Analytical and experimental evaluation of a proposed self-forging fragment munition (open access)

Analytical and experimental evaluation of a proposed self-forging fragment munition

Analytical and experimental tools have been used to study the formation of a proposed self-forging fragment projectile. The primary objective of this study is the determination of the interior and exterior shape of the fully formed fragment, and to determine if the fragment tumbles in flight. In addition, it is of interest to compare computer predictions to experimental results. An experiment was performed using high speed photography and high-energy flash x-ray radiography to study liner and case motion and projectile formation. Fabrication and assembly tolerances were closely controlled in an effort to eliminate tolerances as a possible source of fragment instability. X-ray film-density contours were analyzed to determine the fully formed fragment interior and exterior shape. Down-range yaw screens showed fragment tumbling in flight. The computed fragment shape was compared to experimental results and it was found that a retaining ring in the computational model near the liner periphery had a significant effect on the final computed fragment shape. With the retaining ring in the computational model and full two-way sliding between all material interfaces, the final computed fragment showed very good agreement with the experiment on both exterior and interior shapes.
Date: December 27, 1982
Creator: Tuft, D.B. & Folsom, E.N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Congressional Pay (open access)

Congressional Pay

The question of a salary increase for Members of Congress was considered by both Houses numerous times during the 97th Congress. The issue was last considered during December in the FY83 Further Continuing Appropriations. As sent to the President, the measure provided for a 15% pay increase for Members of the House of Representatives and other senior Federal officials, but not for Senators. The resolution was signed into law by the President on Dec. 21, 1982. Previously, in September, Congress approved a pay cap through Dec. 17, 1982 for Members and other senior Federal officials.
Date: December 27, 1982
Creator: Dwyer, Paul E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-pressure ion source (open access)

Low-pressure ion source

A low pressure ion source for a neutron source comprises a filament cathode and an anode ring. Approximately 150V is applied between the cathode and the anode. Other electrodes, including a heat shield, a reflector and an aperture plate with a focus electrode, are placed at intermediate potentials. Electrons from the filament drawn out by the plasma and eventually removed by the anode are contained in a magnetic field created by a magnet ring. Ions are formed by electron impact with deuterium or tritium and are extracted at the aperture in the focus electrode. The ion source will typically generate a 200 mA beam through a 1.25 cm/sup 2/ aperture for an arc current of 10A. For deuterium gas, the ion beam is over 50 percent D/sup +/ with less than 1% impurity. The current density profile across the aperture will typically be uniform to within 20%.
Date: October 27, 1982
Creator: Bacon, F.M.; Brainard, J.P.; O'Hagan, J.B. & Walko, R.J.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health and Environmental Science: A Brief Review (open access)

Health and Environmental Science: A Brief Review

The detonation of the first atomic bomb heralded the beginning of a new age. Almost everyone agreed that the enormous energy released by the "atomic reaction" would create opportunities and problems far larger than man faced in previous history. However, few foresaw the explosion of knowledge that would also be part of this new age.
Date: September 27, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeled heating and surface erosion comparing motile (gas borne) and stationary (surface coating) inert particle additives (open access)

Modeled heating and surface erosion comparing motile (gas borne) and stationary (surface coating) inert particle additives

The unsteady, non-similar, chemically reactive, turbulent boundary layer equations are modified for gas plus dispersed solid particle mixtures, for gas phase turbulent combustion reactions and for heterogeneous gas-solid surface erosive reactions. The exterior (ballistic core) edge boundary conditions for the solutions are modified to include dispersed particle influences on core propellant combustion-generated turbulence levels, combustion reactants and products, and reaction-induced, non-isentropic mixture states. The wall surface (in this study it is always steel) is considered either bare or coated with a fixed particle coating which is conceptually non-reactive, insulative, and non-ablative. Two families of solutions are compared. These correspond to: (1) consideration of gas-borne, free-slip, almost spontaneously mobile (motile) solid particle additives which influence the turbulent heat transfer at the uncoated steel surface and, in contrast, (2) consideration of particle-free, gas phase turbulent heat transfer to the insulated surface coated by stationary particles. Significant differences in erosive heat transfer are found in comparing the two families of solutions over a substantial range of interior ballistic flow conditions. The most effective influences on reducing erosive heat transfer appear to favor mobile, gas-borne particle additives.
Date: September 27, 1982
Creator: Buckingham, A.C. & Siekhaus, W.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Present status and future direction of plutonium process chemistry (open access)

Present status and future direction of plutonium process chemistry

Large-scale plutonium recovery/processing facilities are currently operated at the US Department of Energy Hanford, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Rocky Flats, and Savannah River Sites. This paper presents an overview of plutonium process chemistry used at these sites, with particular emphasis on solution chemistry involved in recovery, purification, and waste treatment operations. By extrapolating from the present system of processes, this paper also attempts to chart the future direction of plutonium process development and operation. Areas where a better understanding of basic plutonium chemistry will contribute to development of improved processing are called out.
Date: September 27, 1982
Creator: Christensen, E. L.; Gray, L. W.; Navratil, J. D. & Schulz, W. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RIT rotor vibration testing. Test report. [Radial inflow turbines] (open access)

RIT rotor vibration testing. Test report. [Radial inflow turbines]

A radial inflow turbine (RIT) B rotor, including the impeller and shaft, was examined experimentally to determine vibratory characteristics. It was concluded that there are no specific speeds within the operating range with adequate resonance encroachment margins. It is recommended that performance tests be carried out with caution.
Date: September 27, 1982
Creator: Chartier, G L
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of the degradation of two candidate diffusion-pump oils, Krytox and Fomblin. Final report (open access)

Study of the degradation of two candidate diffusion-pump oils, Krytox and Fomblin. Final report

Activation energies were determined for decomposition of Fomblin HVAC 18/8 and Krytox 143AY oils (two perfluorinated polyethers) (respectively 60.6 kcal/mole and 55.6 kcal/mole) in the temperature range of 325/sup 0/ to 405/sup 0/C in a monel vessel. At any temperature in this range, Fomblin decomposes 30 +- 10 times faster than Krytox. The estimated decomposition in 10 years at 250/sup 0/C is 0.14% for Fomblin and 0.009% for Krytox. Effects of 304 ss and aluminum were determined. Although differences in the fluorine NMR spectrum of different batches of Krytox are observed, there are no significant changes detected between aged and unaged oils of the same batch. HF does not react with Krytox at 405/sup 0/C. Krytox can be chromatographed in spite of its high average molecular weight (3600 amu). GCMS showed that each smaller peak contained C/sub 2/F/sub 4/H-groups while the larger peaks contained only C/sub 2/F/sub 5/-groups. Hydrogen NMR on Krytox showed the C/sub 2/F/sub 4/H- to be CF/sub 3/CHF-groups. Chromatography of Fomblin gave a single broad envelope without resolved peaks.
Date: September 27, 1982
Creator: Pearson, R. K.; Happe, J. A. & Barton, G. W. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SYNROC production using a fluid bed calciner (open access)

SYNROC production using a fluid bed calciner

SYNROC is a titanate-based ceramic developed for immobilization of high-level nuclear reactor wastes in solid form. Fluid-bed SYNROC production permits slurry drying, calcining and redox to be carried out in a single unit. We present results of studies from two fluid beds; the Idaho Exxon internally-heated unit and the externally-heated unit constructed at Lawrence Livermore National laboratory. Bed operation over a range of temperature, feed rate, fluidizing rate and redox conditions indicate that high density, uniform particle-size SYNROC powders are produced which facilitate the densification step and give HUP parts with dense, well-developed phases and good leaching characteristics. 3 figures, 3 tables.
Date: September 27, 1982
Creator: Ackerman, F. J.; Grens, J. Z.; Ryerson, F. J.; Hoenig, C. L.; Bazan, F. & Campbell, J. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drilling report: State Nursery test well No. 1 (open access)

Drilling report: State Nursery test well No. 1

A geothermal test well was sited and drilled approximately 0.8 miles (1.3 km) east of Broadwater Hot Springs, near Helena, Montana. The site is on the property of the State Nursery, along the north side of Ten Mile Creek. The purpose of the drilling was to test a thermal infrared imagery anomaly and to evaluate whether a source of warm water for space heating of a series of new greenhouses could be developed to replace ones destroyed in the spring 1981 flooding of Ten Mile Creek. The well was drilled to 280 feet total depth, with no success in obtaining hot or even warm water.
Date: August 27, 1982
Creator: Donovan, J. & Sonderegger, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron-induced fission-cross-section measurements and calculations of selected transplutonic isotopes (open access)

Neutron-induced fission-cross-section measurements and calculations of selected transplutonic isotopes

The neutron-induced fission cross sections of /sup 242m/Am and /sup 245/Cm have been measured over an energy range of 10/sup -4/ eV to approx. 20 MeV in a series of experiments at three facilities during the past several years. The combined results of these measurements, in which only sub-milligram quantities of enriched isotopes were used, yield cross sections with uncertainties of approximately 5% below 10 MeV relative to the /sup 235/U standard cross section used to normalize the data. We summarize the resonance analysis of the /sup 242m/Am(n,f) cross section in the eV region. Hauser-Feshbach statistical calculations of the detailed fission cross sections of /sup 235/U and /sup 245/Cm have been carried out over the energy region from 0.1 to 5 MeV and these results are compared with our experimental data.
Date: August 27, 1982
Creator: White, R. M. & Browne, J. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 7, Number 64, Pages 3115-3162, August 27, 1982 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 7, Number 64, Pages 3115-3162, August 27, 1982

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: August 27, 1982
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Redox calcination study of Synroc D powder containing simulated SRL waste (open access)

Redox calcination study of Synroc D powder containing simulated SRL waste

According to Ringwood (A.E. Ringwood, W. Sinclair, and G.M. McLaughlin, Nuclear Waste Immobilization, Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, Livermore, Rept. UCRL-15147 (1979)), the iron oxidation state is important in controlling, the spinel mineralogy and composition if the amount of titania (TiO/sub 2/) consumed in spinel formation is to be minimized in favor of the formation of the Synroc phases, zirconolite, perovskite, and nepheline. In our redox calcination studies we observed that the iron oxidation state of FeO/Fe/sub 2/O/sub 3/ can be controlled by the redoxcalcining atmosphere. In a CO atmosphere, the oxidation state was reduced to less than 7 wt % Fe/sub 2/O/sub 3/. With appropriate CO/sub 2//CO gas mixtures the resultant iron oxidation states were in the range of 45 to 59 wt % Fe/sub 2/O/sub 3/. Direct rotary redox calcination of spray dried powder at 600/sup 0/C, without prior air calcination, showed increased redox efficiency when compared to powder that had been previously air calcined at 650/sup 0/C. We believe this is caused by a reduction in particle size. Rotary calcination at 800/sup 0/C in argon has no measurable reduction affect on the iron oxidation state of Synroc D powder.
Date: July 27, 1982
Creator: Chen, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 7, Number 56, Pages 2773-2802, July 27, 1982 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 7, Number 56, Pages 2773-2802, July 27, 1982

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: July 27, 1982
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Improved 50-kV pulser design (open access)

Improved 50-kV pulser design

A compact 50 kilovolt pulser has been developed as a gas switch trigger. This unit combines a grounded grid thyratron with a ferrite loaded step-up transformer to provide the required output voltage. A magnetic switch at the output brings the risetime down to the ten nanosecond range. Unit operation is specified into a 25 ohm resistive load. Integral with the pulser package is the necessary low level support electronics to power the thyratron and to provide trigger and diagnostic functions. Package volume is less than .02 m/sup 3/.
Date: May 27, 1982
Creator: Oicles, J.A. & Fulkerson, E.S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library