Vadose Zone Transport Field Study: Detailed Test Plan for Simulated Leak Tests (open access)

Vadose Zone Transport Field Study: Detailed Test Plan for Simulated Leak Tests

This report describes controlled transport experiments at well-instrumented field tests to be conducted during FY 2000 in support of DOE?s Vadose Zone Transport Field Study (VZTFS). The VZTFS supports the Groundwater/Vadose Zone Integration Project Science and Technology Initiative. The field tests will improve understanding of field-scale transport and lead to the development or identification of efficient and cost-effective characterization methods. These methods will capture the extent of contaminant plumes using existing steel-cased boreholes. Specific objectives are to 1) identify mechanisms controlling transport processes in soils typical of the hydrogeologic conditions of Hanford?s waste disposal sites; 2) reduce uncertainty in conceptual models; 3) develop a detailed and accurate data base of hydraulic and transport parameters for validation of three-dimensional numerical models; and 4) identify and evaluate advanced, cost-effective characterization methods with the potential to assess changing conditions in the vadose zone, particularly as surrogates of currently undetectable high-risk contaminants. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) manages the VZTFS for DOE.
Date: June 23, 2000
Creator: Ward, Anderson L. & Gee, Glendon W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structure of Mesita del Buey at TA-54, Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico (open access)

Structure of Mesita del Buey at TA-54, Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico

The geological structure of Mesita del Buey at Technical Area 54 (TA-54) was examined using precise surveying of the contact between units 1v and 2 of the Tshirege Member of the Bandelier Tuff at 3.5 km along the north wall of Pajarito Canyon and 0.6 km along the north wall of a tributary to Canada del Buey. Estimated structure contours on this contact indicate typical strikes of N40E to N70E along this part of Mesita del Buey, although the apparent strike of the tuff is E-W at the western part of the survey. Typical dips are 1.0{degree} to 2.0{degree} to the east or southeast, with an estimated maximum dip of 3.2{degree} near the west end of Material Disposal Area G. Thirty seven faults with vertical displacements of 5 to 65 cm were observed in outcrop along the Pajarito Canyon traverse, and, due to the incomplete exposure of the unit 1v-unit 2 contact, many more faults of this magnitude undoubtedly exist. The faults have a wide range in strike and have either down-to-the-west and down-to-the-east components of offset, although about 65% of the observed displacement is down-to-the-west or northwest. These faults are not clearly associated with major fault zones, indicated by …
Date: April 23, 1998
Creator: Reneau, S. L.; Broxton, D. E.; Carney, J. S. & LaDelfe, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A CORRELATION OF PULSE COLUMN LIQUID-LIQUID HEAT TRANSFER. Progress Report No. 23 on THE PERFORMANCE OF CONTACTORS FOR LIQUID-LIQUID EXTRACTION (open access)

A CORRELATION OF PULSE COLUMN LIQUID-LIQUID HEAT TRANSFER. Progress Report No. 23 on THE PERFORMANCE OF CONTACTORS FOR LIQUID-LIQUID EXTRACTION

Submitted as a thesis by William Berdell Barlage, Jr. Heat transfer studies were refined and extended to the point where the results could be generalized into a mathematical correlation valid over a reasonably wide range of variables. An extended study was made of the rate of heat transfer between benzene and water in direct contact in a pulse column, and of the operating variables which controlled the behavior. In this mode of heat transfer the benzene was dispersed as a family of droplets into the water, which formed the continuous phase. The pulse column was 1.92-in. in inside diam., and contained 8 stainless steel perforated plates spaced 2.00 inches apart. The plates were perforated with 1/8-in. holes in a triangular 60 deg pattern, providing 24.6 per cent free area. The equipment was carefully insulated and modified in many details in order to permit precise heat transfer measurements. The operating conditions were varied so as to provide wide ranges of variables and heat transfer responses. (W.L.H.)
Date: October 23, 1959
Creator: Barlage, W.B. Jr. & Pike, F.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extracellular matrix control of mammary gland morphogenesis and tumorigenesis: insights from imaging (open access)

Extracellular matrix control of mammary gland morphogenesis and tumorigenesis: insights from imaging

The extracellular matrix (ECM), once thought to solely provide physical support to a tissue, is a key component of a cell's microenvironment responsible for directing cell fate and maintaining tissue specificity. It stands to reason, then, that changes in the ECM itself or in how signals from the ECM are presented to or interpreted by cells can disrupt tissue organization; the latter is a necessary step for malignant progression. In this review, we elaborate on this concept using the mammary gland as an example. We describe how the ECM directs mammary gland formation and function, and discuss how a cell's inability to interpret these signals - whether as a result of genetic insults or physicochemical alterations in the ECM - disorganizes the gland and promotes malignancy. By restoring context and forcing cells to properly interpret these native signals, aberrant behavior can be quelled and organization re-established. Traditional imaging approaches have been a key complement to the standard biochemical, molecular, and cell biology approaches used in these studies. Utilizing imaging modalities with enhanced spatial resolution in live tissues may uncover additional means by which the ECM regulates tissue structure, on different length scales, through its pericellular organization (short-scale) and by biasing …
Date: October 23, 2008
Creator: Ghajar, Cyrus M & Bissell, Mina J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RCRA Assessment Plan for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area T at the Hanford Site (open access)

RCRA Assessment Plan for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area T at the Hanford Site

A groundwater quality assessment plan was prepared to investigate the rate and extent of aquifer contamination beneath Waste Management Area T at the Hanford Site in Washington State. This plan is an update of a draft plan issued in January 1999, which guided work performed in fiscal year 2000.
Date: February 23, 2001
Creator: Hodges, Floyd N. & Chou, Charissa J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
RCRA Assessment Plan for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area TX-TY at the Hanford Site (open access)

RCRA Assessment Plan for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area TX-TY at the Hanford Site

A groundwater quality assessment plan was prepared to investigate the rate and extent of aquifer contamination beneath Waste Management Area TX-TY on the Hanford Site in Washington State. This plan is an update of a draft plan issued in February 1999, which guided work performed in fiscal year 2000.
Date: February 23, 2001
Creator: Hodges, Floyd N & Chou, Charissa J
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
RCRA Assessment Plan for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area TX-TY at the Hanford Site (open access)

RCRA Assessment Plan for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area TX-TY at the Hanford Site

A groundwater quality assessment plan was prepared to investigate the rate and extent of aquifer contamination beneath Waste Management Area TX-TY on the Hanford Site in Washington State. This plan is an update of a draft plan issued in February 1999, which guided work performed in fiscal year 2000.
Date: February 23, 2001
Creator: Hodges, Floyd N. & Chou, Charissa J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ultra-shallow box-like profiles fabricated by pulsed UV-laser doping process (open access)

Ultra-shallow box-like profiles fabricated by pulsed UV-laser doping process

Ultra-shallow, box-like impurity profiles are produced using Gas Immersion Laser Doping (GILD) and then analyzed by spreading resistance profilometry (SRP) and secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) to determine the impurity distribution. At high concentrations, the profiles obtained by SRP exhibit the expected box-like shape over the entire range of junction depths: The measured concentration within the junction region is uniform while the dopant gradient at the junction exceeds 0.5 decades/nm. In comparison, the same profiles analyzed by SIMS show a broader transition at the metallurgical junction. Caused by knock-ons and ion mixing during the sputtering process, this inaccuracy is reduced, but not eliminated by lowering the acceleration energy of the primary Cs{sup +} ion beam. At lower concentrations (< 10{sup 19}/cm{sup 3}), profiles analyzed by SRP exhibit shallower junctions than expected. Electrical measurements of diodes and Hall structures show that high-quality, ultra-shallow n{sup +}p, np and pn are fabricated with good dose control using GILD. For complete characterization of GILD, accurate measurement of both chemical and electrically-active dopant profiles are required. At present, neither SIMS nor SRP provides an entirely accurate impurity profile.
Date: March 23, 1993
Creator: Ishida, E.; Sigmon, T. W. & Weiner, K. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tissue architecture and function: dynamic reciprocity via extra- and intra-cellular matrices (open access)

Tissue architecture and function: dynamic reciprocity via extra- and intra-cellular matrices

Mammary gland development, functional differentiation, and homeostasis are orchestrated and sustained by a balance of biochemical and biophysical cues from the organ's microenvironment. The three-dimensional microenvironment of the mammary gland, predominantly 'encoded' by a collaboration between the extracellular matrix (ECM), hormones, and growth factors, sends signals from ECM receptors through the cytoskeletal intracellular matrix to nuclear and chromatin structures resulting in gene expression; the ECM in turn is regulated and remodeled by signals from the nucleus. In this chapter, we discuss how coordinated ECM deposition and remodeling is necessary for mammary gland development, how the ECM provides structural and biochemical cues necessary for tissue-specific function, and the role of the cytoskeleton in mediating the extra - to intracellular dialogue occurring between the nucleus and the microenvironment. When operating normally, the cytoskeletal-mediated dynamic and reciprocal integration of tissue architecture and function directs mammary gland development, tissue polarity, and ultimately, tissue-specific gene expression. Cancer occurs when these dynamic interactions go awry for an extended time.
Date: December 23, 2008
Creator: Xu, Ren; Boudreau, Aaron & Bissell, Mina J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of intensity instability threshold at transition in RHIC. (open access)

Analysis of intensity instability threshold at transition in RHIC.

The beam intensity of ion beams in RHIC is limited by a fast transverse instability at transition, driven by the machine impedance and electron clouds. For gold and deuteron beams we analyze the dependence of the instability threshold on beam and machine parameters from recent operational data and dedicated experiments. We fit the machine impedance to the experimental data.
Date: June 23, 2008
Creator: Fischer, W.; Blaskiewicz, M.; Cameron, P.; Montag, C. & Ptitsyn, V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A step towards a computing grid for the LHC experiments: ATLAS Data Challenge 1 (open access)

A step towards a computing grid for the LHC experiments: ATLAS Data Challenge 1

The ATLAS Collaboration at CERN is preparing for the data taking and analysis at the LHC that will start in 2007. Therefore, a series of Data Challenges was started in 2002 whose goals are the validation of the Computing Model, of the complete software suite, of the data model, and to ensure the correctness of the technical choices to be made. A major feature of the first Data Challenge was the preparation and the deployment of the software required for the production of large event samples as a worldwide-distributed activity. It should be noted that it was not an option to ''run everything at CERN'' even if we had wanted to; the resources were not available at CERN to carry out the production on a reasonable time-scale. The great challenge of organizing and then carrying out this large-scale production at a significant number of sites around the world had the refore to be faced. However, the benefits of this are manifold: apart from realizing the required computing resources, this exercise created worldwide momentum for ATLAS computing as a whole. This report describes in detail the main steps carried out in DC1 and what has been learned from them as a …
Date: April 23, 2004
Creator: Sturrock, R.; Bischof, R.; Epp, B.; Ghete, V. M.; Kuhn, D.; Mello, A. G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration Monitor for Dark Energy Experiments (open access)

Calibration Monitor for Dark Energy Experiments

The goal of this program was to design, build, test, and characterize a flight qualified calibration source and monitor for a Dark Energy related experiment: ACCESS - 'Absolute Color Calibration Experiment for Standard Stars'. This calibration source, the On-board Calibration Monitor (OCM), is a key component of our ACCESS spectrophotometric calibration program. The OCM will be flown as part of the ACCESS sub-orbital rocket payload in addition to monitoring instrument sensitivity on the ground. The objective of the OCM is to minimize systematic errors associated with any potential changes in the ACCESS instrument sensitivity. Importantly, the OCM will be used to monitor instrument sensitivity immediately after astronomical observations while the instrument payload is parachuting to the ground. Through monitoring, we can detect, track, characterize, and thus correct for any changes in instrument senstivity over the proposed 5-year duration of the assembled and calibrated instrument.
Date: November 23, 2009
Creator: Kaiser, M. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of Geophysical Characterization Methods Used at the Hanford Site (open access)

Review of Geophysical Characterization Methods Used at the Hanford Site

Geophysical methods have been used for characterization of hydrogeologic conditions and/or contaminant distributions at the Hanford site since at least the mid- to late-1940s. A review of these geophysical methods is presented in two parts: (1) shallow surface-based geophysical methods and (2) borehole geophysical-logging methods.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Last, G. V. & Horton, D. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SOLID STATE DIVISION ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING MAY 31, 1963 (open access)

SOLID STATE DIVISION ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING MAY 31, 1963

Progress in solid state physics is reported in the following areas: theory, crystals, metals and nonmetals, radiation effects, and other subjects. Separate abstracts were prepared for the fifteen sections of the report. A list of 70 papers and publications is included. (D.C.W.)
Date: August 23, 1963
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of geophysical characterization methods used at the Hanford Site (open access)

Review of geophysical characterization methods used at the Hanford Site

This paper presents a review of geophysical methods used at Hanford in two parts: (1) shallow surface-based geophysical methods and (2) borehole geophysical methods. This review was not intended to be ``all encompassing'' but should represent the vast majority (&gt;90% complete) of geophysical work conducted onsite and aimed at hazardous waste investigations in the vadose zone and/or uppermost groundwater aquifers. This review did not cover geophysical methods aimed at large-scale geologic structures or seismicity and, in particular, did not include those efforts conducted in support of the Basalt Waste Isolation Program. This review focused primarily on the more recent efforts.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Last, GV & Horton, DG
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental management science program FY1997 progress report (open access)

Environmental management science program FY1997 progress report

None
Date: January 23, 1998
Creator: Carrigan, C.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Meson Mass Measurements III : The Pi-Mu Mass Ratio and Energy Balance in Pion Decay (open access)

Meson Mass Measurements III : The Pi-Mu Mass Ratio and Energy Balance in Pion Decay

From introduction: "This article constitutes the third of a series of three papers on the "direct" measurements of the meson masses by the "Hp vs. Range" mass ratio method...The study here reported is a logical extension of the pion-proton mass ratio technique."
Date: March 23, 1954
Creator: Birnbaum, Wallace
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A TRANSISTORIZED ALPHA COUNTER FOR AN ALPHA GAUGE (open access)

A TRANSISTORIZED ALPHA COUNTER FOR AN ALPHA GAUGE

A transistorized instrument prototype was designed and constructed to replace a vacuum-tube instrument in an alpha gauge, which measures the thickness density of gases. The instrument amplifies, shapes, discriminates, and counts alpha pulses from a Au-Si surface-barrier detector exposed to an alpha source in a gas-filled chamber. The circuit consists of a charge-sensitive preamplifier, a main amplifier with pulse clipping, a Schmitt trigger, a diode pump, and a count rate meter. Preliminary tests gave results comparable to the vacuum-tube instrument. Accuracy of counting was within 10% for 0.5- to 10-Mev alpha particles emitted at a maximum rate of 10/sup 6 per sec. The instrument was stable at 25 to 55 deg C, is small and portable, and costs less than 0. An infinitely thick, alpha source that will give a high count rate is being constructed for final tests. (auth)
Date: August 23, 1962
Creator: Kopp, M.C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Collection of Articles Reprinted from Science & Technology Review on University Relations Program (open access)

A Collection of Articles Reprinted from Science & Technology Review on University Relations Program

This month's issue has the following articles: (1) The Power of Partnership--Livermore researchers forge strategic collaborations with colleagues from other University of California campuses to further science and better protect the nation; (2) Collaborative Research Prepares Our Next-Generation Scientists and Engineers--Commentary by Laura R. Gilliom; (3) Next-Generation Scientists and Engineers Tap Lab's Resources--University of California Ph.D. candidates work with Livermore scientists and engineers to conduct fundamental research as part of their theses; (4) The Best and the Brightest Come to Livermore--The Lawrence Fellowship Program attracts the most sought-after postdoctoral researchers to the Laboratory; and (5) Faculty on Sabbatical Find a Good Home at Livermore--Faculty members from around the world come to the Laboratory as sabbatical scholars.
Date: August 23, 2006
Creator: Radousky, H; Rennie, G & Henke, A
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
OPERATING MANUAL FOR THE AE-6 REACTOR (open access)

OPERATING MANUAL FOR THE AE-6 REACTOR

An attempt is made to provide a single reference source for material pertinent to the maintenance and operation of the AE-6 Reactor. Descriptions of various components are included, as well as the common operational and maintenance procedures and check lists. Information is given on the subcritical assemblies that may be studied. (W.D.M.)
Date: June 23, 1960
Creator: Moore, E.A. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of instrumentation for magnetic nondestructive evaluation (open access)

Development of instrumentation for magnetic nondestructive evaluation

The use of failure-prone components in critical applications has been traditionally governed by removing such components from service prior to the expiration of their predicted life expectancy. Such early retirement of materials does not guarantee that a particular sample will not fail in actual usage. The increasing cost of such life expectancy based operation and increased demand for improved reliability in industrial settings has necessitated an alternate form of quality control. Modern applications employ nondestructive evaluation (NDE), also known as nondestructive testing (NDT), as a means of monitoring the levels and growth of defects in a material throughout its operational life. This thesis describes the modifications made to existing instrumentation used for magnetic measurements at the Center for Nondestructive Evaluation at Iowa State University. Development of a new portable instrument is also given. An overview of the structure and operation of this instrumentation is presented. This thesis discusses the application of the magnetic hysteresis and Barkhausen measurement techniques, described in Sections 1.3.1 and 1.3.2 respectively, to a number of ferromagnetic specimens. Specifically, measurements were made on a number of railroad steel specimens for fatigue characterization, and on specimens of Damascus steel and Terfenol-D for materials evaluation. 60 refs., 51 figs., …
Date: September 23, 1991
Creator: Hariharan, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
STEAM GENERATORS FOR HIGH-TEMPERATURE GAS-COOLED REACTORS (open access)

STEAM GENERATORS FOR HIGH-TEMPERATURE GAS-COOLED REACTORS

An analytical approach and an IBM machine code were prepared for the design of gas-cooled reactor once-through steam generators for both axial-flow and cross-flow tube matrices. The codes were applied to investigate the effects of steam generator configuration, tube diameter, extended surface, type of cooling gas, steam and gas temperature and pressure conditions, and the pumping power-to-heat removal ratio on the size, weight, and cost of steam generators. The results indicate that the least expensive and most promising unit for high- temperature high-pressure gascooled reactor plants employs axial-gas flow over 0.5-in.dia bare U-tubes arranged with their axes parallel to that of the shell. The proposed design is readily adaptable to the installation of a reheater and is suited to conventional fabrication techniques. Charts are presented to facilitate tlie design of both axial-flow and cross-flow steam generators for gas- cooled reactor applications. (auth)
Date: April 23, 1963
Creator: Fraas, A.P. & Ozisik, M.N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron Capture and the Production of 60-Fe in Stellar Environments (open access)

Neutron Capture and the Production of 60-Fe in Stellar Environments

The observation of gamma rays associated with the decay of {sup 26}Al and {sup 60}Fe can provide important information regarding ongoing nucleosynthesis in our galaxy. The half-lives of these radioisotopes (7.2 x 10{sup 5} y and 1.5 x 10{sup 6} y, respectively) are long compared to the interval between synthesis events such as supernovae, so they build up in a steady state in the interstellar medium (centered on the galactic plane, where massive stars reside), yet short enough that gamma radiation from their decay may be detected. Additionally, these half-lifes are short compared to the period of galactic revolution, so that observable abundances remain in the proximity of their production sites. Predicted abundances of {sup 26}Al and {sup 60}Fe vary widely between several calculations in the last decade. In 2004, the first observation of the gamma ray flux from {sup 60}Fe decay was reported, with a {sup 60}Fe/{sup 26}Al flux ratio in good agreement with nucleosynthesis modeling from 1995. However, recent calculations that include well motivated updates to the stellar and nuclear physics, predict a flux ratio as much as six times higher than the observed value. It is desirable to understand the discrepancy between the latest calculation, which in …
Date: August 23, 2005
Creator: Kelley, K
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
RHIC polarized proton performance in run-8. (open access)

RHIC polarized proton performance in run-8.

During Run-8, the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) provided collisions of spin-polarized proton beams at two interaction regions. Helical spin rotators at these two interaction regions were used to control the spin orientation of both beams at the collision points. Physics data were taken with different orientations of the beam polarization. We present recent developments and improvements as well as the luminosity and polarization performance achieved during Run-8.
Date: June 23, 2008
Creator: Montag, C.; Abreu, N.; Ahrens, L.; Bai, M.; Barton, D. & al., et
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library