During the pulsed cooling phase of nuclear reactor rocket engine tests, as part of the Rover Program at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, the possibility of atmospheric release of radioactive particulates exists. To control this potential release, a special air cleaning system employing High Efficiency Particulate Aerosol (HEPA) filters was designed, constructed, and tested. A primary concern was the structural integrity of these filters under the intense noise levels that exist during reactor tests.Commercially available HEPA filters were subjected to noise levels simulating the acoustic environment that exists near a reactor during testing. These acoustic exposures included both reverberant and progressive fields of varying time intervals and reached maximum sound pressure levels of 148 db. Filter efficiency tests using air-generated dioctyl phthalate (DOP) were performed before and after acoustic exposures and are reported. Details of the acoustic and DOP test methods are also discussed.
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