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S i
ORNL-2517 ;72 4
C.85 - Rncm-hircm{r Nuclear
Propulsion Systems
(o
AIRCRAFT NUCLEAR PROPULSION PROJECT
‘,\.J‘f
{
¥
QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT G\ @’”
FOR PERIOD ENDING MARCH 31, 1958
¥ A
A el
OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY
operated by
UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION
for the
CENTRAL RESEARCH LIBRARY U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
DOCUMENT COLLECTION
LIBRARY LOAN COPY
DO NOT TRANSFER TO ANOTHER PERSON
If you wish someone else to see this
document, send in name with document
and the library will arrange a loan.
ORNL.-.2517
C-85 = Reactors-Aircraft Nuclear
Propulsion Systems
This document consists of 146 pages.
Copy/y‘] of 219 copies. Series A,
Contract No. W=7405-eng-26
AIRCRAFT NUCLEAR PROPULSION PROJECT
QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT
For Period Ending March 31, 1958
A, J. Miller, Project Coordinator
DATE ISSUED
AUG 201958
OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY
Oak Ridge, Tonnuuo
operated
UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION
U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
MARTIN MARIETTA ENERGY SYSTEMS LIBRAR
i il
3 4456 0251080 b
C s
FOREWORD
The ORNL-ANP program provides research and development support in shielding,
reactor materials, and reactor engineering to organizations engaged in the development
of air-cooled and liquid-metal-cooled reactors for aircraft propulsion. The work described
here is basic to or in direct support of investigations under way at General Electric
Company, Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Department, and Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Division,
United Aircraft Corporation. This report is divided into four major parts: 1. Metallurgy,
2. Chemistry and Radiation Damage, 3. Engineering, and 4. Shielding.
;’ifi o ?
INTRODUCTION
The current ANP program at ORNL consists
primarily of supporting research and developmental
work for the General Electric Company, Aircraft
Propulsion Department, on air-cooled
and for Pratt & Whitney Aircraft on
lithium-cooled reactors, Metallurgical, chemical,
and engineering information required to develop
and evaluate materials and components for use in
specific systems is being obtained. The work
in support of lithium-cooled reactor development is
providing information on factors affecting the
stability of high-temperature columbium-lithium
systems, factors affectingthe mechanical properties
of columbium, basic hydrodynamic and heat trans-
fer characteristics of lithium systems, and com-
ponents for use in lithium systems., Work under
way on moderator materials for use at high temper-
atures, shielding materials, and the production of
low-oxygen-content yttrium metal is related to the
requirements of both types of reactor.
A comprehensive shielding program is being
carried out to aid in the development of lightweight
and crew shields for nuclear-powered
Nuclear
reactors
reactor
aircraft. The major experimental facilities em-
ployed are the Lid Tank Shielding Facility (L TSF),
which provides a beam of radiation for attenuation
measurements on materials in slab geometry im-
mersed in water; the Bulk Shielding Facility
(BSF), which provides a reactor for attenuation
measurements in three-dimensional geometry of
configurations immersed in water; and the Tower
Shielding Facility (TSF), at which operating re-
actors, reactor shields, and crew shields can be
suspended as high as 200 ft in the air, Much of
the experimentation at these facilities is on
material configurations and shield mockups speci-
fied by GE or P&W in connection with their current
design problems. Measurements are also made to
obtain fundamental shielding data as part of a
basic program of study of the theory of radiation
attenuation and the development of shield design
methods.
Details of the progress made on this program
during the past three months are presented in this
report., Future progress reports will be on a semi-
annual basis.
ANP PROJECT QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT
SUMMARY
PART 1. METALLURGY
1.1. Fabrication
Effort is being devoted to determining the effects
of impurities, such as oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen,
and carbon, on the fabricability, weldability,
mechanical properties, and corrosion resistance
of columbium. In comparisons of cold-worked
powder-metallurgy and arc-cast material, the form
in"which the impurities are present was found to be
as important as the quantity of the impurities,
Studies of the effects of various heat treatments
initiated, and the
preliminary results indicated that nitrogen is the
impurity most influential in heat treatment effects.
Work was continued on the fabrication of co-
lumbium tube shells. Three arc-cast billets were
extruded satisfactorily and are to be drawn into
tubing. Additional billets are being obtained for
determining optimum extrusion temperatures and
cladding procedures,
Coatings of brazing alloys applied by flame
spraying are being tested for oxidation protection
of columbium. Both Coast Metals brazing alloys
52 and 53 were found to provide satisfactory
protection in 1000-hr oxidation tests at 1700°F,
Subsequent metallographic examination, however,
revealed cracks in the coatings that could have
led to rapid failure. Studies of the reaction rates
between low-pressure gases and columbium were
initiated
on impure columbium were
in order to determine the permissible
limits of gaseous contaminants in the environment
when columbium is exposed at high temperatures,
Developmental work on methods and apparatus
for the production of low-oxygen-content yttrium
metal was continued. The method now being
studied involves the lithium reduction of a low-
melting mixture of the fluorides of yttrium, mag-
nesium, and lithium to produce an yttrium-magnesium
alloy from which yttrium sponge is produced by
vacuum distillation. Castings prepared from the
sponge by arc melting under an argon atmosphere
with a tungsten electrode were analyzed for im-
purity content, The chemical analyses indicated
oxygen contfents af 600 to 3000 ppm and nitrogen
contents of 50 to 17,000 ppm. Experiments are
under way to determine the relationship between
impurity content and tensile properties.
An electron-beam method of consolidating the
yttrium-magnesium alloy directly into a finished
billet is being investigated. This method, if
successful, could eliminate the vacuum-distillation
and arc-melting steps. Also, equipment is being
assembled for hydriding yttrium,
1.2. Corrosion
Methods are being studied for purifying the
lithium required in projects in support of both the
air-cycle and the lithium-cooled reactors, Lithium
as pure as it is practical to produce is needed for
the reduction step in the production of low-oxygen-
content yttrium metal, as well as for studies of
the effects of minor amounts of oxide and nitride
on the corrosion of reactor materials, Determi-
nations of the solubility of nitrogen and oxygen in
lithium and studies of various purification tech-
niques indicated that gettering was a more satis-
factory purification technique than low-temperature
filtration or vacuum distillation, Initial gettering
tests with zirconium, titanium, and a mixture of
titanium and calcium indicated significant re-
ductions of the nitrogen content of lithium, but
these gettering materials had little effect on the
oxygen content, Further experiments will be
performed with other metals which have oxides
whose free-energy values indicate that they are
suitable as getters for oxygen. The extensive
oxidation of an yttrium metal specimen upon ex-
posure to lithium suggested the possibility of
using yttrium metal in the purification of the
lithium required in the reduction step of the
yttrium production process.
Two zirconium-base alloys being investigated for
use as weld-filler rod in the fabrication of ductile
saddle welds in columbium tubing were tested for
corrosion resistance in lithium, Static and thermal-
convection loop tests showed weld joints made
with both an 85% Zr—-15% Cb and an 80% Zr-15%
Cb-5% Mo alloy to have excellent corrosion
resistance.
Thermal-convection loop tests of lithium-
columbium systems have thus far been of limited
vii
, Y
duration because of the high rate of penetration
of the longitudinal weld in the wall of the columbium
tubing by the lithium metal, Two loops of sintered
columbium tubing with inserts of arc-cast material
showed very little attack away from the longitudinal
weld, but there was severe attack in the heat-
affected and weld zones.
Static tests of lithium-filled columbium tubes
were made in order to determine whether the en-
vironment in which the thermal-convection loop
tests were made had an effect on the weld attack.
Four capsules, two in an argon atmosphere and
the other two in a dynamic vacuum of less than
5 u, were attacked similarly. The weld and heat-
affected zones of all four capsules were heavily
attacked, and there were several cases of complete
The base material away from the
weld zone was unattacked.
Experimental work on a lead-lithium alloy con-
taining 0.69 wt % lithium - a potential shielding
material — was completed. An experimental
shield was prepared for studies at the Bulk Shield-
ing Facility.
penetration,
1.3. Welding and Brazing
The effect of oxidation on brazed joints is being
investigated. A nickel-rich solid-solution layer
forms on the fillet surfaces of joints brazed with
the Coast Metals nickel-base brazing alloys and
the depleted region is quite ductile. Thus it
appears that the ductility of oxidized joints of
this type should improve during service. Studies
of the rate of depletion of microcanstituents during
high-temperature oxidation are under way.
Refractory-metal brdzing alloys for use in
lithium-cooled reactor applications are being in-
vestigated, since the nickel-base brazing alloys
have poor resistance to lithium, A survey was
made of the columbium and zirconium binary
systems of potential interest, and other systems
will be studied.
1.4. Mechanical Properties
Investigations were continued of the high-
temperature mechanical properties of structural
The testing programs include mechanical
and thermal strain cycling, mechanical stress
cycling (fatigue), creep in bending, and creep
under multiaxial stresses. Inconel was chosen
as the first test material because its tensile,
metals.
uniaxial creep, and relaxation characteristics are
vili
e 37
well known and could be used in the analysis of
its behavior under more complex stress situations.
In mechanical strain cycling, emphasis is placed
on evaluating the influence of frequency of cycling
on the number of cycles to failure. The extent to
which the cycle time influences the number of
cycles to rupture is dependent on the plastic
strain per cycle and the temperature. A com-
parison of the number of cycles to rupture at
low strains for cycle times of 2 and 30 min re-
vealed that long cycle times decrease the strain
absorption capacity. This effect becomes more
apparent at the low strain-per-cycle values ‘and is
also magnified by increasing temperature, A
severe frequency effect, for example, was observed
at 1% strain and at 1500°F; fine-grained material
endured approximately 700 cycles at 2 min per
cycle and only 160 cycles at 30 min per cycle.
At 1300°F, however, 2- and 30-min cycles yielded
the same number of cycles to rupture at 1% strain,
A series of thermal strain cycling tests at a
mean temperature of 1500°F were completed at
the University of Alabama. The correlation between
mechanical and thermal cycling data was very
Lack of agreement between the tests is
attributed to the unreliability of the techniques
presently used to measure the plastic strain per
cycle in the thermal cycling tests,
Fatigue studies were conducted by Battelle
Memorial Institute, Data obtained at 1600°F on
specimens stress cycled at 1 and 10 cps revealed
a similar frequency effect to that observed in the
strain cycling tests conducted at ORNL, Specimens
cycled at the high frequency endured 10 times
more cycles before failure than did the specimens
in comparable lower frequency tests.
The effect of cyclic stresses on creep properties
was also investigated. Small alternating stresses
were beneficial to the creep properties. The time
to rupture showed a slight increase, and the creep
rate decreased in comparison with pure creep
properties, Upon further increasing the alternating
stress, the time to rupture decreased. Conventional
Goodman-type diagrams, which relate time to
rupture to the stress ratio, were obtained for the
two frequencies, 1 and 10 cps.
Results from creep-bending tests at 1500°F
the hypothesis that creep-bending be-
havior can be predicted from tensile creep data,
As postulated, creep in the outer beam fibers
will follow curves in tensile creep tests at the
poor,
support
stress initially present in the outer fibers. How-
ever, after the first few hours, the bending creep
rate correlates more closely with tensile creep
data corresponding to a lower stress. This indi-
cates that the bending stresses in the beam are
redistributed through relaxation and that the re-
distribution results in a lower stress in the outer
fiber of the beams.
Multiaxially stressed tubular specimens were
creep tested at 1500°F. |t was found that the creep
rate in the axial direction was not influenced by
tangential stress in cases where the axial-to-
tangential stress ratio, O’Z/Ort, was greater than
0.5. In other words, the axial stress alone de-
termined the axial creep rate. At the stress ratio
of 0.5, no axial creep was observed, although a
tensile stress was present in the axial direction,
At stress ratios, 0 /o, from 0.5 to -1.0, com-
pressive axial creep was observed. Incompression,
however, creep rates were accelerated by tan-
gential stress.
In contrast to the creep rates, time to rupture was
greatly affected by tangential stress. As the
stress ratio decreased from « to 1.0, for example,
when one of the principal stresses was held at
6000 psi, the time to rupture decreased from 350 to
90 hr. At ratios below 1.0, where only the axial
stress was varied, the variance of time to rupture
with stress ratio was only slight, although the time
to rupture continued to decrease as the stress
ratio decreased,
occurred at the stress ratio —1.0,
The minimum time to rupture
At present neither the creep nor rupture behavior
can be related to the common mechanical theories
of flow and fracture, However, a number of tenta-
tive conclusions can be drawn from the data, It
seems likely that deformation rates under multi-
axial stresses are controlled by the maximum
normal stress in the axial direction in the range
of stress ratios from 0.5 to @, This implies that
data from conventional uniaxial creep tests are
valid bases for design under these conditions.
However, the elongation to which a material may
be stretched before failure is markedly affected by
changes in stress distribution, and it decreases
greatly with increased tangential stress. Recog-
nition of this fact by the designer may alter the
selection of a limiting strain.
1.5. Ceramics
Dense beryllium oxide is being studied for
use as a neutron reflector material in air-cycle
The possibility of adding boron as
a suppressor for secondary gamma rays is also
being investigated. Specimens containing ZrB,,
TaB,, TiB,, GrB,, HfB,, CeBG, and BN were
prepared, and the specimens containing ZrB, and
Hf82 were found to be much superior to the other
combinations with respect to oxidation resistance
at 1300°C. Additives are being sought that will
densify extruded and cold-pressed BeO bodies and
possibly, but not necessarily, fulfill the boron con-
tent requirements,
reactors,
1.6. Nondestructive Testing
The study of eddy-current techniques for measur-
ing cladding thicknesses was continued. Corre-
lation of the measurements with the results of
metallographic examinations is under way. Also,
the possibility of measuring the thickness of a
nonmagnetic cladding material on a magnetic core
is being investigated. Measurements of aluminum
coating thicknesses on steel in the absence of an
intermetallic layer can be made with an accuracy
of 0,0001 in. or greater,
During investigation of the problem of measuring
the thickness of aluminum coatings on steel, a
new technique was developed which shows promise
of eliminating the inaccuracies introduced by [ift-
off or poor coupling between the probe coil and the
part. A method that is independent of |ift-off
variations will be adaptable to automatic scanning.
An ultrasonic phenomenon Lamb
waves, which are basically a characteristic elastic
vibration established in a thin metal plate, is being
investigated for possible use in the detection of
laminations, The Lamb waves are generated in
thin metal sections by directing a beam of ultra-
sonic energy at particular incident angles to the
sheet surface.
known as
Equipment has been obtained and is being tested
for measurements of ultrasonic attenuation and
velocity. Changes in ultrasonic attenuvation as a
function of changes in metal structures will be
examined, and methods for valid vultrasonic in-
spection of welded structures will be developed.
PART 2. CHEMISTRY AND RADIATION DAMAGE
2.1. Materials Chemistry
The methods developed for the preparation of
the LiF-MgF ,-YF, mixture required in the pro-
duction of yttrium metal were analyzed in terms
of possible large-scale production in available
equipment. Since scale-up of the process appears
to present no particular difficulties, a pilot plant
in which the available equipment will be utilized
was designed and is being constructed. The
pilot plant will be capable of supplying a quantity
of fluoride mixture sufficient for the production
monthly of 200 Ib of low-oxygen-content yttrium
metal.
Experimental initiated of a
possible method for the extraction of impurities
studies were
from lithium metal with molten salts. In order to
avoid contamination of the lithium by extraneous
metal, the eutectic mixture LiF-LiBr (12-88
mole %) was chosen as the extractant for preliminary
studies. In an additional step, bismuth wasused
to extract the residual lithium from the salt mixture
following the initial impurity extraction. Further
experiments mustbe performed before the effective-
ness of the method can be determined.
2.2. Analytical Chemistry
The precision of a method which has been pro-
posed for the determination of lithium oxide in
metallic lithium was evaluated by analyzing
samples of a dispersion of metallic lithium in
paraffin. In this method the lithium sample is
dispersed in paraffin so that aliquots for analysis
can be obtained by merely cutting and weighing.
In order to determine the uniformity of the sample
dispersion in the paraffin, dispersions were pre-
pared with a Waring Blendor fitted with a stainless
steel mixing cup in which a helium atmosphere
was maintained. Samples of the solidified ma-
terial, which contained approximately 1 g of the
dispersed metal, were analyzed, The average
value for five samples was 230 ppm, with a co-
efficient of variation of 5%. These results indicate
the validity of the assumption that lithium oxide is
uniformly distributed in the lithium-paraffin dis-
persion, |
The apparatus previously used for determination
of oxides in fused mixtures of fluoride salts is
being adapted for use with BrF.SbF . This flux
should be applicable to the determination of oxides
in fused mixtures of lithium fluoride and magnesium
fluoride.
2.3. Radiation Damage
The tube-burst stress-rupture apparatus for tests
under irradiation in the MTR was completed, and
final preirradiation tests were initiated. The
apparatus differs from that used in previous MTR
irradiations in that the Inconel specimens will be
irradiated in air rather than in helium to avoid
changes in thermocouple calibration, and the
specimens will be cooled internally in order to
avoid overheating. While being irradiated the
specimens will be at 1500°F and at stresses of
3000 to 6000 psi. It is planned to continue tests
of Inconel specimens wuntil all experimental
difficulties have been resolved and basic data on
the material have been obtained.
Metallographic examination of an Inconel stress-
rupture specimen irradiated in the LITR for 600 hr
while at a stress of 2000 psi and a temperature of
1500°F showed that rupture had occurred outside
the gage length where the temperature was not
monitored. The specimen was exposed to a
fluoride fuel mixture on the inside and helium on
the outside. No evidence of increased corrosion
as a result of irradiation was found in the gage
length where the temperature was monitored, A
holding fixture for creep experiments in the ORR
pool has been installed, and a flux monitoring
facility was completed.
Irradiation~induced changes in semiconductor
diodes were studied in the light of the two princi-
pal barrier theories: the Shockley diffusion theory
and the charge recombination-generation theory,
Experimental evidence indicates that irradiation
causes a change in the predominant mechanism of
rectification of germanium p-n junctions from the
diffusion mechanism to the recombination-generation
mechanism, This shift in mechanism explains the
difficulty heretofore encountered in explaining
the radiation-induced changes in current-voltage
characteristics.
Work continued on the preparation of apparatus
for thermal-stress- and thermal-shock-resistance
testing of moderator materials at high temperatures
in the ETR. The specimens that will be irradiated
include beryllium oxide, beryllium, and yttrium
hydride. Preirradiation tests of the specimens
will be made to determine elastic properties and
dimensions and the effect of heat cycling. The
yttrium hydride specimens will, in addition, be
examined by x-ray diffraction in order to determine
the crystal type and lattice spacing. These studies
will be repeated after irradiation to detect changes.
PART 3. ENGINEERING
3.1. Component Development and Testing
loop was designed for
studying the corrosion of columbium by lithium
A forced-circulation
metal circulating at high temperatures in a system
with a temperature gradient. In order to protect
the columbium tubing from air oxidation, the
auxiliary portions of the loop, that is, the fill
and drain lines, the line to the lithium expansion
tank, and the loop which includes the rotating-
magnet pump, will be clad with type 446 stainless
steel. The tubing that will be at high temperatures
in the test section will be surrounded with static
sodium which will transfer heat to or remove heat
from the columbium tubing in the hot and coid
legs of the loop. The cladding of the external
portion of the columbium loop will be joined with
the stainless steel expansion tank of the sodium
system. An all-stainless-steel loop of this design
is being constructed in which NaK will be circu-
lated in order to obtain operating data with which
to validate assumptions made in heat transfer and
flow calculations.
The centrifugal pump rotary assembly in oper-
ation under gamma irradiation in the canal at the
MTR had received an accumulated gamma-ray dose
of 1,6 x 107 rep by the end of the quarter, that is,
about one-half the planned dose. The equipment
continues to operate satisfactorily, and no gross
changes have been observed in the oil {Gulfcrest-
34) which is used to lubricate the bearing and
seal, Oil-lubricated pumps of this type are being
tested for applicability to liquid-metal circulation
in radiation fields,
Modifications were made to the primary face
seals of centrifugal pumps being tested for high-
service. Use of a Fulton-Sylphon
seal prevented accumulation of undesirable de-
posits on the gas side of the seal. A split purge
arrangement stopped the rise of vapor from the
pumped fluid and likewise prevented accumulation
of deposits on the seal face.
One phase of the development and testing of
shut-off valves for high-temperature service was
completed. A valve was developed which is
satisfactory for operation in NaK at temperatures
vp to 1300°F, Cermet combinations known to be
compatible with lithium were used as seat and
The valve will be satisfactory if
fabricated from columbium or another material
temperature
plug materials.
compatible with lithium.
3.2. Heat Transfer Studies
Experimental studies of the effect of thermal
stress cycling on structural materials were con-
tinued with the use of the pulse-pump system.
The effects of exposure time, that is, total number
of thermal cycles, on the Inconel test specimens
are being investigated. For correlation with these
studies, measurements are being made of the
attenuation of sinusoidal temperature oscillations
at the interior surface of a thick-walled Inconel
cylinder,
The study of the effect of screens in a diverging
annular channel on the thermal structure of a
fluid with internal heat generation was completed.
The wuse of variable porosity screens reduced
the amplitude of the surface temperature fluctu-
ations to less than 10% of the axial rise at both
the inner and outer channel walls. The screens
also effectively reduced flow asymmetries caused
by stoppage of one of the two pumps in the flow
system,
Initial studies of heat transfer in a liquid metal
with internal heat generation were completed.
Preliminary analyses of the data indicate that the
surface-to-fluid mean temperature differences are
greater than predicted. It thus appears that the
theory-vs-experiment discrepancies observed in
liquid-metal wall-heat-transfer systems — that is,
externally heated systems — also exist in the in-
ternally heated systems,
3.3. Instruments and Controls
A data acquisition, or digital recording, system
was obtained for use in recording and correlating
the process variables for which measuring instru-
ments will be required in a reactor system. The
information obtained with this system will be use-
ful in evaluations of the need for instruments and
the preparation of specifications for instruments.
Life tests of ORNL-designed liquid-metal-tevel
transducers were continued., Two units have
accumulated 5408 hr of operation at 1200°F in
NaK and two have accumulated 775 hr. Eight
units were tested to investigate wetting in NaK at
various temperatures. The data are being analyzed.
Two l-in. turbine flowmeters that had operated in
NaK for 2000 hr at temperatures up to 1560°F were
removed from the test loop and are being dis-
assembled for examination. The design principles
embodied in these instruments are suitable for the
design of instruments for use with high-temperature
lithium systems.
Strain gages for static measurements at temper-
atures up to 2000°F are being studied, Since
past experience with strain gages has been almost
entirely at low temperatures, a test facility for
evaluating various types of strain gages at high
temperatures is being devised,
A design of an in-pile loop in which to study the
effects of high-level radiation on thermocouples
was prepared. The test environment will be
sodium,
Tests are under way on pneumatic pressure
transmitters., Overrange pressures are being used
to determine the aging characteristics of the
instruments with respect to accuracy and over-all
safety.
PART 4. SHIELDING
4.1. Shielding Theory
In order to predict and check the results of
shielding experiments, a computation was made
of the energy and angular distribution of the gamma
rays at the surface of the BSF reactor. The calcu-
lated gamma-ray energy spectrum normal to the
surface of the reactor checked with that obtained
in previous calculations, and the first detailed
calculation of angular distribution was completed.
4,2. Lid Tank Shielding Facility
The experiment designed by GE-ANP for studying
the production of secondary gamma rays in con-
figurations containing advanced shielding ma-
terials is being continued. The latest tests were
performed to determine the optimum placement
of boral within configurations containing stainless
steel, The most effective way of reducing the
capture gamma-ray dose rates beyond the con-
figurations was to distribute the boral evenly
throughout the stainless steel and, in addition,
to place some boral behind the stainless steel.
4.3. Bulk Shielding Facility
The design of a stainless-steel-clad, U02-
fueled reactor for the BSF was completed, and a
report for submission to the Advisory Committee on
Reactor Safeguards was prepared. Mechanical tests
and analog computations carried out on the control
system indicate that it is capable of safely re-
versing positive periods as short as 8 msec.
This would be equivalent to an excess reactivity
of 1.2%; however, it is planned to limit the stain-
less steel reactivity to 0.75% until a planned
series of tests on the BSR-ll and its control
system can be performed at the SPERT Facility.
The study of the spectra of gamma radiation
associated with the fission of U237 is continuing.
It has included a second BSF determination of
prompt radiation, the results of which are in general
agreement with the previous results, although
they differ by as much as a factor of 2 in some
energy regions. Preliminary results were also
obtained in measurements of the fission-product
gamma radiation emitted during the period between
5 x 108 and 10~¢ sec after fission and during the
period between 1 and 1500 sec after fission.
A ?’/4-in.-diu by 2-in.-deep well was drilled into
the truncated end of the 9-in..dia crystal of
Nal(T1) — which will be used as a total absorption
gamma-ray spectrometer at the BSF — in order to
reduce the effects on the spectral response of the
Compton scattering near the surface where the
gamma radiation enters the crystal. In an attempt
to improve the percentage resolution, seven 3-in.-
dia photomultiplier tubes were mounted on the
crystal, In spite of this improvement, the total
spectrometer does not yet compete
favorably with other spectrometers in terms of
resolution, although its efficiency is two or three
orders of magnitude greater.
A study of the heat production in a large slab
mockup of a typical aircraft shield was undertaken
absorption
at the BSF. The mockup being investigated con-
sists of a 4-in,-thick slab of beryllium, followed by
a gamma-ray shield and 16 in. of lithium hydride.
The gamma-ray material consists of 3 in. of lead,
3 in. of iron, or 2 in. of Mallory 1000. The entire
shield is submerged in an oil-filled aluminum tank
positioned against the BSR. Measurements are
being made of the heating, dose rates, and fluxes
within the shield.
4.4. Tower Shielding Facility
An experiment in cooperation with Convair, Fort
Worth, is now being conducted at the Tower
Shielding Facility to obtain neutron and gamma-
ray dose rates and thermal-neutron fluxes under
conditions similar to those encountered with the
Nuclear Test Airplane Program but in the absence
of the airplane structure. The experiment will
also include dose rates and flux measurements
taken at various positions around the ASTR while
the reactor is 12,5 ft above the ground as in the
Convair ground test measurements. In order to
sort out the ground scattering effects, similar
measurements will be made while the reactor is |
suspended at an altitude of approximately 190 ft.
Other measurements will be made to determine
the spectra of neutrons emitted from the ASTR.
xiii