The Decontamination of Uranium from Fission Products by the Use of the Uranyl Oxalate Precipitation Reaction (open access)

The Decontamination of Uranium from Fission Products by the Use of the Uranyl Oxalate Precipitation Reaction

Abstract: "Decontamination factors of the order of 10-4 were obtained for Beta and Gamma emitters present as fission products when uranium was precipitated from 50 mC activity level solutions as uranyl oxalate under normal uranium yield conditions for three cycles (~60%). Factors of the order of 10-3 were obtained by the use of this reaction with similar solutions under relatively high uranium yield conditions for three cycles (~90%). The uranium peroxide precipitation reaction proved to be of no value on such solutions, yielding decontamination factors of only 17.1 Beta emitters and 1.2 for Gamma emitters for three cycles."
Date: May 10, 1951
Creator: Kelchner, B. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of Columbia River studies program -- H. I. Development Division (open access)

Review of Columbia River studies program -- H. I. Development Division

In view of current work on the Columbia River by the Biology Division and Development Division of the Health Instrument Divisions and the contemplated studies of the US Public Health Service Group new at Hanford, it was suggested that the groups review their programs related to studies of the Columbia River. The work carried out by the Control Functions Section of the Health Instrument Division in this respect is reviewed in outline form. Some of the studies are jointly carried out by the Control Functions Section and the Methods Group of the Environmental Hazards Section. The principal purpose for monitoring the Columbia River is to evaluate any radiation hazards that might exist as the result of discharging radioactive effluent into the river from the Hanford pile areas. The miscellaneous special studies conducted so supplement the routine monitoring program are pointed at into the river to better understand the effects of this radioactive contamination on the environment of the river and/or any drinking water supplies using the Columbia river as a source of supply. 1 fig.
Date: May 10, 1951
Creator: Singlevich, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The transonic characteristics of 17 rectangular, symmetrical wing models of varying aspect ratio and thickness (open access)

The transonic characteristics of 17 rectangular, symmetrical wing models of varying aspect ratio and thickness

Report presenting an investigation to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of a series of thin, rectangular wings in the 16-foot high-speed wind tunnel using the transonic bump technique over a range of Mach and Reynolds numbers. Lift, drag, and pitching moment characteristics are presented for wings of 4 different aspect ratios and NACA 63A0XX sections and with 5 different thickness-to-chord ratios.
Date: May 10, 1951
Creator: Nelson, Warren H. & McDevitt, John B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical performance of lithium and fluorine as a rocket propellant (open access)

Theoretical performance of lithium and fluorine as a rocket propellant

Theoretical performance for liquid lithium and liquid fluorine as a rocket propellant was calculated with assumptions both of equilibrium and frozen composition during expansion. Parameters included were specific impulse, combustion-chamber temperature, nozzle-exit temperature, composition, mean molecular weight, characteristic velocity, coefficient of thrust, and ratio of nozzle-exit area to throat area. For chamber pressure of 300 pounds per square inch absolute and expansion to 1 atmosphere, the maximum equilibrium specific impulse calculated was 335.5 pound-seconds per pound. The effect of ionization on calculated performance was shown to be negligible by comparison of values of various parameters calculated both with and without ionized products of combustion.
Date: May 10, 1951
Creator: Gordon, Sanford & Huff, Vearl N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A biharmonic relaxation method for calculating thermal stress in cooled irregular cylinders (open access)

A biharmonic relaxation method for calculating thermal stress in cooled irregular cylinders

A numerical method was developed for calculating thermal stresses in irregular cylinders cooled by one or more internal passages. The use of relaxation methods and elementary methods of finite differences was found to give approximations to the correct values when compared with previously known solutions for concentric circular cylinders possessing symmetrical and asymmetrical temperature distributions.
Date: May 10, 1951
Creator: Holms, Arthur G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The DD and TD Cross Sections (open access)

The DD and TD Cross Sections

The total cross sections of the reactions DDp, DDn, TD at 10 kev to 10 Mev are estimated from a review of the experimental data up to January 1951. Maxwell averages for DDp and TD computed from these estimates are given, together with some fitted analytic expressions provided for machine use. A collection of the identifiable earlier estimates is also included for reference and for comparison with the new figures. For relative order of magnitude purposes, cross sections and the derived Maxwell averages are given down to 50 ev using the theoretical Gamow slopes for the extrapolation. Gamow plots for the derived cross sections above l0 kev arc also given. Much of the primary experimental data exists in the form of thick target yields and we find the most uncertain factor in converting these thick targets yields into cross sections is the magnitude of the D/sub 2/O stopping cross section. The particular D/sub 2/O stopping cross section relation used in this derivation together with some of the earlier stopping cross sections are given. Thick target yields are included for both DD and TD on D/sub 2/ targets, at 0.01 to 1 Mev, experimental values being supplemented by calculated values.
Date: May 10, 1951
Creator: Tuck, J L
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemistry Division Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending March 31, 1951 (open access)

Chemistry Division Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending March 31, 1951

Quarterly technical report including reports on chemistry of source, fissionable, and structural elements, nuclear chemistry, radio-organic chemistry, chemistry of separations processes, chemical physics, radiation chemistry, and instrumentation. [From Abstract]
Date: May 10, 1951
Creator: Lind, S. C.; Boyd, G. E. & Bredig, M. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library