Resource Type

Completion Report An Automatic Fuel Element Stamping Machine (open access)

Completion Report An Automatic Fuel Element Stamping Machine

This document will be concerned with the design, operation and maintenance of an automatic fuel element stamping machine. In order to take advantage of automatic unloading and length checking at the Acme-Gridley lathes in the 313 Building, automatic stamping of fuel elements is desirable. This, along with the need for a permanent canning line identification, resulted in a request for a machine to automatically stamp HAPO fuel elements on a production basis.
Date: January 12, 1960
Creator: Allen, C. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Considerations on the Configuration and Stability of the H2 Temperature Control Loops of the 80" Bubble Chamber (open access)

Some Considerations on the Configuration and Stability of the H2 Temperature Control Loops of the 80" Bubble Chamber

There is but little known about the thermal process involving the dynamics and thermodynamics of the cycling liquid H2 in the chamber and those of the H2 fluid flow in the cooling coil as well as the geometrical characteristics of the chamber body. This the physical equations governing this process are involving so many variables that this analysis becomes rather complex even if simplifying assumptions are made. To those difficulties is added the ignorance even of an approximative expression for some physical quantities such as film heat transfer coefficients entering as major parameters the process equation.
Date: January 7, 1964
Creator: Androulakis, John G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biological Effects of Thermal Neutrons and the B10 (n,c) Li7 Reaction (open access)

Biological Effects of Thermal Neutrons and the B10 (n,c) Li7 Reaction

Boron-10 has a high thermal neutron capture cross section (3880 barns). Following neutron capture, the subsequent nuclear disintegration produces an alpha particle and a lithium-7 nucleus with the release of an average of 2.34 MeV for the particle irradiation, and in 93% of the reactions there is also the emission of an 0.48 MeV gamma ray: [equation not transcribed]. The kinetic energy is divided between the lithium-7 nucleus and the alpha particle giving the equal and opposite momentums with a range in tissue of about 8-14μ or approximately 1 cell diameter (1). This fact and the reported favorable partition of boron between tumor and the normal brain suggested a possible therapeutic usefulness which has been investigated clinically. The object of our study is to document the biological effects of the B10 (n,α) Li7 reaction on the brain of dogs injected with boron-10 30 minutes prior to irradiation with thermal neutrons. For this, we felt it desirable to estimate a dose for the boron-10 reaction which if exceeded, produces destruction of normal tissue. This dose could then be a reference dose to be utilized as a maximal limit for the irradiation of normal tissue. We have assured that the largest fluence …
Date: January 13, 1964
Creator: Archambeau, J. O.; Alcober, V; Calvo, W. & Brenneis, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dose-survival Curves for HeLa Cell Cultures Using Thermal Neutrons and the B10 (n,α)Li7 Reaction (open access)

Dose-survival Curves for HeLa Cell Cultures Using Thermal Neutrons and the B10 (n,α)Li7 Reaction

The biological evaluation of the thermal neutron capture reaction of boron-10, B10 (n,α)Li7 + 2.786 MeV, has previously been studied, using different particles from the boron-10 thermal neutron capture reaction compared with 250 kvp x-rays has been reported as 1.05 for spleen-thymic weight reduction (1), as 1.5 to 2.0 for skin lesions in pigs (2), and 1.87 for skin lesions of the rabbit's ear (3). The significance of such a calculation is felt to be unreliable for the boron-10 reaction in animals because of the vagaries of dose determination resulting from irregular boron distribution, and by the presence of an adventitious irradiation from fast neutrons and capture gammas that is inadequately determined at present. Our present experiment attempts to circumvent the difficulties attendent to studies of the boron-10 reaction in animals by comparing the effect of this reaction on the proliferative capacity of HeLa cells with those produced with 250 kvp x-ray.
Date: January 13, 1964
Creator: Archambeau, J. O.; Drew, R. M. & Robertson, J. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cool-Down Refrigeration Requirements for 80" Bubble Chambers (open access)

Cool-Down Refrigeration Requirements for 80" Bubble Chambers

The purpose of this report is to determine the amount of refrigeration capacity required to cool down the 80" bubble chamber from ambient temperature to liquid hydrogen temperature.
Date: January 7, 1964
Creator: Bamberger, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
General Description of the 80" Bubble Chamber Refrigeration System (open access)

General Description of the 80" Bubble Chamber Refrigeration System

Reliability of individual components and the ability to produce refrigeration even if one or two of these components should be in operable are the prime design parameters of this cycle. Each component was looked at with these two parameters in mind and any item that had obvious objections was either rejected or backed up with another piece of equipment. Along this line, you will notice (refer to line schematic) two hydrogen compressors and two nitrogen compressors; for full capacity all are required. However, in the event of the loss of use of one of these compressors, it will still be possible to produce at least 50% of the rated capacity. To eliminate outside influences, the cycle was designed around what may be called a closed cycle cascade system; with the assumption that there is no loss of power, cooling water, the equipment can run indefinitely. The nitrogen and hydrogen cycles are of the Simple Linde type with pre-cooling making use of the Joule-Thompson Effect for the refrigeration produced. The low-temperature components of the cycle have no moving parts other than valves, consisting entirely of counter-flow heat exchangers to lower the temperature of the incoming high-pressure gas to a level where …
Date: January 7, 1964
Creator: Bamberger, J. A.; Brown, D. P. & Jensen, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogen Refrigerator Design Capacity for 80" Chamber (open access)

Hydrogen Refrigerator Design Capacity for 80" Chamber

When the design of the refrigerator was begun, one of the important parameters was refrigeration capacity required. In order to estimate the required hydrogen refrigeration load the following had to be considered: 1. Dynamic Load due to pulsing of the chamber. Although this has been determined some two years ago through test work, it has not been published as of this date and will be presented here. 2. Static losses due to conduction, radiation, and convection. This is covered by Eng. Note BC-03-0-B. 3. Cool-down requirements. This is covered by Eng. Note BC-03-0-C.
Date: January 7, 1964
Creator: Bamberger, J. A.; Brown, D. P. & Jensen, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spinning of Columbium & Columbium 1%- Zirconium Tubing (open access)

Spinning of Columbium & Columbium 1%- Zirconium Tubing

The following objectives were planned for this project. (1) Development of spinning data necessary for spinning Columbium and Columbium-1% Zirconium tubing from ingot, forged or welded tube blanks. (2) Determine mechanical & metallurgical properties of spun Columbium and Columbium-1% Zirconium tubing. (3) Determine dimensional and tolerance limits possible to attain on spun Columbium and Columbium-1% Zirconium tubing based on our present equipment, tooling limitations, and the spinning tests performed for objective No. 1.
Date: January 19, 1961
Creator: Barker, Wharton R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Time Dependence of Space Charge Beam Losses in the Cosmotron (open access)

Time Dependence of Space Charge Beam Losses in the Cosmotron

An investigation was made of Cosmotron intensity versus time through the entire time interval from the beginning of injection to the completion of r-f capture. The induction electrode signal was used for the instantaneous measurement of beam intensity. Oscilloscope displays of the signal were photographed and traced. Base lines were filled in on the tracings and the area of the pulses measured with a polar planimeter. It was found that the relation losses of beam intensity increase with injection intensity (total injected charge), and that most of the losses take place in the time interval between the end of injection and the completion of the first synchrotron oscillation
Date: January 4, 1962
Creator: Barton, M. Q. & Sacharidis, E. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Upper Atmosphere Monitoring Program : Progress Report No. 8 for May 1, 1959 through July 31, 1959 (open access)

Upper Atmosphere Monitoring Program : Progress Report No. 8 for May 1, 1959 through July 31, 1959

The overall scope of the program encompasses both research into the physical parameters involved in the collection of airborne radioactive particles and the development, fabrication and calibration of balloon-borne sampling equipment to enable the precise determination of stratospheric particle concentration and particle size distribution.
Date: January 15, 1960
Creator: Baumstark, J.; Jones, S.; Stern, S.; Torgeson, L. & Zeller, W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deep-Pool Reactor for Water Desalting (open access)

Deep-Pool Reactor for Water Desalting

The following report presents the results of an engineering design study performed to investigate the potential and feasibility of a deep-pool reactor concept for ultimate use as an economic heat source for a single-purpose desalting plant.
Date: January 30, 1965
Creator: Bechtel Corporation
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of the Localization, Physiochemical Properties, and Action of Phycocyanin in Anacystis Nidulans (open access)

Studies of the Localization, Physiochemical Properties, and Action of Phycocyanin in Anacystis Nidulans

The blue-green algae, classed as primitive monerans, represent the lowest level of organization known to possess a higher plant type of photosynthesis. The role in photosynthesis of the phycocyanin in these organisms is particularly interesting from the point of view of ultrastructural biochemistry. It has been shown repeatedly that despite the primacy normally assigned to chlorophyll, the light absorbed by phycocyanin is used more efficiently for photosynthesis (equated with photosynthetic oxygen evolution). This property is all the more intriguing since Hill activity is very labile in these organisms; the loss being correlated with the release of phycocyanin. Then too, it has been observed that fluorescence at about 685 mμ, attributed to chlorophyll, is proportionately greater for wavelengths absorbed by phycocyanin. French and Young attributed the differential to inactive absorption by carotenoids in the "Soret" region of chlorophyll, but Duysens concluded that the magnitude of the difference observed by him was too great to be explained by screening. Duysens proposed the existence of two pools of chlorophyll of about equal size; one containing fluorescent, photosynthetically active chlorophyll in proximity to phycocyanin, the other nonfluorescent, photosynthetically inactive and remote from phycocyanin.
Date: January 3, 1964
Creator: Bergeron, John A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering Report on the Design of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Forced Convection Alkali Metal Vaporization Condensation Heat Transfer Rig (open access)

Engineering Report on the Design of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Forced Convection Alkali Metal Vaporization Condensation Heat Transfer Rig

Summary. A test rig has been designed to obtain basic two phase forced convection liquid metal heat transfer and pressure drop data for use in the design of liquid metal boilers. This engineering report includes background of the boiling problem, partial summary of work done by other investigators, the object, scope, engineering, and operations of this test rig, and a summary of reproducibility tests conducted in a water back-up rig.
Date: January 18, 1963
Creator: Bernstein, E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Simple Theory of the Process P+P → D+W+ (open access)

A Simple Theory of the Process P+P → D+W+

The discovery of the vector meson which mediates the weak interactions, W,1 would be of extreme importance for weak interaction physics and for field theory in general. The W, if it exists, will be made in a variety of processes such as v+N →W+ + e- + N, or n- + P →W- + P, or, as studied in this note, P + P → D + W+. The W couples to leptons with a dimensionless constant [constant not transcribed] where G is the Feral constant defined t=so that [constant not transcribed]. Thus for [equation not transcribed] and the smallness of this constant is, evidently, what makes any of the above processes difficult to detect. The W may have a variety of decay modes.
Date: January 28, 1963
Creator: Bernstein, Jeremy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Correlation of Kinetic Isotope Effects with Chemical Bonding in Three Center Reactions (open access)

Correlation of Kinetic Isotope Effects with Chemical Bonding in Three Center Reactions

We consider the kinetic isotope effect in three center reactions of the type of A+BC→AB+C. Such model calculations are a good approximation to primary hydrogen isotope effects. For abstraction or transfer reactions, B becomes H, D, or T. The dynamics of the three storm system are calculated for a general quadratic potential, with the assumption that the potential energy is constant along the reaction coordinate (flat top barrier). This model system can be calculated in detail and serves to illustrate the relationship between kinetic isotope effect and chemical bonding in the transition state. The statistical mechanical part of the calculation can be carried out exactly within the framework transition state theory or in any one of a number of approximations. The γ bar method gives particularly good insight into the chemistry of the problem with a minimum of arithmetic.
Date: January 7, 1964
Creator: Bigeleisen, Jacob
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Investigations of the Removal of Sodium Oxide From Liquid Sodium (open access)

Experimental Investigations of the Removal of Sodium Oxide From Liquid Sodium

Experimental investigations were conducted to obtain additional information on the growth and characteristics of sodium oxide deposits in liquid sodium which could lead to system plugging. These investigations included the removal of sodium oxide from molten sodium by the cold trap method.
Date: January 18, 1960
Creator: Billuris, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam Separators for Bev Particles (open access)

Beam Separators for Bev Particles

The problem of separation of beams of particles of different masses but of the same momentum at Bev energies is the subject of a great deal of study at several high energy laboratories. In this note we shall describe the problem and tabulate a few of the cogent parameters. Frequently the student of high energy interactions is faced with a beam of miscellaneous particles coming from an accelerator. By standard techniques this beam can be rendered approximately parallel and an inch or so in diameter. By passage through a magnetic field the beam can be analyzed in momentum. Now it frequently happens that the particles in which the experimenter is particularly interested make up only a small fraction of the beam and the exigencies of the proposed experiment may well demand that the background of undesired particles be drastically reduced. The problem is difficult because the velocities of the various particles are almost equal to each other and to the velocity of lights; this makes time-of-flight techniques relatively ineffective. The energies of the particles are almost equal so electrostatic separation also is difficult. Since the beam is already analyzed in momentum, further separation by magnetic means is impossible.
Date: January 22, 1963
Creator: Blewett, J. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two Lectures on the Magnetic Scattering of Neutrons (open access)

Two Lectures on the Magnetic Scattering of Neutrons

In these lectures we will discuss some examples of information about magnetic properties of solids which can be obtained by neutron scattering. We consider a scattering process in which a neutron with wave vector k and spin σ is incident upon a solid in state q>. (Here q stands for all of the quantum numbers which describe the state of the solid, such as spin and orbital electronic states, phonon numbers, etc.) After interacting with the solid, the neutron goes off with wave-vector k' and spin σ', leaving the solid in state q'>. In performing an experiment of this sort one does not usually observe the initial and final spin states of the neutron or the initial and final states of the solid. We must then sum over all possible final states and average over all initial states.
Date: January 13, 1964
Creator: Blume, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modified-Graphite Technology : Quarterly Report No. 1 (open access)

Modified-Graphite Technology : Quarterly Report No. 1

From abstract: "This report summarizes the past year of study of fine, molded, multicrystalline graphites with particular reference to the interrelation among certain properties with the composition, fabricating techniques, and thermal treatments found to influence them."
Date: January 20, 1960
Creator: Bradstreet, Samuel W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure Vessel Steel Surveillance Program for General Electric Power Reactors (open access)

Pressure Vessel Steel Surveillance Program for General Electric Power Reactors

Abstract: "Pressure vessel steel surveillance programs are performed in nuclear power reactors to provide knowledge of the mechanical properties of the pressure vessel material as neutron irradiation proceeds. A standard surveillance program is described. Design of specimens, capsules, and associated equipment, as well as selection of test material and techniques for special preparation and testing, are discussed."
Date: January 8, 1965
Creator: Brandt, F. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of Dislocation Theory to Analysis of Vertical Displacements at the Ground Surface Caused by the Duryea Event (open access)

Application of Dislocation Theory to Analysis of Vertical Displacements at the Ground Surface Caused by the Duryea Event

This report documents the use of the dislocation theory to analyze measured vertical displacements across a fault near the Duryea underground nuclear explosion.
Date: January 29, 1968
Creator: Brethauer, G. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geologic Investigations of Radioactive Deposits, 1942-1960 : A Bibliography of U.S. Geological Survey Publications on the Geology of Radioactive Deposits (open access)

Geologic Investigations of Radioactive Deposits, 1942-1960 : A Bibliography of U.S. Geological Survey Publications on the Geology of Radioactive Deposits

The following report is the last in a series of periodic reports covering investigations made by the U.S. Geological Survey on behalf of the Divisions of Raw Materials and Research of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. The following is a bibliography of Geological Survey publications stemming from investigations on radioactive materials and deposits since 1942.
Date: January 1961
Creator: Brown, Andrew
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Multi-Layer Insulation (open access)

Evaluation of Multi-Layer Insulation

The purpose of this report is to compare multi-layer insulation and liquid nitrogen shielding as methods of insulating the 80-inch Liquid Hydrogen Bubble Chamber.
Date: January 7, 1964
Creator: Brown, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Non-military Uses of Nuclear Explosions (open access)

Non-military Uses of Nuclear Explosions

Introduction. With the development of fission and subsequently of thermonuclear explosives, a very large source of cheap energy has become available. The problem of using this energy for peaceful purposes safely and economically presents itself as one of the most interesting and important of our time. In explosions the energy is released very suddenly. Conversion of this sudden release of energy at extremely high temperature and pressure into the form of useful work, either mechanical or chemical or thermal, must be accomplished in order for such explosions to have nonmilitary uses. The technical feasibility of such conversions in a number of different instances will be described in this article. At the same time one must be able to control nuisance effects. Examples of these are seismic effects, the blast and heat which at least in the atmosphere always accompany such explosions, and the problem of radioactivity. Even given the technical feasibility of these accomplishments, which in some cases seems quite clear from what is known already, one must prove economic feasibility. That is to say, one must show that the cost of certain nonmilitary undertakings will be considerably less by the use of nuclear explosions than by conventional methods.
Date: January 6, 1960
Creator: Brown, Harold
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library