Study of the Mechanism of Radiation Induced Gelation in Monomer-Polymer Mixtures

"A number of mixtures of polymers and multi-unsaturated monomers have been prepared and irradiated. The content of insoluble gel of irradiated samples of these polymer-monomer mixtures has been determined by extraction."
Date: September 20, 1960
Creator: Radiation Applications Incorporated
System: The UNT Digital Library
Equilibrium Configuration of a Plasma in the Guiding Center Limit (open access)

Equilibrium Configuration of a Plasma in the Guiding Center Limit

"We compute the equilibrium configuration of a collision-free plasma contained in an axially symmetric magnetic field. The plasma is characterized by a non-scalar pressure tensor which is obtained from a microscopic distribution function in a form suggested b the guiding center approximation. The solution is calculated in the limit where the ratio of the width to the length of the plasma region and the ratio of the gas to the magnetic pressure are both small. Boundary values at the midplane as well as the shape of the plasma appear as arbitrary parameters in the solution. We give the solution to a corresponding scalar pressure problem for comparison."
Date: September 15, 1960
Creator: Oppenheim, Alan
System: The UNT Digital Library