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Hanford contractor settles fraud suit for $3.45M
Hanford Site services contractor Hanford Mission Integration Solutions (HMIS) has agreed to pay the Department of Justice $3.45 million as part of a settlement agreement resolving allegations that HMIS overcharged the Department of Energy for millions of dollars in labor hours at the nuclear site in Washington state.
S. R. MacEwen, A. R. Causey
Nuclear Technology | Volume 44 | Number 1 | June 1979 | Pages 118-131
Technical Paper | Reactor | doi.org/10.13182/NT79-A32245
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
Irradiation creep and growth causes the core components in pressure tube reactors to change dimensions. The pressure tubes and calandria tubes in Canada Deuterium Uranium (CANDU) reactors elongate and may interact with the end shields. An analysis was performed that quantitatively describes the nature of this interaction. It is shown that as the fuel channels elongate, compressive stresses are induced in the pressure tubes, tensile stresses are induced in the calandria tubes, and the two end shields move apart. It is also demonstrated how simple mechanical adjustments can alter the nature of the induced stresses.