A Single Stage Axial Compressor Blade Test Facility (open access)

A Single Stage Axial Compressor Blade Test Facility

Abstract: This report gives a general description of the single stage axial compressor blade test facility located at the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant, Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Date: January 13, 1964
Creator: Fee, G. G.
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.
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.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Use of Activated Charcoal Iodine Monitors During and Following a Release of Fission Product Iodines (open access)

The Use of Activated Charcoal Iodine Monitors During and Following a Release of Fission Product Iodines

The present core of the Brookhaven Graphite Reactor consists of some 4900 highly enriched uranium fuel loaded in 615 horizontal fuel channels passing through a 25 foot cube of graphite moderator and reflector. The core is divided into two halves (north and south) by an 8 cm. wide vertical gap in the center of the graphite. The cooling air enters the reactor through inlet filters, at the rate of 270,000 CFM, passes into the central gap and flows bi-directionally through the north and south halves of the core. It then enters the collecting plenums and flows into the north and south ducts. The air is first monitored by the north and south exit air monitors located within the pile building. These are moving filter tape monitors with beta scintillation detectors. They are essentially operational monitors and are maintained by reactor operations. They are essentially operational monitors and are maintained by a reactor operations. The air then passes through the exit air filters, heat exchanger, venturi and on to the fan house where the north and south ducts join. After the fan house the air is monitored by Argon-41 by a Kanne ion chamber syste.
Date: January 13, 1964
Creator: Foelix, Charles F. & Gemmell, L.
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.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Army Gas-Cooled Reactor Systems Program Quarterly Progress Report: July 1 - September 30, 1964 (open access)

Army Gas-Cooled Reactor Systems Program Quarterly Progress Report: July 1 - September 30, 1964

Report documenting the progress of the Army Gas-Cooled Reactor Systems Program to develop a mobile nuclear power plant for military field operation.
Date: November 13, 1964
Creator: Aerojet-General Corporation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the Combustion of Graphite-Uranium Fuels in a Fixed Bed or Moving Bed (open access)

Analysis of the Combustion of Graphite-Uranium Fuels in a Fixed Bed or Moving Bed

The first step in a proposed processing method for recovery of uranium from graphite-uranium fuels consists of oxidation of the fuel by oxygen to volatilize the carbon. Residue ash from the combustion step can be treated in a variety of ways to recover and purify the uranium. The combustion step may be caried out by contacting the solid fuel in a fixed or moving bed with a stream of oxygen-bearing gas in a tubular or annular reactor. Oxidizing gas may be introduced to the reactor at several points up the reactor and there may be continuous or intermittent addition of fresh fuel and removal of residue ash.
Date: August 13, 1964
Creator: Scott, Charles D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Graduate Programs for the Health Physicist in the United States (open access)

Graduate Programs for the Health Physicist in the United States

The first man-made nuclear reactor -- or "pile" as it was then called -- was rather hurriedly improvised and operated in a crowded space under the athletic bleachers of Stagg Field at the University of Chicago on December 2, 1942. Just prior to this time, there began the assembly of a group of physicists with an unusual assignment. They were determined that radiation hazards of unprecedented proportions must be coped with successfully in the conduct of reactor programs as planned. Since these physicists were to be concerned with the health of radiation workers, they were called health physicists. There was no formal instruction available to this first group of health physicists and they perforce received training as they felt their way by firsthand experience and by trial and error. Health physics at Oak Ridge National Laboratory from the very beginning has been organized into three principal areas: applied activities, education and training and research.
Date: August 13, 1964
Creator: Morgan, K. Z. (Karl Ziegler), 1908-
System: The UNT Digital Library