History and results of VC-1, the first CSDP corehole in Valles caldera, New Mexico (open access)

History and results of VC-1, the first CSDP corehole in Valles caldera, New Mexico

Valles Caldera No. 1 (VC-1) is the first Continental Scientific Drilling Program (CSDP) corehole drilled in the Valles caldera and the first continuously cored hole in the caldera region. The objectives of VC-1 were to penetrate a hydrothermal outflow plume near its source, to obtain structural and stratigraphic information near the intersection of the ring-fracture zone and the pre-caldera Jemez fault zone, and to core the youngest volcanic unit inside the caldera (Banco Bonito obsidian, 0.13 Ma). VC-1 penetrates 298 m of moat volcanics and caldera-fill ignimbrites, 35 m of pre-caldera volcaniclastic breccia, and 523 m of Paleozoic carbonates, sandstones and shales, with over 95% core recovery. Hydrothermal alterations are concentrated in sheared, brecciated and fractured zones from the volcaniclastic breccia to total depth with both the intensity and rank of alterations increasing with depth. Alterations consist primarily of clays, calcite, pyrite, quartz, and chlorite, but chalcopyrite has been identified as high as 518 m and molybdenite has been identified in a fractured zone at 847 m. Thermal aquifers were penetrated at various intervals from about 510 m on down. 11 refs., 5 figs.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Goff, F.; Rowley, J.; Gardner, J.N.; Hawkins, W.; Goff, S.; Pisto, L. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oak Ridge rf test facility (open access)

Oak Ridge rf test facility

The ORNL RF Test Facility is to provide a national facility for the testing and evaluation of steady state, high-power (approx.1.0-MW) Ion Cyclotron Resonance Heating (ICRH) systems and components. The facility configuration consists of a vacuum vessel and two fully tested superconducting development magnets from the EBT-P program, arranged as a simple mirror of mirror ratio 4.8. The axial centerline distance between magnet throat centers is 112 cm. The vacuum vessel cavity has a large port (74 by 163 cm) and a test volume adequate for testing prototypic launchers for DIII-D and TFTR. The magnets are capable of generating a steady state field of approx.3 T on axis in the magnet throats. Steady state plasmas are generated in the facility by cyclotron resonance breakdown using a dedicated 200-kW, 28-GHz gyrotron. Rf sources are available covering a frequency range of 2 to 200 MHz at 1.5 kW and 3 to 18 MHz at 200 kW with several sources at intermediate parameters. Available in July 1986 will be a >1.0-MW, cw source spanning 40 to 80 MHz. The report consists of nine viewgraphs.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Gardner, W.L.; Hoffman, D.J.; McCurdy, H.C.; McManamy, T.J.; Moeller, J.A. & Ryan, P.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oak Ridge rf Test Facility (open access)

Oak Ridge rf Test Facility

The rf Test Facility (RFTF) of Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) provides a national facility for the testing and evaluation of steady-state, high-power (approx.1.0-MW) ion cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) systems and components. The facility consists of a vacuum vessel and two fully tested superconducting development magnets from the ELMO Bumpy Torus Proof-of-Principle (EBT-P) program. These are arranged as a simple mirror with a mirror ratio of 4.8. The axial centerline distance between magnet throat centers is 112 cm. The vacuum vessel cavity has a large port (74 by 163 cm) and a test volume adequate for testing prototypic launchers for Doublet III-D (DIII-D), Tore Supra, and the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR). Attached to the internal vessel walls are water-cooled panels for removing the injected rf power. The magnets are capable of generating a steady-state field of approx.3 T on axis in the magnet throats. Steady-state plasmas are generated in the facility by cyclotron resonance breakdown using a dedicated 200-kW, 28-GHz gyrotron. Available rf sources cover a frequency range of 2 to 200 MHz at 1.5 kW and 3 to 18 MHz at 200 kW, with several sources at intermediate parameters. Available in July 1986 will be a >1.0-MW, cw …
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Gardner, W.L.; Hoffman, D.J.; McCurdy, H.C.; McManamy, T.J.; Moeller, J.A. & Ryan, P.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ORNL facilities for testing first-wall components (open access)

ORNL facilities for testing first-wall components

Future long-impulse magnetic fusion devices will have operating characteristics similar to those described in the design studies of the Tokamak Fusion Core Experiment (TFCX), the Fusion Engineering Device (FED), and the International Tokamak Reactor (INTOR). Their first-wall components (pumped limiters, divertor plates, and rf waveguide launchers with Faraday shields) will be subjected to intense bombardment by energetic particles exhausted from the plasma, including fusion products. These particles are expected to have particle energies of approx.100 eV, particle fluxes of approx.10/sup 18/ cm/sup -2/.s/sup -1/, and heat fluxes of approx.1 kW/cm/sup 2/ CW to approx.100 kW/cm/sup 2/ transient. No components are available to simultaneously handle these particle and heat fluxes, survive the resulting sputtering erosion, and remove exhaust gas without degrading plasma quality. Critical issues for research and development of first-wall components have been identified in the INTOR Activity. Test facilities are needed to qualify candidate materials and develop components. At Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), existing neutral beam and wave heating test facilities can be modified to simulate first-wall environments with heat fluxes up to 30 kW/cm/sup 2/, particle fluxes of approx.10/sup 18/ cm/sup -2/.s/sup -1/, and pulse lengths up to 30 s, within test volumes up to approx.100 L. …
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Tsai, C.C.; Becraft, W.R.; Gardner, W.L.; Haselton, H.H.; Hoffman, D.J.; Menon, M.M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alpha particle diagnostic beam line system to generate an intense Li/sup 0/ beam with an ORNL SITEX source (open access)

Alpha particle diagnostic beam line system to generate an intense Li/sup 0/ beam with an ORNL SITEX source

The Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) SITEX (Surface Ionization with Transverse Extraction) negative ion source utilizes a 100-V/20-A reflex arc discharge in a 1300-gauss magnetic field to generate Cs+ ions and H+ or D+ ions, depending on the beam required. A shaped molybdenum plate is placed directly behind the arc column. Cesium coverage on this plate is used to minimize the surface work function, which requires two-thirds of a monolayer coverage. Cesium coverage ia adjusted both by cesium flow control into the arc discharge chamber and by temperature control of the converter using gaseous-helium cooling channels in the converter plate. Normal converter operational temperatures are 300/sup 0/ to 500/sup 0/C H/sup -//D/sup -/ beams are generated at the biased converter surface (-150 V with respect to the anode) by Cs/sup +/ sputtering of absorbed hydrogen or deuterium and by the reflection-conversion mechanism of H/sup +//D/sup +/ ions which strike the converter surface at 150 eV. The negative ions are accelerated through the 150-V plasma sheath at the converter surface and are focused by the converter geometry and magnetic field so as to pass through the exit aperture with minimum angular divergence. The ion optics of the SITEX accelerator has been …
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Dagenhart, W. K.; Stirling, W. L.; Tsai, C. C. & Whealton, J. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commissioning the polarized beam in the AGS (open access)

Commissioning the polarized beam in the AGS

After the successful operation of a high energy polarized proton beam at the Argonne Laboratory Zero Gradient Synchrotron (ZGS) was terminated, plans were made to commission such a beam at the Brookhaven National Laboratory Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS). On February 23, 1984, 2 ..mu..A of polarized H/sup -/ was accelerated through the Linac to 200 MeV with a polarization of about 65%. 1 ..mu..A was injected into the AGS and acceleration attempts began. Several relatively short runs were then made during the next three months. Dedicated commissioning began in early June, and on June 26 the AGS polarized beam reached 13.8 GeV/c to exceed the previous ZGS peak momentum of 12.75 GeV/c. Commissioning continued to the point where 10/sup 10/ polarized protons were accelerated to 16.5 GeV/c with 40% polarization. Then, two experiments had a short polarized proton run. We plan to continue commissioning efforts in the fall of this year to reach higher energy, higher intensity, and higher polarization levels. We present a brief description of the facility and of the methods used for preserving the polarization of the accelerating beam.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Ratner, L. G.; Brown, H.; Chiang, I. H.; Courant, E.; Gardner, C.; Lazarus, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Liquid sample shuffler (open access)

Liquid sample shuffler

A method for measuring either the uranium or plutonium content of solutions has been developed and tested on natural uranium solution. The method involves using an isotopic, /sup 252/Cf, neutron source to induce fissions and then counting delayed neutrons once the source is withdrawn. The neutron source is inserted into a port in the center of the solution tank to improve the chance of a source neutron inducing a fission. Delayed neutrons are counted with high efficiency by detectors placed in ports surrounding the irradiation position. Because neutrons are counted, instead of gamma rays, radioactive solutions such as those found in reprocessing plants can be measured. The ultimate detection limit of this technique is better than 1 mg/l of the fissile isotope.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Crane, T. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiologic characterization of the Mexican Hat, Utah, uranium mill tailings remedial action site: Appendix D, Addenda D1--D7 (open access)

Radiologic characterization of the Mexican Hat, Utah, uranium mill tailings remedial action site: Appendix D, Addenda D1--D7

This radiologic characterization of the inactive uranium millsite at Mexican Hat, Utah, was conducted by Bendix Field Engineering Corporation foe the US Department of Energy (DOE), Grand Junction Project Office, in response to and in accord with a Statement of Work prepared by the DOE Uranium Mill tailings Remedial Action Project (UMTRAP) Technical Assistance Contractor, Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. the objective of this project was to determine the horizontal and vertical extent of contamination that exceeds the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards at the Mexican Hat site. The data presented in this report are required for characterization of the areas adjacent to the Mexican Hat tailings piles and for the subsequent design of cleanup activities. Some on-pile sampling was required to determine the depth of the 15-pCi/g Ra-226 interface in an area where wind and water erosion has taken place.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Ludlam, J.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration of a monochromator/spectrometer system for the measurement of photoelectron angular distributions and branching ratios (open access)

Calibration of a monochromator/spectrometer system for the measurement of photoelectron angular distributions and branching ratios

We describe the techniques used in calibrating a monochromator/spectrometer system for gas-phase photoelectron angular distribution and branching ratio measurements. We report a self-consistent set of values for the Ne 2p, Ar 3p, Kr 4p/sub 3/2/ and 4p/sub 1/2/, and Xe 5p/sub 3/2/ and 5p/sub 1/2/ photoelectron asymmetry parameters and for the Kr 4p/sub 3/2/:4p/sub 1/2/ and Xe 5p/sub 3/2/:5p/sub 1/2/ branching ratios for the energy regions from threshold to approximately 15 iV. 22 refs., 7 figs.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Southworth, S. H.; Parr, A. C.; Hardis, J. E.; Dehmer, J. L. & Holland, D. M. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Management of National Nuclear Power Programs for assured safety (open access)

Management of National Nuclear Power Programs for assured safety

Topics discussed in this report include: nuclear utility organization; before the Florida Public Service Commission in re: St. Lucie Unit No. 2 cost recovery; nuclear reliability improvement and safety operations; nuclear utility management; training of nuclear facility personnel; US experience in key areas of nuclear safety; the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission - function and process; regulatory considerations of the risk of nuclear power plants; overview of the processes of reliability and risk management; management significance of risk analysis; international and domestic institutional issues for peaceful nuclear uses; the role of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO); and nuclear safety activities of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Connolly, T.J. (ed.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photoelectron studies of autoionizing Rydberg states in HCl (open access)

Photoelectron studies of autoionizing Rydberg states in HCl

The results of a systematic investigation of electronically autoionizing Rydberg states in HCl are discussed. Vibrationally resolved photoelectron spectroscopy was used to map out the non-radiative decay of vibronic levels of 3psigma ..-->.. n(/sub d//sup s/)sigma Rydberg states converging to the A/sup 2/..sigma../sup +/(3psigma)/sup -1/ excited ionic state. The observed vibrational distributions of the resulting X/sup 2/PI(1..pi..)/sup -1/ ionic state are compared with the results of model calculations of Terwilliger and Smith based on spectral analysis of the absorption spectrum. Overall, the X/sup 2/PI vibrational branching ratios are found to be in only rough qualitative agreement with the calculations and these results are discussed in relation to the approximations involved. 18 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: White, M. G. & Grover, J. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
State-of-the-Art Construction Technology for Deep Tunnels and Shafts in Rock (open access)

State-of-the-Art Construction Technology for Deep Tunnels and Shafts in Rock

Report describing an effort to determine the state-of-the-art in tunnel and shaft construction technology, as part of the overall feasibility study to construct a facility for the ICBM Deep Basing Deployment Concept.
Date: January 1985
Creator: Bennett, Robert D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Charge exchange processes involving iron ions (open access)

Charge exchange processes involving iron ions

A review and evaluation is given of the experimental data which are available for charge exchange processes involving iron ions and neutral H, H/sub 2/ and He. Appropriate scaling laws are presented, and their accuracy estimated for these systems. A bibliography is given of available data sources, as well as of useful data compilations and review articles. A procedure is recommended for providing single approximate formulae to the fusion community to describe total cross sections for electron capture by partially-stripped Fe/sup q+/ ions in collisions with H, H/sub 2/ and He, based on the scaling relationships suggested by Janev and Hvelplund.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Phaneuf, R.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron resonance averaging with filtered beams (open access)

Neutron resonance averaging with filtered beams

Neutron resonance averaging using filtered beams from a reactor source has proven to be an effective nuclear structure tool within certain limitations. These limitations are imposed by the nature of the averaging process, which produces fluctuations in radiative intensities. The fluctuations have been studied quantitatively. Resonance averaging also gives us information about initial or capture state parameters, in particular the photon strength function. Suitable modifications of the filtered beams are suggested for the enhancement of non-resonant processes.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Chrien, R. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ATF neutral beam injection system (open access)

ATF neutral beam injection system

The Advanced Toroidal Facility is a stellarator torsatron being built at Oak Ridge National Laboratory to investigate improved plasma confinement schemes. Plasmas heating will be carried out predominantly by means of neutral beam injection. This paper describes the basic parameters of the injection system. Numerical calculations were done to optimize the aiming of the injectors. The results of these calculations and their implications on the neutral power to the machine are elaborated. The effects of improving the beam optics and altering the focal length on the power transmitted to the plasma are discussed.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Menon, M.M.; Morris, R.N. & Edmonds, P.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clean vacuum systems for RFTF (open access)

Clean vacuum systems for RFTF

The three vacuum systems to be used on the test facility are briefly described and their performance noted. (MOW)
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Livesey, R.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sensitivity and uncertainty studies of the CRAC2 code for selected non-meteorological models and parameters (open access)

Sensitivity and uncertainty studies of the CRAC2 code for selected non-meteorological models and parameters

We have studied the sensitivity of health impacts and economic costs from hypothetical nuclear reactor accidents, as predicted by the CRAC2 computer code, to undertainties in selected non-meteorological models and parameters. The sources of uncertainty include (1) dose conversion factors for inhalation as affected by uncertainties in the particle size of the carrier aerosol and clearance of radionuclides from the respiratory tract, (2) the weathering half-time for external ground-surface exposure, and (3) transfer coefficients for terrestrial foodchain pathways. Uncertainties in inhalation dose conversion factors affected predicted early injuries by as much as 1 to 2 orders of magnitude in runs with fixed weather sequences, whereas the effects on early fatalities were less than a factor of 2 and on latent cancer fatalities less than 10%. Uncertainties in the weathering half-time for ground-surface exposure affected latent fatalities by a factor of 2 to 3 but economic costs by less than a factor of 2. Uncertainties in the transfer coefficients for terrestrial foodchain pathways affected latent fatalities by less than 15% and had no effect on economic costs. 10 references.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Kocher, D.C.; Killough, G.G. & Dunning, D.E. Jr.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Symmetry, stability, and diffraction properties of icosahedral crystals (open access)

Symmetry, stability, and diffraction properties of icosahedral crystals

In a remarkable experiment on an Mn-Al alloy, Shechtman et al. observed a diffraction spectrum with icosahedral symmetry. This is inconsistent with discrete translational invariance since the symmetry includes a five-fold axis. In this paper, it is shown that the crystallography and diffraction pattern can be described by a six-dimensional space group. The crystal structure in 3d is obtained as a cut along a 3d hyperplane in a regular 6d crystal. Displacements of the 6d crystal along 6 orthogonal directions define 6 continuous symmetries for the icosahedral crystal, three of which are phase symmetries describing internal rearrangements of the atoms.
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Bak, P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solar Energy Education. Renewable energy activities for chemistry and physics (open access)

Solar Energy Education. Renewable energy activities for chemistry and physics

Information on renewable energy sources is provided for students in this teachers' guide. With the chemistry and physics student in mind, solar energy topics such as absorber plate coatings for solar collectors and energy collection and storage methods are studied. (BCS)
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Polymer research at synchrotron radiation sources: symposium proceedings (open access)

Polymer research at synchrotron radiation sources: symposium proceedings

The twenty-two papers are arranged into eleven sessions entitled: general overviews; time-resolved x-ray scattering; studies using fluorescence, ion-containing polymers; time-resolved x-ray scattering; novel applications of synchrotron radiation; phase transitions in polymers; x-ray diffraction on polymers; recent detector advances; complementary light, x-ray and neutron studies; and neutron scattering studies. Seven of the papers are processed separately; three of the remainder have been previously processed. (DLC)
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Russell, Thomas P. & Goland, Allen N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 10, Number 6, Pages 191-230, January 18, 1985 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 10, Number 6, Pages 191-230, January 18, 1985

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: January 18, 1985
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
The question of state government capability (open access)

The question of state government capability

The ACIR Library is composed of publications that study the interactions between different levels of government. This document addresses state government capability.
Date: January 1985
Creator: United States. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations.
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tenth workshop on geothermal reservoir engineering: proceedings (open access)

Tenth workshop on geothermal reservoir engineering: proceedings

The workshop contains presentations in the following areas: (1) reservoir engineering research; (2) field development; (3) vapor-dominated systems; (4) the Geysers thermal area; (5) well test analysis; (6) production engineering; (7) reservoir evaluation; (8) geochemistry and injection; (9) numerical simulation; and (10) reservoir physics. (ACR)
Date: January 22, 1985
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal energy abstract sets. Special report No. 14 (open access)

Geothermal energy abstract sets. Special report No. 14

This bibliography contains annotated citations in the following areas: (1) case histories; (2) drilling; (3) reservoir engineering; (4) injection; (5) geothermal well logging; (6) environmental considerations in geothermal development; (7) geothermal well production; (8) geothermal materials; (9) electric power production; (10) direct utilization of geothermal energy; (11) economics of geothermal energy; and (12) legal, regulatory and institutional aspects. (ACR)
Date: January 1, 1985
Creator: Stone, C. (comp.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library