Water Bath and Air-Bath Calorimeter Qualification for Measuring 3013 Containers of Plutonium Oxide at the Hanford Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP).

Year
2003
Author(s)
D. L. Haggard - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Steven Schlegel - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Elizabeth W. Curfman - Fluor Hanford, Inc.
Dennis M. Fazzari - Fluor Hanford, Inc.
TL Welsh - PTH
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to present qualification data generated from water and air-bath calorimeters measuring radioactive decay heat from plutonium oxide in DOE STD-3013- 2000 (3013) containers at the Hanford Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP). Published data concerning air and water bath calorimeters and especially 3013-qualified calorimeters is minimal at best. This paper will address the data from the measurement/qualification test plan, the heat standards used, and the calorimeter precision and accuracy results. The 3013 package is physically larger than earlier plutonium oxide storage containers, thereby necessitating a larger measurement chamber. To accommodate the measurements of the 3013 containers at PFP, Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) supplied a water bath dual-chambered unit and the Savannah River Technology Center (SRTC) provided two airbath calorimeters. Both types of Calorimeters were installed in the analytical laboratory at PFP. The larger 3013 containers presented a new set of potential measurement problems: longer counting times, heat conductivity through a much larger container mass and wall thickness, and larger amounts of copper shot to assist sample thermal conductivity. These potential problems were addressed and included in the measurement/qualification test plan.