EQUIPOISE 3A (open access)

EQUIPOISE 3A

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Nestor, C. W. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
COMPILER INTO GEORGE ASSEMBLY ROUTINE (open access)

COMPILER INTO GEORGE ASSEMBLY ROUTINE

This program of the GEORGE Assembly Routine (GAR) will accept Fortran- like statements from paper tape and create the GAR language program on tape. This includes the needed calls for common subroutines and the reservations for the named variables and temporaries. The original statements in Fortran are carried along as remarks. The GAR language program may then be processed in the usual way by the GEORGE Assembly Routine, giving machine-language code. The level of sophistication of the source language is roughly equal to that of Fortransit or SALT. (auth)
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: George, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quarterly Status Report on LAMPRE Program for Period Ending May 20, 1962 (open access)

Quarterly Status Report on LAMPRE Program for Period Ending May 20, 1962

During the report period 110 Mw-hr of operation were completed by LAMPRE I at various power levels, and observations were made of control element performance and reactivity losses. Metallographic examination of a Core I capsule having 120 Mw-hr of irradiation exposure disclosed no major attack. Core II utilizes Ta alloy melts and 13 fuel melts. Starting materials for Core II capsules are tabulated. In research and development a gamma-ray conversion television was used to observe the flow of molten Pu in the PTA experiment. Dilute fuels being studied for use in a high-performance reactor include Pu --Co - -Ce alloys, ing exposure of test containers to U --Pu -Mn fuel at 900 deg C for 2 hrs are tabulated. In fuel reprocessing data on decontamination of Pu metal by electrorefining and by solvent extraction were obtained. Details of maintenance and development of the core test facility are included. (J.R.D.)
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
FUEL CYCLE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM. Quarterly Progress Report, January 1 to March 31, 1962 (open access)

FUEL CYCLE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM. Quarterly Progress Report, January 1 to March 31, 1962

The permanent shutdown of the Westinghouse Testing Reactor at the end of the quarter forced a revision in plans for programming the remainder of the irradiation of the two uninstrumented capsules whose testing was in progress. The minimum estimated burnup at this point, based on hot cell data obtained from the pilot capsule, was 13,100 MW-d/ton U. It was decided to continue the testing of only one capsule in another reactor until the original goal of 20,000 MW-d/ton U is reached. The irradiation of the second capsule is to be terminated so that it can serve as a control. Fabrication was initiated on enriched UO/sub 2/ pellets for incorporation in full scale fuel rods to be irradiated in the Vallecitos Boiling Water Reactor. A wet nitrogen pyrohydrolysis step in conjunction with oxidationreduction cycling is being used to attain a satisfactory density exceeding 95% of theoretical at 1150 deg C. Apparatus and procedures being used for measurement of thermal conductivity and thermal expansion of sintered and cast uranium carbide are described. The coefficient of linear thermal expansion for a single specimen of 4.37 wt.% carbon sintered uranium carbide was determined to be 11.8 x 10/sup -6/ mm/mm- deg C, while that …
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Technology Division, Unit Operations Section Monthly Progress Report, January 1962 (open access)

Chemical Technology Division, Unit Operations Section Monthly Progress Report, January 1962

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Whatley, M. E.; Haas, P. A.; Horton, R. W.; Ryon, A. D.; Suddath, J. C. & Watson, C. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
FEASIBILITY OF Pu$sup 239$-U$sup 235$-FUELED CORES TO PREDICT Pu$sup 239$- FUELED CORE DIMENSIONS (open access)

FEASIBILITY OF Pu$sup 239$-U$sup 235$-FUELED CORES TO PREDICT Pu$sup 239$- FUELED CORE DIMENSIONS

Use of Pu/sup 239/ -- U/sup 235/-fueled fast critical assemblies to estimate properties of Pu/sup 239/-fueled assemblies is of interest because of safety considerations and limited plutonium availability. Bare and reflected homogeneous cores and reflected two-region cores are considered. The fuel, 5% by volume, is assumed to be Pu/sup 239/ and U/sup 235/ of various fuel composition ratios for the homogeneous cores. For the tworegion cores the 5% fuel volume is Pu/sup 235/ in the central region and U/sup 235/ in the outer core region. Core diluents, simulating fertile, structural, and coolant materials, are assumed identical in all cases. it is estimated that construction of the reflected two- region core with ratio of central core region volume to total core volume of 0.1 will theoretically decrease the calculated error in prediction of the critical size of a corresponding solely Pu/sup 239/-fueled assembly by a factor of about 10 to 20. (auth)
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Meneghetti, D. & Ishikawa, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ELECTROLYTIC DISSOLUTION OF NUCLEAR FUELS. PART III. STAINLESS STEEL (304) IN NITRATE SOLUTIONS (open access)

ELECTROLYTIC DISSOLUTION OF NUCLEAR FUELS. PART III. STAINLESS STEEL (304) IN NITRATE SOLUTIONS

The potential-current density relationships for 304 stainless steel dissolution in a nitrate system were studied as a function of solution composition and temperature in order to optimize the conditions for electrolytic dissolution of ihis material. In the nitrate system, the anodic dissolution of steel takes place in the transpassive region. Under some conditions, deviations from Tafel behavior are observed which depend greatly on the nitrate and hydrogen ion concentration, and on temperature. A discussion of passivity, transpassivity, secondary passivation, the limiting current density, and the effect of alloy composition on the dissolution behavior is given. It was found that at temperatures above 60 deg C efficient dissolver operation should be possible over a wide range of solution compositions and at current densities up to 2 amp/cm/sup 2/. (auth)
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Aylward, J. R. & Whitener, E. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ECONOMIC FACTORS OF MFP THERMOELECTRIC GENERATORS. Interim Report (open access)

ECONOMIC FACTORS OF MFP THERMOELECTRIC GENERATORS. Interim Report

Mixed Fission Products (MFP) for use as a heat source for thermoelectric generators will become increasingly available in the coming years. The Atomic Energy Conamission sponsored program on solidification of nuclear wastes is now entering the hot-bench scale test phase. During this phase approximately 5000 thermal watts of two year old MFP could be produced monthly. Two different types of hot calcination pilot plants are planned for installation at the Hanford National Laboratories in the 1964 to 1966 time period. Each of these plants should be able to produce 160,000 thermal watts of two year MFP and 16,000 thermal watts of ten year MFP on a monthly basis. During this phase, MFP costs should be less than 15 per ihermal watt for two year MFP and 50 for ten year MFP. This cost includes operation of the plant solely to obtain heat sources and sealing the MFP into fuel containers. A full scale plant for a 15,000 Mw(e) nuclear economy is estimated to produce four to five times as much MFP as either of the pilot plants. Costs will be dependent upon AEC policy in effect at the time the plant is operating. lf the policy indicates that the full …
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Barmat, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING DIVISION SUMMARY REPORT, JANUARY-MARCH 1962 (open access)

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING DIVISION SUMMARY REPORT, JANUARY-MARCH 1962

Additional experiments conducted on nitridation of irradiated U-fissium fuel pins revealed that irradiation does not greatly affect the nitridation rate at 300 deg C. In skullreclamation development, a phase separation common to both the blanket- and skull-processes was investigated in which a 50% Mg-- Zn supernatant solution was removed from precipitated U metal. In most runs the supernatant phase was removed with negligible U entrainment. The reduction rate of ZrO by Zn--Mg solution under skull-recovery process conditions was found to be lower than that of U oxides. It may be possible in this process to effect some Zr separation by limiting the reduction time to that necessary for U. Methods of procesging EBR-II fuels are being investigated to establish methods of separating rare earths from Pu. Development work on preparation of UC by addition of C to U dissolved in liquid metal media showed that the limited addition of alkali metals improves C wetting and the tests showod high C-to-U ratios and high O/sub 2/ contamination; procedure and equipment improvements are being made. Studies are in progress to evaluate the compatibility of various materials with the liquid metal-salt systems contemplated for reactor fuel reprocessing. Tungsten appears to have high corrosion …
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Irradiation Behavior of Restrained and Vented Uranium-2 w/o Zirconium Alloy. Final Report-Programs 6.1.22 and 6.1.27 (open access)

Irradiation Behavior of Restrained and Vented Uranium-2 w/o Zirconium Alloy. Final Report-Programs 6.1.22 and 6.1.27

Twelve 0.22-in.-diameter fuel specimens containing a longitudinal central vent and clad with 0.010 in. of Type 304 stainless steel were irradiated to evaluate the effect of restraint and a central vent on fuel element stability. The cladding of 10 of the specimens contained porous end plugs to vent any released fission gas and thus to minimize the buildup of gas pressure within the stainless steel cladding. The specimens consisted of a 20% enriched uranium--2 wt% zirconium alloy core surrounded by a natural uranium--2 wt% zirconium alloy sleeve. Eight of the specimens were irradiated to burnups of the enriched core of 6.9 to 12.8% of all atoms (1.2 to 2.2 at.% of the duplex assembly) at maximum fuel temperatures ranging from 280 to 760 deg C. Most of the clad specimens exhibited negligible volume increases as a result of irradiation. Two specimens containing central vents but unclad were irradiated together with the clad specimens in an attempt to differentiate between the effects due to a central vent and the effects due to cladding. The central vent in itself did not appear to reduce the swelling characteristics of the alloy. Mechanical restraint appeared to have extended the useful operating temperatures of the …
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Horak, J. A.; Kittel, J. H. & Yaggee, F. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Generation of Poisson Time Distributed Random Pulses (open access)

The Generation of Poisson Time Distributed Random Pulses

The need for a source of pulses randomly distributed in time according to the Poisson distribution is discussed. A theoretical analysis showed that these pulses may be generated by employing an electrical white noise'' source. Calculations indicated the feasibility of a generator capable of producing Poisson pulse at a maximum average rate of one megacycle. The results of laboratory experiments support the calculations and demonstrate the nadequacy of using periodic pulses to determine instrument response to random pulses. A design of a nuclear signal simulator incorporating the Poisson pulse generator is suggested. (auth)
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Wilde, N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CHARACTERIZATION OF THE PHOTOSYNTHETICALLY SYNTHESIZED 'gamma-KETOACID' PHOSPHATE AS A DIPHOSPHATE ESTER OF 2-KETO-L-GULONIC ACID (open access)

CHARACTERIZATION OF THE PHOTOSYNTHETICALLY SYNTHESIZED 'gamma-KETOACID' PHOSPHATE AS A DIPHOSPHATE ESTER OF 2-KETO-L-GULONIC ACID

The summary of this report is that a substance isolated from Chlorella Pyrenoidosa metabolizing {sup 14}CO{sub 2} in the light, previously believed to be a diphosphate ester of a 2-carboxy-4-pentulose, has now been shown to be a disphosphate of 2-keto-L-gulonic acid. The phosphate groups appear to be attached to two of the carbon atoms 3-6. Evidence is presented suggesting that this compound arises from glucose, or a glucose phosphate, which is not in rapid equilibrium with photosynthetically produced glucose derivatives.
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Moses, V.; Ferrier, R.J. & Calvin, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flow testing rear face hardware combinations (open access)

Flow testing rear face hardware combinations

The purpose of these tests is to provide necessary laboratory data in support of an R,PEO program in determining the energy loss associated with various hardware size combinations on the rear face of the B-D-F reactors. The original method used to check for critical flow was determined to be faulty. A revised method demonstrated critical flow did occur in the 5/8-inch inconel connector and combination 1 fittings. The remaining fitting combinations with the 5/8-inch inconel and 3/4-inch aluminum connector were not rechecked because of the reaming of the I.D. to permit the continuation of the original tests. During test number 6, audible cavitation was heard with the highest severity at a point midway between pressure points 3 and 4 on the connector. This condition appeared again in tests 6A, 7, and 7A, with incipient cavitation at approximately 40 gpm in each test, regardless of the rear header pressure and/or temperature.
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Haun, F. E. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report on Flow Test of I. I. D. Well No. 1, Brawley, California Area (open access)

Report on Flow Test of I. I. D. Well No. 1, Brawley, California Area

The scope of this report is as follows: (1) Presentation of data obtained from the well flow metering tests performed during the week of May 28, 1962; (2) Interpretation of the observed data relative to total mass flow, chemical composition, and heat energy available from the well discharge at this stage in the well flow test program; (3) Compilation of well head pressure and temperature readings and other available pertinent data regularly logged from start of flow test program on May 18, 1962; (4) Determination of electric power generating capability of the well based on observed data; (5) Determination of quantity of major chemical constituents available from the well effluent; and (6) Conclusions and recommendations regarding well performance, future test procedures, and test equipment.
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instrumentation and control system design criteria. Test cell ETS-1 NNRDC. Volume II. Criteria drawings (open access)

Instrumentation and control system design criteria. Test cell ETS-1 NNRDC. Volume II. Criteria drawings

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instrumentation and control system design criteria. Test cell ETS-1 NNRDC. Volume III. Criteria technical data sheets (equipment) (open access)

Instrumentation and control system design criteria. Test cell ETS-1 NNRDC. Volume III. Criteria technical data sheets (equipment)

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Encapsulation of lead telluride thermoelectric elements (open access)

Encapsulation of lead telluride thermoelectric elements

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Groce, I.J. & Reed, E.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
MEASURED BEHAVIOR OF GAMMA-RAY PHOTOCONDUCTIVITY IN ORGANIC DIELECTRICS (open access)

MEASURED BEHAVIOR OF GAMMA-RAY PHOTOCONDUCTIVITY IN ORGANIC DIELECTRICS

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Harrison, S.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instrumentation and control system design criteria. Test cell ETS-1 NNRDC. Volume I. Criteria (open access)

Instrumentation and control system design criteria. Test cell ETS-1 NNRDC. Volume I. Criteria

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Poissonian and Laplacian field analogue for the solution of two dimensional complex heat conduction problem (open access)

Poissonian and Laplacian field analogue for the solution of two dimensional complex heat conduction problem

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Pierce, B. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
TARGET EFFICIENCY MEASUREMENTS AT THE AGS (open access)

TARGET EFFICIENCY MEASUREMENTS AT THE AGS

Two methods for measuring target efficiencies are briefly discussed. The second method puts an upper bound on the efficiency and permits observation of instantaneous efficiency, thereby aiding location of losses. Measurements agree well with conventional radiochemical values. (D.C.W.)
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Maschke, A.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stress-Charge Release Relationships for Ferroelectric Ceramics (open access)

Stress-Charge Release Relationships for Ferroelectric Ceramics

None
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Ripperger, E. A. & Hart, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Developments in Multichannel Pulse-Height Analysis (open access)

Recent Developments in Multichannel Pulse-Height Analysis

The state of the pulse-height analyzing art is reviewed with particular emphasis on the developments of the past two years. The discussion includes consideration of multidimensional instruments, calibration-stabilizing techniques, and some of the auxiliary features that are becoming increasingly available on commercial instruments. Possible future developments with respect to resolving time and memory organization is discussed briefly. (auth)
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Chase, R.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
THORIA AND THORIA-URANIA REINFORCED BY METAL FIBERS (open access)

THORIA AND THORIA-URANIA REINFORCED BY METAL FIBERS

Thoria compacts containing refractory metal fibers in quantities as low as 5 wt% showed significantly better resistance to thermal shock spalling than thoria alone. Of the metals and alloys evaluated, molybdenum and niobium gave the best results. Values are presented for room- and elevated-temperature properties of fiber-reinforced thoria. Measured properties included compressive strength, modulus of rupture, impact strength, thermal shock resistance, thermal conductivity, thermal expansion, and oxidation resistance. The widespread presence of microcracks in these compacts resulted in significantly lower strengths and elastic moduli than those of thoria. Fibers improve resistance to thermal spalling by suppressing and limiting crack propagation and by structurally reinforcing the cracked body. Room-temperature thermal conductivity of reinforced thoria is slightly higher than that of thoria, but at 1600 deg C it is 3 times greater. Oxidation resistance of molybdenum-reinforced thoria is best of all combinations investigated and improves with increased specimen density. However, because of the presence of microcracks, even the densest specimens are severely attacked after 24 hr in air at 1000 deg C. Thoria-urania compacts reinforced with molybdenum fibers were bonded together by means of conventional brazing techniques. Irradiation of metal-reinforced thoria-urania specimens indicated that molybdenum fibers aided the heat transfer from the …
Date: June 1, 1962
Creator: Baskin, Y. & Handwerk, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library