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Calorimetric assay of reactor grade PuO{sub 2} (open access)

Calorimetric assay of reactor grade PuO{sub 2}

This paper describes an experiment to estimate random and systematic errors in determining the effective specific power of plutonium. Precisons and accuracies comparable to coulometric assay were demonstrated for a wide range of plutonium isotopic compositions. Thus, calorimetric assay can provide an effective method for plutonium assay of materials in the nuclear fuel cycle.
Date: December 31, 1977
Creator: Rodenburg, W. W. & Rogers, D. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some illustrations of stochasticity (open access)

Some illustrations of stochasticity

A complex, and apparently stochastic, character frequently can be seen to occur in the solutions to simple Hamiltonian problems. Such behavior is of interest, and potentially of importance, to designers of particle accelerators--as well as to workers in other fields of physics and related disciplines. Even a slow development of disorder in the motion of particles in a circular accelerator or storage ring could be troublesome, because a practical design requires the beam particles to remain confined in an orderly manner within a narrow beam tube for literally tens of billions of revolutions. The material presented is primarily the result of computer calculations made to investigate the occurrence of ''stochasticity,'' and is organized in a manner similar to that adopted for presentation at a 1974 accelerator conference.
Date: December 27, 1977
Creator: Laslett, L.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of transport in distribution of radioions and radiolabeled metabolites (open access)

Effect of transport in distribution of radioions and radiolabeled metabolites

The following topics are discussed: route of administration; carrier effects and complexed or ionic tracers; membrane permeability, extracellular and intracellular concentrations; enzyme and hormonal stimulation or depression and the metabolic state; neoplasia and transport; and carrier for radiopharmaceutical binding to membrane or protein sites. Some radioisotopes considered are /sup 99m/Tc, /sup 65/Zn, /sup 62/Zn, /sup 14/C and /sup 111/In. (HLW)
Date: December 22, 1977
Creator: Yano, Y.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of a hypothetical loss-of-coolant accident on a Mark I Boiling Water Reactor pressure-suppression system (open access)

Effects of a hypothetical loss-of-coolant accident on a Mark I Boiling Water Reactor pressure-suppression system

A loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA) in a boiling-water-reactor (BWR) power plant has never occurred. However, because this type of accident could be particularly severe, it is used as a principal theoretical basis for design. A series of consistent, versatile, and accurate air-water tests that simulate LOCA conditions has been completed on a /sup 1///sub 5/-scale Mark I BWR pressure-suppression system. Results from these tests are used to quantify the vertical-loading function and to study the associated fluid dynamics phenomena. Detailed histories of vertical loads on the wetwell are shown. In particular, variation of hydrodynamic-generated vertical loads with changes in drywell-pressurization rate, downcomer submergence, and the vent-line loss coefficient are established. Initial drywell overpressure, which partially preclears the downcomers of water, substantially reduces the peak vertical loads. Scaling relationships, developed from dimensional analysis and verified by bench-top experiments, allow the /sup 1///sub 5/-scale results to be applied to a full-scale BWR power plant. This analysis leads to dimensionless groupings that are invariant. These groupings show that, if water is used as the working fluid, the magnitude of the forces in a scaled facility is reduced by the cube of the scale factor and occurs in a time reduced by the square root …
Date: December 22, 1977
Creator: Pitts, J.H. & McCauley, E.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical components for the SHIVA laser (open access)

Optical components for the SHIVA laser

SHIVA, the 10-kilojule Neodymium-glass laser for the High Energy Laser Facility at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory has been built, exceeded minimum energy predictions, and is currently being applied to laser fusion experiments. The twenty, 20-cm aperture arms contain a total of about 1500 optical components for beam propagation, and another 1000 elements are used for control systems and diagnostics. In order to focus the energy on targets smaller than 1 mm in diameter, it has been necessary to maintain very high optical quality throughout the system. The manufacturing and testing technologies involved in meeting this challenge have been noteworthy and have encompassed glass manufacturing, optical finishing, and coating, for elements as diverse as Faraday rotators, laser rods and disks and aspheric lenses.
Date: December 22, 1977
Creator: Wallerstein, E. P.; Marchi, F. T.; Whistler, W. T. & Bissinger, H. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Absolute instrumental neutron activation analysis at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory (open access)

Absolute instrumental neutron activation analysis at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory

The Environmental Science Division at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory has in use a system of absolute Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA). Basically, absolute INAA is dependent upon the absolute measurement of the disintegration rates of the nuclides produced by neutron capture. From such disintegration rate data, the amount of the target element present in the irradiated sample is calculated by dividing the observed disintegration rate for each nuclide by the expected value for the disintegration rate per microgram of the target element that produced the nuclide. In absolute INAA, the expected value for disintegration rate per microgram is calculated from nuclear parameters and from measured values of both thermal and epithermal neutron fluxes which were present during irradiation. Absolute INAA does not depend on the concurrent irradiation of elemental standards but does depend on the values for thermal and epithermal neutron capture cross-sections for the target nuclides. A description of the analytical method is presented.
Date: December 21, 1977
Creator: Heft, R.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alice Mary Robertson--Anti-Feminist Congresswoman (open access)

Alice Mary Robertson--Anti-Feminist Congresswoman

Article describes the life and accomplishments of Alice Mary Robertson, the second woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and the first from Oklahoma. Louise B. James explores her activities before election, the connections she made with other political leaders, and her seemingly contrary personal beliefs.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: James, Louise Boyd
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
The Beginning of Oil and Gas Conservation in Oklahoma, 1907-1931 (open access)

The Beginning of Oil and Gas Conservation in Oklahoma, 1907-1931

Article details the history of oil and gas conservation in Oklahoma from 1907 to 1931. With the growth of the oil industry and the increase of oil fields, it became necessary to develop regulatory practices due to the amount of waste being produced by these industries.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: Clark, Blue
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
The Effect of the Ku Klux Klan on the Oklahoma Gubernatorial Election of 1926 (open access)

The Effect of the Ku Klux Klan on the Oklahoma Gubernatorial Election of 1926

Article describes the impact of the Ku Klux Klan on the Oklahoma Gubernatorial Election of 1926. David C. Boles explores the supporters and opponents to Klan ideals and the demographics of the voting base of the election.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: Boles, David C.
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
For the Record, Winter 1977-78 (open access)

For the Record, Winter 1977-78

For the Record section including the minutes of the quarterly board meeting of the Board of Directors of the Oklahoma Historical Society that was held on July 28, 1977. It also includes a gift list for the second quarter of 1977 and lists of new annual and new life members of the OHS.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: Oklahoma Historical Society
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
French Explorers in Oklahoma (open access)

French Explorers in Oklahoma

Article explores the journeys of French explorers in early Oklahoma, relaying their interactions with the tribes in the area, the trading posts they established, and the national scale of their expeditions.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: Schafer, Delbert F.
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Fundamental study of crack initiation and propagation. [Computer model of ductile fracture] (open access)

Fundamental study of crack initiation and propagation. [Computer model of ductile fracture]

Objective is to determine the fracture toughness of A533B-1 steel by computer modeling Charpy V-notch tests. A computer model of ductile fracture was developed that predicts fracture initiation. The model contains a set of material-dependent parameters obtained by computer simulations of small specimen tests. The computer calculations give detailed stress and strain histories up to the time of fracture, which are used to determine the model parameter values. The calibrated fracture model, that correctly predicts fracture initiation (and initiation energy) in the Charpy specimen, may then be used to simulate tests of accepted fracture-toughness specimens and hence obtain fracture toughness. The model parameters were calibrated to predict fracture in four different test specimens: two different notched-tension specimens, a simple tension specimen, and a precracked compact-tension specimen. The model was then used in a computer simulation of the Charpy V-notch specimen to initiate and advance a flat fracture. Results were compared with interrupted Charpy tests. Calibration of the model for two additional heat treatments of A533B-1 steel is in progress.
Date: December 21, 1977
Creator: Norris, D.M. Jr.; Reaugh, J.E.; Moran, B.; Quinones, D.F. & Wilkins, M.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Note and Documents, Winter 1977-78 (open access)

Note and Documents, Winter 1977-78

Notes and Documents column including an announcement about the award of merit for "The Oklahoma Series" and an account of Lincoln's second inauguration written by Chief John Ross through correspondence with his wife, Mary Stapler Ross.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: Oklahoma Historical Society
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Old Central: A Pictorial Essay (open access)

Old Central: A Pictorial Essay

Article discusses the history, establishment, and restoration of Oklahoma Territorial Agricultural and Mechanical College and its main building, Old Central, through historical context and a series of expository photographs.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: Fischer, LeRoy H. & Brown, Kenny L.
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
The Seminole Nation After Leaving Florida, 1855-1860 (open access)

The Seminole Nation After Leaving Florida, 1855-1860

Article describes the history of the Seminoles during their journey to Indian Territory from their homeland in Florida. L. Edward Carter discusses how the Nation experienced physical division during forced relocation, as well as factionalism during the Civil War.
Date: Winter 1977
Creator: Carter, L. Edward
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Directions for possible upgrades of the Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF) (open access)

Directions for possible upgrades of the Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF)

The Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF) may be upgraded by extending the time of plasma sustenance in an approach to steady-state operation and/or by increasing the neutral-beam injection energy. Some parameter bounds for these upgrades are discussed as they relate to a definition of the required neutral-beam development.
Date: December 20, 1977
Creator: Damm, C. C.; Coensgen, F. H.; Devoto, R. S.; Molvik, A. W.; Porter, G. D.; Shearer, J. W. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Materials testing using laser energy deposition (open access)

Materials testing using laser energy deposition

A convenient method for determining the elastic constants of materials has been devised using the energy from a Q-switched neodymium-glass laser. Stress waves are induced in materials having circular rod or rectangular bar geometries by the absorption of energy from the laser. The wave transit times through the material are recorded with a piezoelectric transducer. Both dilatation and shear wave velocities are determined in a single test using an ultrasonic technique and these velocities are used to calculate the elastic constants of the material. A comparison of the constants determined for ten common engineering materials using this method is made with constants derived using the conventional ultrasonic pulse technique and agreement is shown to be about one percent in most cases. Effects of material geometry are discussed and surface damage to the material caused by laser energy absorption is shown.
Date: December 20, 1977
Creator: Wilcox, W.W. & Calder, C.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Diffusivity Measurement of Temperature Sensitive Materials by an Extended Pulse Technique. (open access)

Thermal Diffusivity Measurement of Temperature Sensitive Materials by an Extended Pulse Technique.

None
Date: December 19, 1977
Creator: Donaldson, A. B. & Faubion, B. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogenation of CO and CO/sub 2/ on clean rhodium and iron foils. Correlations of reactivities and surface compositions (open access)

Hydrogenation of CO and CO/sub 2/ on clean rhodium and iron foils. Correlations of reactivities and surface compositions

An experimental arrangement consisting of an ultrahigh vacuum bell jar equipped with an internal sample isolation cell was used to investigate the hydrogenation of CO over Fe and Rh surfaces. This apparatus permitted both UHV surface characterization (Auger electron spectroscopy, low-energy electron diffraction) and high pressure (1-20 atm) catalytic reactions to be carried out. Small surface area (approximately 1 cm/sup 2/) metal samples, both single crystals and polycrystalline foils, were used to catalyze the H/sub 2//CO reaction at high pressures (1-6 atm). Reaction products were monitored with a gas chromatograph equipped with a flame ionization detector. The surface compositions of the metal samples were determined before and after the reaction and the results correlated with the observed product distributions and reaction rates. In addition, the influence of various surface additives (carbon, oxygen, potassium) was also investigated. Iron was the more reactive of the two metals studied and was found to produce C/sub 1/-C/sub 5/ straight chain hydrocarbons but it poisoned rapidly. The catalytically active surface of both metals was covered with a carbonaceous monolayer. The carbonaceous monolayer was stable on the rhodium surface and produced C/sub 1/-C/sub 4/ hydrocarbons at a steady rate even after several hours of reaction. The …
Date: December 16, 1977
Creator: Dwyer, D.; Yoshida, K. & Somorjai, G.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Universal formula for the quasistatic second-order density perturbation by a cold magnetoplasma wave (open access)

Universal formula for the quasistatic second-order density perturbation by a cold magnetoplasma wave

Using the general expression for the ponderomotive Hamiltonian, the quasi-static quasi-neutral density change caused by the ponderomotive force of a cold magnetoplasma wave of arbitrary frequency and polarization is obtained. This formula agrees with and extends previous results for unmagnetized and magnetized plasma.
Date: December 16, 1977
Creator: Kaufman, A. N.; Cary, J. R. & Pereira, N. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering: 1977 (open access)

Proceedings of the Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering: 1977

The Third Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering convened at Stanford University on December 14, 1977, with 104 attendees from six nations. In keeping with the recommendations expressed by the participants at the Second Workshop, the format of the Workshop was retained, with three days of technical sessions devoted to reservoir physics, well and reservoir testing, field development, and mathematical modeling of geothermal reservoirs. The program presented 33 technical papers, summaries of which are included in these Proceedings. Although the format of the Workshop has remained constant, it is clear from a perusal of the Table of Contents that considerable advances have occurred in all phases of geothermal reservoir engineering over the past three years. Greater understanding of reservoir physics and mathematical representations of vapor-dominated and liquid-dominated reservoirs are evident; new techniques for their analysis are being developed, and significant field data from a number of newer reservoirs are analyzed. The objectives of these workshops have been to bring together researchers active in the various physical and mathematical disciplines comprising the field of geothermal reservoir engineering, to give the participants a forum for review of progress and exchange of new ideas in this rapidly developing field, and to summarize the effective …
Date: December 15, 1977
Creator: Ramey, H. J., Jr. & Kruger, P. (eds.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
1978 USGS Geothermal Resource Assessment (open access)

1978 USGS Geothermal Resource Assessment

The author distinguishes between geothermal resource base, accessible geothermal resource base, geothermal resource, and geothermal reserve. Conditions for periodically updating the assessment of geothermal energy resources include: increased data from expanded exploration and drilling; development of improved and new technologies for exploration, evaluation, extraction, and use; rapid evolution of geothermal knowledge; and the increased role of geothermal energy in response to changing economic, social, political, and environmental conditions, particularly an increasing awareness of the limits to petroleum and natural gas resources. Accordingly, the U. S. Geological Survey (USGS) plans by the end of 1978 to update its 1975 assessment of the United States’ geothermal resource, with increased emphasis on several items. The USGS’s joint evaluations of geothermal resource-assessment techniques in the last year with the National Electric Agency of Italy (ENEL) under U. S. Energy Research and Development Agency sponsorship identified a number of problems, one of which was how to formulate geothermal recovery factors for systems producing by intergranular vaporization and by intergranular flow. The first formulation is fairly rigorous; the author solicits the reservoir engineering community’s help in improving the estimate of the second. 3 figs., 11 refs.
Date: December 14, 1977
Creator: Muffler, L.J. Patrick
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Geothermal Well Logs (open access)

Analysis of Geothermal Well Logs

In the petroleum industry, well logging is a well developed discipline that has matured over a fifty-year period. Compared to this, geothermal well logging is a very new field of activity. The current practice is to use the same logging equipment and the same log interpretation techniques for geothermal wells as had been used for petroleum wells. However, this approach has proven either inadequate or ineffective in most geothermal areas. The problems here are of two types: (1) those associated with logging equipment and operation, and (2) those connected with log interpretation techniques. This paper focuses on the log interpretation aspects only. 6 refs.
Date: December 14, 1977
Creator: Sanyal, Subir K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bench-Scale Experiments in the Stanford Geothermal Program (open access)

Bench-Scale Experiments in the Stanford Geothermal Program

The emphasis of the smaller scale laboratory of the Stanford Geothermal Program is on improving the understanding of the physics of flow through porous materials in a geothermal environment. Three major investigations are in progress: (1) examination of the phenomenon of vapor pressure lowering in porous media, (2) determination of the temperature dependence of absolute and relative permeabilities of steam and water in sandstones under high confining pressures, and (3) observation of steady and unsteady, single- and two-phase flows of water or brine through permeable cores. In addition, development continues on the dielectric constant liquid content detector—a device which would prove extremely useful in these and subsequent experiments. 10 refs., 4 figs.
Date: December 14, 1977
Creator: Horne, R.N.; Counsil, J.; Hsiech, C.H.; Ramey, H.J. Jr. & Kruger, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library