Degree Department

First CSDP (Continental Scientific Drilling Program)/thermal regimes core hole project at Valles Caldera, New Mexico (VC-1): Drilling report (open access)

First CSDP (Continental Scientific Drilling Program)/thermal regimes core hole project at Valles Caldera, New Mexico (VC-1): Drilling report

This report is a review and summary of the core drilling operations of the first Valles Caldera research borehole (VC-1) under the Thermal Regimes element of the Continental Scientific Drilling Program (CSDP). The project is a portion of a broader program that seeks to answer fundamental scientific questions about magma, rock/water interactions, and volcanology through shallow (<1-km) core holes at Long Valley, California; Salton Sea, California; and the Valles Caldera, New Mexico. The report emphasizes coring operations with reference to the stratigraphy of the core hole, core quality description, core rig specifications, and performance. It is intended to guide future research on the core and in the borehole, as well as have applications to other areas and scientific problems in the Valles Caldera. The primary objectives of this Valles Caldera coring effort were (1) to study the hydrogeochemistry of a subsurface geothermal outflow zone of the caldera near the source of convective upflow, (2) to obtain structural and stratigraphic information from intracaldera rock formations in the southern ring-fracture zone, and (3) to obtain continuous core samples through the youngest volcanic unit in Valles Caldera, the Banco Bonito rhyolite (approximately 0.1 Ma). All objectives were met. The high percentage of core …
Date: February 1, 1987
Creator: Rowley, J.; Hawkins, W. & Gardner, J. (comps.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ICH antenna development on the ORNL RF Test Facility (open access)

ICH antenna development on the ORNL RF Test Facility

A compact resonant loop antenna is installed on the ORNL Radio Frequency Test Facility (RFTF). Facility characteristics include a steady-state magnetic field of {approx} 0.5 T at the antenna, microwave-generated plasmas with n{sub e} {approx} 10{sup 12} cm{sup {minus}3} and T{sub e} {approx} 8 eV, and 100 kW of 25-MHz rf power. The antenna is tunable from {approximately}22--75 MHz, is designed to handle {ge}1 MW of rf power, and can be moved 5 cm with respect to the port flange. Antenna characteristics reported and discussed include the effect of magnetic field on rf voltage breakdown at the capacitor, the effects of magnetic field and plasma on rf voltage breakdown between the radiating element and the Faraday shield, the effects of graphite on Faraday shield losses, and the efficiency of coupling to the plasma. 2 refs., 4 figs.
Date: January 1, 1987
Creator: Gardner, W.L.; Bigelow, T.S.; Haste, G.R.; Hoffman, D.J. & Livesey, R.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Core lithology, Valles caldera No. 1, New Mexico (open access)

Core lithology, Valles caldera No. 1, New Mexico

Vallas caldera No. 1 (VC-1) is the first Continental Scientific Drilling Program research core hole in the Vallas caldera and the first continuously cored hole in the region. The hole penetrated 298 m of moat volcanics and caldera-fill ignimbrites, 35 m of volcaniclastic breccia, and 523 m of Paleozoic carbonates, sandstones, and shales with over 95% core recovery. The primary research objectives included coring through the youngest rhyolite flow within the caldera; obtaining structural and stratigraphic information near the intersection of the ring-fracture zone and the pre-caldera Jemez fault zone; and penetrating a high-temperature hydrothermal outflow plume near its source. This report presents a compilation of lithologic and geophysical logs and photographs of core that were collected while drilling VC-1. It is intended to be a reference tool for researchers interested in caldera processes and associated geologic phenomena.
Date: April 1, 1987
Creator: Gardner, J.N.; Goff, F.; Goff, S.; Maassen, L.; Mathews, K.; Wachs, D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of whole-building energy design targets for commercial buildings: Phase 1, Planning: Volume 1, Final report (open access)

Development of whole-building energy design targets for commercial buildings: Phase 1, Planning: Volume 1, Final report

This report describes background research for preparation of a plan for development of whole-building energy targets for new commercial buildings. The lead laboratory for this program is the Pacific Northwest Laboratory. A wide variety of expertise and resources from industry, academia, other government entities, and other DOE laboratories are used in planning, reviewing and conducting research activities. Cooperative and complementary research development, and technology transfer activities with other interested organizations are actively pursued.
Date: April 1, 1987
Creator: Crawley, D. B.; Briggs, R. S.; Jones, J. W.; Seaton, W. W.; Kaufman, J. E.; Deringer, J. J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of whole-building energy design targets for commercial buildings: Phase 1, Planning: Volume 2, Technical report (open access)

Development of whole-building energy design targets for commercial buildings: Phase 1, Planning: Volume 2, Technical report

This is the second volume of the Phase 1 report and discusses the 10 tasks performed in Phase 1. The objective of this research is to develop a methodology for setting energy design targets to provide voluntary guidelines for the buildings industry. The whole-building energy targets project is being conducted at the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL) for the US Department of Energy (DOE) to encourage the construction of energy-efficient buildings by informing designers and owners about cost-effective goals for energy use in new commercial buildings. The outcome of this research will be a flexible methodology for setting such targets. The tasks are listed and discussed in this report as follows: Task 1 - Develop Detailed Project Goals and Objectives; Task 2 - Establish Buildings-Industry Liaison; Task 3 - Develop Approaches to the Energy Targets Model, Building Operations, and Climate; Task 4 - Develop an Approach for Treating Economic Considerations; Task 5 - Develop an Approach for Treating Energy Sources; Task 6 - Collect Energy-Use Data; Task 7 - Survey Energy Expert Opinion; Task 8 - Evaluation Procedure Specification and Integration; Task 9 - Phase 1 Report Development; and Task 10 - Phase 1 Review Planning.
Date: August 1, 1987
Creator: Crawley, D. B.; Briggs, R. S.; Jones, J. W.; Seaton, W. W.; Kaufman, J. E.; Deringer, J. J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bibliography of the technical literature of the Materials Joining Group, Metals and Ceramics Division, 1951 through June 1987 (open access)

Bibliography of the technical literature of the Materials Joining Group, Metals and Ceramics Division, 1951 through June 1987

This document contains a listing of the written scientific information originating in the Materials Joining Group (formerly the Welding and Brazing Group), Metals and Ceramics Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory during 1951 through June 1987. It is a registry of about 400 documents as nearly as possible in the order in which they were issued.
Date: August 1, 1987
Creator: David, S. A.; Goodwin, G. M. & Gardner, K. (comps.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Field evaluation of a tensiometer data acquisition system for hydrologic studies of waste disposal site design. [Shallow land burial] (open access)

Field evaluation of a tensiometer data acquisition system for hydrologic studies of waste disposal site design. [Shallow land burial]

Commercially available differential pressure transducers, tensiometers and a data acquisition system were combined to study soil water tension changes with time within two trench cap designs used for the shallow land burial of waste materials. Apparent diurnal variations in soil water tension measured with this system are evaluated relative to field variations in temperature, atmospheric pressure and soil water content. Ongoing research is described which should improve the reliability of future soil water tension data collected in the field. 10 refs., 5 figs.
Date: January 1, 1987
Creator: Nyhan, J. W.; Drennon, B. J. & Gaylor, R. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental research on actinide elements (open access)

Environmental research on actinide elements

The papers synthesize the results of research sponsored by DOE's Office of Health and Environmental Research on the behavior of transuranic and actinide elements in the environment. Separate abstracts have been prepared for the 21 individual papers. (ACR)
Date: August 1, 1987
Creator: Pinder, J. E., III; Alberts, J. J.; McLeod, K. W. & Schreckhise, R. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Operational Experience With Light Ions at BNL (open access)

Operational Experience With Light Ions at BNL

A new transfer line has joined the Tandem Van de Graaff facility and the AGS at Brookhaven National Laboratory, permitting the acceleration of light ions (up to sulfur) to 14.5 GeV/nucleon. The Tandem, operating with a pulsed ion source, supplies a fully stripped ion beam at about 7 MeV/nucleon to the AGS. A new low frequency rf system accelerates the beam in the AGS to about 200 MeV/nucleon. The previously existing rf system completes the cycle. High energy ion beams are delivered using standard resonant extraction to four experimental beam lines. Details of techniques and preliminary performance and operational characteristics are discussed.
Date: March 1, 1987
Creator: Reece, R. K.; Ahrens, L. A.; Barton, D. S.; Beavis, D.; Benjamin, J.; Foelsche, H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of rapid solidification on stainless steel weld metal microstructures and its implications on the Schaeffler diagram (open access)

Effect of rapid solidification on stainless steel weld metal microstructures and its implications on the Schaeffler diagram

An investigation was carried out to determine the effect of rapid solidification on the weld metal microstructure of austenitic stainless steels and its implication on the ferrite constitution diagram. A wide variety of stainless steels were laser welded at different welding speeds and laser power levels. Results indicate that both weld pool cooling rate and the postsolidification solid state cooling rates have a profound effect on the microstructures. For the steels investigated, the microstructures ranged from duplex austenite (..gamma..) + ferrite (delta) to fully austenitic or fully ferritic. These microstructures were found to be sensitive to both cooling rates and composition. The observed results are rationalized based on rapid solidification theory. This investigation indicates that solidification rates and postsolidification cooling rates have a profound effect on the observed microstructures, thus making it impossible to predict the microstructures of rapidly cooled weld metal from the conventional constitution diagrams. The influence of the observations made in this investigation on the Schaeffler diagram is demonstrated, and possible corrections to the constitution diagram incorporating the cooling rate effects are proposed. 23 refs., 17 figs., 4 tabs.
Date: September 1, 1987
Creator: David, S. A.; Vitek, J. M.; Reed, R. W. & Hebble, T. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design considerations for a negative ion source for dc operation of high-power, multi-megaelectron-volt neutral beams (open access)

Design considerations for a negative ion source for dc operation of high-power, multi-megaelectron-volt neutral beams

A dc negative hydrogen and/or deuterium ion source is needed to produce high-power, high-energy neutral beams for alpha diagnostics and current drive applications in fusion devices. The favorable beam particle energy for such applications extends to 1.5 MeV/amu. Continuous-wave (cw) radiofrequency quadrupole (RFQ) accelerators have been proposed to accelerate negative ions efficiently to this energy range. In this paper, the desired beam properties for ion beams injected into cw RFQ accelerators are summarized. A number of candidate ion sources being developed at Culham, JAERI, LBL, and ORNL may prove useful for these applications. The properties of the Volume Ionization with Transverse Extraction (VITEX) ion sources being developed at ORNL are presented. Scaling such a dc ion source to produce ampere beams is discussed. 53 refs., 4 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: January 1, 1987
Creator: Tsai, C. C.; Stirling, W. L.; Akerman, M. A.; Becraft, W. R.; Dagenhart, W. K.; Haselton, H. H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermodynamic data bases for multivalent elements: An example for ruthenium (open access)

Thermodynamic data bases for multivalent elements: An example for ruthenium

A careful consideration and understanding of fundamental chemistry, thermodynamics, and kinetics is absolutely essential when modeling predominance regions and solubility behavior of elements that exhibit a wide range of valence states. Examples of this are given using the ruthenium-water system at 298.15 K, for which a critically assessed thermochemical data base is available. Ruthenium exhibits the widest range of known aqueous solution valence states. Known solid anhydrous binary oxides of ruthenium are crystalline RuO/sub 2/, RuO/sub 4/, and possibly RuO/sub 3/ (thin film), and known hydroxides/hydrated oxides (all amorphous) are Ru(OH)/sub 3/ . H/sub 2/O, RuO/sub 2/ . 2H/sub 2/O, RuO/sub 2/ . H/sub 2/O, and a poorly characterized Ru(V) hydrous oxide. Although the other oxides, hydroxides, and hydrous oxides are generally obtained as precipitates from aqueous solutions, they are thermodynamically unstable with regard to RuO/sub 2/(cr) formation. Characterized aqueous species of ruthenium include RuO/sub 4/ (which slowly oxidizes water and which dissociates as a weak acid), RuO/sub 4//sup -/ and RuO/sub 4//sup 2 -/ (which probably contain lesser amounts of RuO/sub 3/(OH)/sub 2//sup -/ and RuO/sub 3/(OH)/sub 2//sup 2 -/, respectively, and other species), Ru(OH)/sub 2//sup 2 +/, Ru/sub 4/(OH)/sub 12//sup 4 +/, Ru(OH)/sub 4/, Ru/sup 3 +/, Ru(OH)/sup …
Date: November 1, 1987
Creator: Rard, J.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Subthreshold pion production (open access)

Subthreshold pion production

This process is relatively well-understood, and one of the aims of subthresold production experiments is to identify other collective effects. Some possible signatures of collective effects are: Production below the 'absolute' threshold; production in excess predictions of nucleon-nucleon models; and a change in the characteristic behavior of the pion spectra as the threshold is crossed. This paper discusses these collective effects especially the last one. (LSP)
Date: November 1, 1987
Creator: Miller, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isotope and Nuclear Chemistry Division annual report FY 1986, October 1985-September 1986 (open access)

Isotope and Nuclear Chemistry Division annual report FY 1986, October 1985-September 1986

This report describes progress in the major research and development programs carried out in FY 1986 by the Isotope and Nuclear Chemistry Division. The report includes articles on radiochemical diagnostics and weapons tests; weapons radiochemical diagnostics research and development; other unclassified weapons research; stable and radioactive isotope production and separation; chemical biology and nuclear medicine; element and isotope transport and fixation; actinide and transition metal chemistry; structural chemistry, spectroscopy, and applications; nuclear structure and reactions; irradiation facilities; advanced concepts and technology; and atmospheric chemistry.
Date: June 1, 1987
Creator: Heiken, J.H. (ed.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Key statistics related to CO/sub 2/ emissions: Significant contributing countries (open access)

Key statistics related to CO/sub 2/ emissions: Significant contributing countries

This country selection task report describes and applies a methodology for identifying a set of countries responsible for significant present and anticipated future emissions of CO/sub 2/ and other radiatively important gases (RIGs). The identification of countries responsible for CO/sub 2/ and other RIGs emissions will help determine to what extent a select number of countries might be capable of influencing future emissions. Once identified, those countries could potentially exercise cooperative collective control of global emissions and thus mitigate the associated adverse affects of those emissions. The methodology developed consists of two approaches: the resource approach and the emissions approach. While conceptually very different, both approaches yield the same fundamental conclusion. The core of any international initiative to control global emissions must include three key countries: the US, USSR, and the People's Republic of China. It was also determined that broader control can be achieved through the inclusion of sixteen additional countries with significant contributions to worldwide emissions.
Date: July 1, 1987
Creator: Kellogg, M. A.; Edmonds, J. A.; Scott, M. J. & Pomykala, J. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 200, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1987 (open access)

The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 200, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1987

Daily newspaper from Perry, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: October 1, 1987
Creator: Watson, Milo W.
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 44, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 1, 1987 (open access)

Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 44, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 1, 1987

Daily newspaper from Perry, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: April 1, 1987
Creator: Watson, Milo W.
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 96, Ed. 1 Monday, June 1, 1987 (open access)

Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 96, Ed. 1 Monday, June 1, 1987

Daily newspaper from Perry, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: June 1, 1987
Creator: Watson, Milo W.
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
AGS experiments: 1985, 1986, 1987 (open access)

AGS experiments: 1985, 1986, 1987

This report contains: Experimental areas layout, table of beam parameters and fluxes, experiment schedule ''as run,'' experiment long range schedule, a listing of experiments by number, two-page summaries of each experiment, also ordered by number, and publications of AGS experiments, 1982-1987.
Date: January 1, 1987
Creator: Depken, J. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health and Safety Research Division: Progress report, October 1, 1985-March 31, 1987 (open access)

Health and Safety Research Division: Progress report, October 1, 1985-March 31, 1987

This report summarizes the progress in our programs for the period October 1, 1985, through March 31, 1987. The division's presentations and publications represented important contributions on the forefronts of many fields. Eleven invention disclosures were filed, two patent applications submitted, and one patent issued. The company's transfers new technologies to the private sector more efficiently than in the past. The division's responsibilities to DOE under the Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action (UMTRA) program includes inclusion recommendations for 3100 properties. The nuclear medicine program developed new radiopharmaceuticals and radionuclide generators through clinical trials with some of our medical cooperatives. Two major collaborative indoor air quality studies and a large epidemiological study of drinking water quality and human health were completed. ORNL's first scanning tunneling microscope (STM) has achieved single atom resolution and has produced some of the world's best images of single atoms on the surface of a silicon crystal. The Biological and Radiation Physics Section, designed and constructed a soft x-ray spectrometer which has exhibited a measuring efficiency that is 10,000 times higher than other equipment. 1164 refs.
Date: September 1, 1987
Creator: Walsh, Phillip J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pacific Northwest Laboratory: Annual report for 1986 to the DOE Office of Energy Research: Part 1, Biomedical sciences (open access)

Pacific Northwest Laboratory: Annual report for 1986 to the DOE Office of Energy Research: Part 1, Biomedical sciences

This report summarizes progress on OHER biomedical and health-effects research conducted at PNL in FY 1986. The research develops the knowledge and scientific principles necessary to identify, understand and anticipate the long-term health consequences of energy-related radiation and chemicals. Our continuing emphasis is to decrease the uncertainty of health-effects risk estimates from existing and/or developing energy-related technologies through an increased understanding of how radiation and chemicals cause health effects. The report is arranged to reflect the PNL research relative to OHER programmatic structure. The first section, on human health effects, concerns statistical and epidemiological methods for assessing health risks among nuclear workers. The next two sections, which contain reports of health-effects research in biological systems, include effects of radiation and of energy-related chemicals. The last section is related to medical applications of nuclear technology.
Date: February 1, 1987
Creator: Park, J. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inhalation developmental toxicology studies: Teratology study of n-hexane in rats: Final report (open access)

Inhalation developmental toxicology studies: Teratology study of n-hexane in rats: Final report

The straight chain hydrocarbon, n-hexane, is a volatile, ubiquitous solvent used in industrial, academic, and smaller commercial environments. The significant opportunity for women of child-bearing age to be exposed to this chemical prompted the undertaking of a study to assess the developmental toxicity of n-hexane in an animal model. Timed-pregnant (30 animals per group) and virgin (10 animals per group) Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to 0 (filtered air), 200, 1000, and 5000 ppM n-hexane (99.9% purity) vapor in inhalation chambers for 20 h/day for a period of 14 consecutive days. Sperm-positive females were exposed for 6 to 19 days of gestation (dg) and virgins were exposed concurrently for 14 consecutive days. The day of sperm detection was designated as 0 dg for mated females. Adult female body weights were monitored prior to, throughout the exposure period, and at sacrifice. Uterine, placental, and fetal body weights were obtained for gravid females at sacrifice. Implants were enumerated and their status recorded as live fetus, early or late resorption, or dead. Live fetuses were sexed and examined for gross, visceral, skeletal, and soft-tissue craniofacial defects. 16 refs., 3 figs., 7 tabs.
Date: December 1, 1987
Creator: Mast, T.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics Division progress report, January 1, 1984-September 30, 1986 (open access)

Physics Division progress report, January 1, 1984-September 30, 1986

This report provides brief accounts of significant progress in development activities and research results achieved by Physics Division personnel during the period January 1, 1984, through September 31, 1986. These efforts are representative of the three main areas of experimental research and development in which the Physics Division serves Los Alamos National Laboratory's and the Nation's needs in defense and basic sciences: (1) defense physics, including the development of diagnostic methods for weapons tests, weapon-related high-energy-density physics, and programs supporting the Strategic Defense Initiative; (2) laser physics and applications, especially to high-density plasmas; and (3) fundamental research in nuclear and particle physics, condensed-matter physics, and biophysics. Throughout the report, emphasis is placed on the design, construction, and application of a variety of advanced, often unique, instruments and instrument systems that maintain the Division's position at the leading edge of research and development in the specific fields germane to its mission. A sampling of experimental systems of particular interest would include the relativistic electron-beam accelerator and its applications to high-energy-density plasmas; pulsed-power facilities; directed energy weapon devices such as free-electron lasers and neutral-particle-beam accelerators; high-intensity ultraviolet and x-ray beam lines at the National Synchrotron Light Source (at Brookhaven National Laboratory); the …
Date: October 1, 1987
Creator: Keller, W.E. (comp.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An overview of the IAEA Safety Series on procedures for evaluating the reliability of predictions made by environmental transfer models (open access)

An overview of the IAEA Safety Series on procedures for evaluating the reliability of predictions made by environmental transfer models

The International Atomic Energy Agency is preparing a Safety Series publication on practical approaches for evaluating the reliability of the predictions made by environmental radiological assessment models. This publication identifies factors that affect the reliability of these predictions and discusses methods for quantifying uncertainty. Emphasis is placed on understanding the quantity of interest specified by the assessment question and distinguishing between stochastic variability and lack of knowledge about either the true value or the true distribution of values for quantity of interest. Among the many approaches discussed, model testing using independent data sets (model validation) is considered the best method for evaluating the accuracy in model predictions. Analytical and numerical methods for propagating the uncertainties in model parameters are presented and the strengths and weaknesses of model intercomparison exercises are also discussed. It is recognized that subjective judgment is employed throughout the entire modelling process, and quantitative reliability statements must be subjectively obtained when models are applied to different situations from those under which they have been tested. (6 refs.)
Date: October 1, 1987
Creator: Hoffman, F. W. & Hofer, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library