States

Waste and Encapsulation Storage Facility (WESF) Essential and Support Drawing List (open access)

Waste and Encapsulation Storage Facility (WESF) Essential and Support Drawing List

The drawings identified in this document will comprise the Waste Encapsulation and Storage Facility essential and support drawing list. This list will replace drawings identified as the ''WESF Essential and support drawing list''. Additionally, this document will follow the applicable requirements of HNF-PRO-242 ''Engineering Drawing Requirements'' and FSP-WESF-001, Section EN-1 ''Documenting Engineering Changes''. An essential drawing is defined as an engineering drawing identified by the facility staff as necessary to directly support the safe operation or maintenance of the facility. A support drawing is defined as a drawing identified by the facility staff that further describes the design details of structures, systems, or components shown on essential drawings or is frequently used by the support staff.
Date: August 31, 1999
Creator: SHANNON, W.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste and Encapsulation Storage Facility (WESF) Essential and Support Drawing List (open access)

Waste and Encapsulation Storage Facility (WESF) Essential and Support Drawing List

The drawings identified in this document will comprise the Waste Encapsulation and Storage Facility essential and support drawing list. This list will replace drawings identified as the ''WESF Essential and support drawing list''. Additionally, this document will follow the applicable requirements of HNF-PRO-242 ''Engineering Drawing Requirements'' and FSP-WESF-001, Section EN-1 ''Documenting Engineering Changes''. An essential drawing is defined as an engineering drawing identified by the facility staff as necessary to directly support the safe operation or maintenance of the facility. A support drawing is defined as a drawing identified by the facility staff that further describes the design details of structures, systems, or components shown on essential drawings or is frequently used by the support staff.
Date: August 31, 1999
Creator: SHANNON, W.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste and Encapsulation Storage Facility (WESF) Essential and Support Drawing List (open access)

Waste and Encapsulation Storage Facility (WESF) Essential and Support Drawing List

The drawings identified in this document will comprise the Waste Encapsulation and Storage Facility essential and support drawing list. This list will replace drawings identified as the ''WESF Essential and support drawing list''. Additionally, this document will follow the applicable requirements of HNF-PRO-242 ''Engineering Drawing Requirements'' and FSP-WESF-001, Section EN-1 ''Documenting Engineering Changes''. An essential drawing is defined as an engineering drawing identified by the facility staff as necessary to directly support the safe operation or maintenance of the facility. A support drawing is defined as a drawing identified by the facility staff that further describes the design details of structures, systems, or components shown on essential drawings or is frequently used by the support staff.
Date: August 31, 1999
Creator: SHANNON, W.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Foothills Parkway Section 8B Final Environmental Report, Volume 6, Appendix N (open access)

Foothills Parkway Section 8B Final Environmental Report, Volume 6, Appendix N

In 1994, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) was tasked by the National Park Service (NPS) to prepare an Environmental Report (ER) for Section 8B of the Foothills Parkway in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP). Section 8B represents 27.7 km (14.2 miles) of a total of 115 km (72 miles) of the planned Foothills Parkway and would connect the Cosby community on the east to the incorporated town of Pittman Center to the west. The major deliverables for the project are listed. From August 1995 through October 1996, NPS, GSMNP, and ORNL staff interacted with Federal Highway Administration staff to develop a conceptual design plan for Section 8B with the intent of protecting critical resources identified during the ER process to the extent possible. In addition, ORNL arranged for bioengineering experts to discuss techniques that might be employed on Section 8B with NPS, GSMNP, and ORNL staff during September 1996. For the purposes of this ER, there are two basic alternatives under consideration: (1) a build alternative and (2) a no-build alternative. Within the build alternative are a number of options including constructing Section 8B with no interchanges, constructing Section 8B with an interchange at SR 416 or U.S. …
Date: July 1, 1999
Creator: Blasing, T. J.; Cada, G. F.; Carer, M.; Chin, S. M.; Dickerman, J. A.; Etnier, D. A. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preserving Alaska's early Cold War legacy. (open access)

Preserving Alaska's early Cold War legacy.

The US Air Force owns and operates numerous facilities that were constructed during the Cold War era. The end of the Cold War prompted many changes in the operation of these properties: missions changed, facilities were modified, and entire bases were closed or realigned. The widespread downsizing of the US military stimulated concern over the potential loss of properties that had acquired historical value in the context of the Cold War. In response, the US Department of Defense in 1991 initiated a broad effort to inventory properties of this era. US Air Force installations in Alaska were in the forefront of these evaluations because of the role of the Cold War in the state's development and history and the high interest on the part of the Alaska State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO) in these properties. The 611th Air Support Group (611 ASG) owns many of Alaska's early Cold War properties, most were associated with strategic air defense. The 611 ASG determined that three systems it operates, which were all part of the integrated defense against Soviet nuclear strategic bomber threat, were eligible for the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) and would require treatment as historic properties. These systems include …
Date: March 8, 1999
Creator: Hoffecker, J. & Whorton, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bin Set 1 Calcine Retrieval Feasibility Study (open access)

Bin Set 1 Calcine Retrieval Feasibility Study

At the Department of Energy's Idaho Nuclear Technology and Engineering Center, as an interim waste management measure, both mixed high-level liquid waste and sodium bearing waste have been solidified by a calculation process and are stored in the Calcine Solids Storage Facilities. This calcined product will eventually be treated to allow final disposal in a national geologic repository. The Calcine Solids Storage Facilities comprise seven ''bit sets.'' Bin Set 1, the first to be constructed, was completed in 1959, and has been in service since 1963. It is the only bin set that does not meet current safe-shutdown earthquake seismic criteria. In addition, it is the only bin set that lacks built-in features to aid in calcine retrieval. One option to alleviate the seismic compliance issue is to transport the calcine from Bin Set 1 to another bin set which has the required capacity and which is seismically qualified. This report studies the feasibility of retrieving the calcine from Bi n Set 1 and transporting it into Bin Set 6 which is located approximately 650 feet away. Because Bin Set 1 was not designed for calcine retrieval, and because of the high radiation levels and potential contamination spread from the …
Date: October 1, 1999
Creator: Adams, R. D.; Berry, S. M.; Galloway, K. J.; Langenwalter, T. A.; Lopez, D. A.; Noakes, C. M. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Report: Design & Evaluation of Energy Efficient Modular Classroom Structures Phase II / Volume I-VII, January 17, 1995 - October 30, 1999 (open access)

Final Report: Design & Evaluation of Energy Efficient Modular Classroom Structures Phase II / Volume I-VII, January 17, 1995 - October 30, 1999

We are developing innovations to enable modular builders to improve the energy performance of their classrooms with no increase in first cost. The Modern Building Systems' (MBS) classroom building conforms to the stringent Oregon energy code, and at $18/ft{sup 2} ($1.67/m{sup 2}) (FOB the factory) it is at the low end of the cost range for modular classrooms. We have investigated daylighting, cross-ventilation, solar preheat of ventilation air, air-to-air heat exchanger, electric lighting controls, and down-sizing HVAC systems as strategies to improve energy performance. We were able to improve energy performance with no increase in first cost in all climates examined. Two papers and a full report on Phase I of this study are available. The work described in this report is from the second phase of the project. In the first phase we redesigned the basic modular classroom to incorporate energy strategies including daylighting, cross-ventilation, solar preheating of ventilation air, and insulation. We also explored thermal mass but determined that it was not a cost-effective strategy in the five climates we examined. Energy savings ranged from 6% to 49% with an average of 23%. Paybacks ranged from 1.3 years to 23.8 years, an average of 12.1 years. In Phase …
Date: October 30, 1999
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A History of Building 828, Sandia National Laboratories (open access)

A History of Building 828, Sandia National Laboratories

This report documents the history of Building 828 in Sandia National Laboratories' Technical Area I. Building 828 was constructed in 1946 as a mechanical test laboratory for Los Alamos' Z-Division (later Sandia) as it moved to Sandia Base. The building has undergone significant remodeling over the years and has had a variety of occupants. The building was evaluated in compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act, but was not eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. Nevertheless, for many Labs employees, it was a symbol of Sandia's roots in World War II and the Manhattan Project.
Date: August 1, 1999
Creator: Ullrich, Rebecca
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Liquid and Gaseous Waste Operations Section Annual Operating Report CY 1998 (open access)

Liquid and Gaseous Waste Operations Section Annual Operating Report CY 1998

None
Date: January 1, 1999
Creator: Maddox, J. J. & Scott, C. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cold Vacuum Drying facility civil structural system design description (SYS 06) (open access)

Cold Vacuum Drying facility civil structural system design description (SYS 06)

This document describes the Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) Facility civil - structural system. This system consists of the facility structure, including the administrative and process areas. The system's primary purpose is to provide for a facility to house the CVD process and personnel and to provide a tertiary level of containment. The document provides a description of the facility and demonstrates how the design meets the various requirements imposed by the safety analysis report and the design requirements document.
Date: July 6, 1999
Creator: PITKOFF, C.C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind River Watershed Project; Volume III of III Report H, 1998 Annual Report. (open access)

Wind River Watershed Project; Volume III of III Report H, 1998 Annual Report.

The objective of this study was to assess fish passage at Trout Creek's Hemlock Dam and prescribe options for restoring fish passage.
Date: November 1999
Creator: Wieman, Kenneth
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Decision Analysis Science Modeling for Application and Fielding Selection Applied to Equipment Dismantlement Technologies (open access)

Decision Analysis Science Modeling for Application and Fielding Selection Applied to Equipment Dismantlement Technologies

The dismantlement of radioactively contaminated process equipment is a major concern during the D&D process. There are an estimated 1,200 buildings in the DOE-EM complex that will require the dismantlement of equipment and various metal structures. As buildings undergo the D&D process, this metallic equipment contaminated with radionuclides such as uranium and plutonium must be size-reduced before final disposal. A single information source comparing dismantlement technologies in the areas of safety, cost, and performance is needed by DOE managers and is not currently available. The selection of the appropriate technologies to meet the dismantlement objectives for a given site is a difficult process in the absence of comprehensive and comparable data. Choosing the wrong technology could result in increased exposure of personnel to contaminants and an increase in D&D project costs. The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate commercially available and innovative technologies for equipment dismantlement and provide a comprehensive source of information to the D&D community in the areas of technology performance, cost, and health and safety.
Date: January 1, 1999
Creator: Ebadian, M. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
River Protection Project information systems assessment (open access)

River Protection Project information systems assessment

The Information Systems Assessment Report documents the results from assessing the Project Hanford Management Contract (PHMC) Hanford Data Integrator 2000 (HANDI 2000) system, Business Management System (BMS) and Work Management System phases (WMS), with respect to the System Engineering Capability Assessment Model (CAM). The assessment was performed in accordance with the expectations stated in the fiscal year (FY) 1999 Performance Agreement 7.1.1, item (2) which reads, ''Provide an assessment report on the selected Integrated Information System by July 31, 1999.'' This report assesses the BMS and WMS as implemented and planned for the River Protection Project (RPP). The systems implementation is being performed under the PHMC HANDI 2000 information system project. The project began in FY 1998 with the BMS, proceeded in FY 1999 with the Master Equipment List portion of the WMS, and will continue the WMS implementation as funding provides. This report constitutes an interim quality assessment providing information necessary for planning RPP's information systems activities. To avoid confusion, HANDI 2000 will be used when referring to the entire system, encompassing both the BMS and WMS. A graphical depiction of the system is shown in Figure 2-1 of this report.
Date: July 28, 1999
Creator: JOHNSON, A.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lessons Learned from the Puerto Rico Battery Energy Storage System (open access)

Lessons Learned from the Puerto Rico Battery Energy Storage System

The Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA) installed a distributed battery energy storage system in 1994 at a substation near San Juan, Puerto Rico. It was patterned after two other large energy storage systems operated by electric utilities in California and Germany. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Energy Storage Systems Program at Sandia National Laboratories has followed the progress of all stages of the project since its inception. It directly supported the critical battery room cooling system design by conducting laboratory thermal testing of a scale model of the battery under simulated operating conditions. The Puerto Rico facility is at present the largest operating battery storage system in the world and is successfully providing frequency control, voltage regulation, and spinning reserve to the Caribbean island. The system further proved its usefulness to the PREPA network in the fall of 1998 in the aftermath of Hurricane Georges. The owner-operator, PREPA, and the architect/engineer, vendors, and contractors learned many valuable lessons during all phases of project development and operation. In documenting these lessons, this report will help PREPA and other utilities in planning to build large energy storage systems.
Date: September 1, 1999
Creator: BOYES, JOHN D.; DE ANA, MINDI FARBER & TORRES, WENCESLANO
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulated performance of CIEE's 'Alternatives to Compressive Cooling' prototype house under design conditions in various California climates (open access)

Simulated performance of CIEE's 'Alternatives to Compressive Cooling' prototype house under design conditions in various California climates

To support the design development of a compressorless house that does not rely on mechanical air-conditioning, the author carried out detailed computer analysis of a prototypical house design to determine the indoor thermal conditions during peak cooling periods for over 170 California locations. The peak cooling periods are five-day sequences at 2{percent} frequency determined through statistical analysis of long-term historical weather data. The DOE-2 program was used to simulate the indoor temperatures of the house under four operating options: windows closed, with mechanical ventilation, evaporatively-cooled mechanical ventilation, or a conventional 1 1/2-ton air conditioner. The study found that with a 1500 CFM mechanical ventilation system, the house design would maintain comfort under peak conditions in the San Francisco Bay Area out to Walnut Creek, but not beyond. In southern California, the same system and house design would maintain adequate comfort only along the coast. With the evaporatively-cooled ventilation system, the applicability of the house design can be extended to Fairfield and Livermore in northern California, but in southern California a larger 3000 CFM system would be needed to maintain comfort conditions over half of the greater Los Angeles area, the southern half of the Inland Empire, and most of San …
Date: December 1, 1999
Creator: Huang, Yu Joe
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design-Only Conceptual Design Report: Plutonium Immobilization Plant (open access)

Design-Only Conceptual Design Report: Plutonium Immobilization Plant

This design-only conceptual design report was prepared to support a funding request by the Department of Energy Office of Fissile Materials Disposition for engineering and design of the Plutonium Immobilization Plant, which will be used to immobilize up to 50 tonnes of surplus plutonium. The siting for the Plutonium Immobilization Plant will be determined pursuant to the site-specific Surplus Plutonium Disposition Environmental Impact Statement in a Plutonium Deposition Record of Decision in early 1999. This document reflects a new facility using the preferred technology (ceramic immobilization using the can-in-canister approach) and the preferred site (at Savannah River). The Plutonium Immobilization Plant accepts plutonium from pit conversion and from non-pit sources and, through a ceramic immobilization process, converts the plutonium into mineral-like forms that are subsequently encapsulated within a large canister of high-level waste glass. The final immobilized product must make the plutonium as inherently unattractive and inaccessible for use in nuclear weapons as the plutonium in spent fuel from commercial reactors and must be suitable for geologic disposal. Plutonium immobilization at the Savannah River Site uses: (1) A new building, the Plutonium Immobilization Plant, which will convert non-pit surplus plutonium to an oxide form suitable for the immobilization process, immobilize …
Date: January 1, 1999
Creator: DiSabatino, A. & Loftus, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 24, Number 49, Pages 10619-11039, December 3, 1999 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 24, Number 49, Pages 10619-11039, December 3, 1999

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: December 3, 1999
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Controlling company drawing symbology (open access)

Controlling company drawing symbology

Fluor Daniel Hanford. Inc., is the prime contractor for the US, Department of Energy, Richland Operations Office at the Hanford Site, which is located near Richland, Washington, in the southeastern portion of the state. Six major subcontractors for Fluor Daniel Hanford, Inc., provide operations and maintenance in waste management, environmental restoration, science and energy for 24 major facilities, programs or utilities on the Site that covers 1,465 square kilometers (560 square miles). Hanford was established in secrecy during the Second World War to produce plutonium for America's nuclear weapons. Peak production was reached in the 1960s when nine production reactors were in operation at the Site. All weapons material production was halted in the late 1980s and the Site is now engaged in the world's largest environmental cleanup project. The mission at Hanford is to manage waste products; researching, developing, applying, and commercializing technologies; waste management; cleanup and environmental restoration. Engineering, scientific and research programs are conducted on environmental restoration, tank waste remediation, waste management, nuclear energy, and energy research.
Date: June 6, 1999
Creator: Nielsen, Bruce L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test and Evaluation Plan for Project W-314 Tank Farm Restoration and Safe Operations (open access)

Test and Evaluation Plan for Project W-314 Tank Farm Restoration and Safe Operations

This Test and Evaluation Plan (TEP) defines the objectives, roles, responsibilities, and overall strategy for conducting test and evaluation activities for the W-314 Project.
Date: July 16, 1999
Creator: HAMMERS, J.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ENVision, Volume 5, Issue 3, Winter 1999 (open access)

ENVision, Volume 5, Issue 3, Winter 1999

Quarterly newsletter discussing the activities and updates of the Environmental Affairs Division of the Department of Transportation.
Date: Winter 1999
Creator: Texas. Department of Transportation.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Historic preservation requirements and the evaluation of cold war era nuclear facilities at Argonne National Laboratory-East. (open access)

Historic preservation requirements and the evaluation of cold war era nuclear facilities at Argonne National Laboratory-East.

Project design for the decontamination and decommissioning (D&D) of federal facilities must address the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act which includes compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA). Section 106 of the NHPA requires that Federal agencies consider any effect their activities may have on historic properties. While a cultural property is not usually considered historic until it has reached an age of 50 years or older, special consideration is given to younger properties if they are of exceptional importance in demonstrating unique development in American history, architecture, archaeology, engineering, or culture. As part of the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) D&D program at Argonne National Laboratory-East (ANL-E), site properties are evaluated within the context of the Cold War Era and within themes associated with nuclear technology. Under this program, ANL-E staff have conducted archival research on three nuclear reactor facilities, one accelerator, and one laboratory building. DOE and ANL-E have been working closely with the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency (IHPA) to determine the eligibility of these properties for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. In 1998, in consultation with the IHPA, the DOE determined that the reactor facilities were eligible. Memoranda of Agreement were …
Date: April 8, 1999
Creator: Wescott, K. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Energy-Efficiency Retrofits to Baltimore's Row Homes (open access)

High Energy-Efficiency Retrofits to Baltimore's Row Homes

The purpose of the research project is to develop high-perfommnce, energy-eflicient retrofits of existing row homes in Baltimore, Maryland. These efficiency enhancements are to optimize building envelope improvements, mechanical equipment improvements and operational improvements to the highest cost-effective level. Furthermore, this project is to investigate and demonstrate the impact of high-performance energy-efficiency retrofit improvements on row homes in the Historic East area of Baltimore. Three homes awaiting renovation are planned to receive building envelope, mechanical system, and electrical system improvements that will improve their energy petiormance. An incremental additional cost ceiling of $4000 for the energy eftlciency improvements, beyond those normally installed, has been set by the project.
Date: April 19, 1999
Creator: Chalk, J.; Johnson, A.L.; Lipscomb, L. & Wendt, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Debris Removal Project K West Canister Cleaning System Performance Specification (open access)

Debris Removal Project K West Canister Cleaning System Performance Specification

Approximately 2,300 metric tons Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) are currently stored within two water filled pools, the 105 K East (KE) fuel storage basin and the 105 K West (KW) fuel storage basin, at the U.S. Department of Energy, Richland Operations Office (RL). The SNF Project is responsible for operation of the K Basins and for the materials within them. A subproject to the SNF Project is the Debris Removal Subproject, which is responsible for removal of empty canisters and lids from the basins. Design criteria for a Canister Cleaning System to be installed in the KW Basin. This documents the requirements for design and installation of the system.
Date: December 9, 1999
Creator: Farwick, C. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Design Criteria for PFP Stabilization of Polycubes Project C-227 (open access)

Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Design Criteria for PFP Stabilization of Polycubes Project C-227

This document provides the design criteria for the Los Alamos National Laboratory design of a thermal stabilization process for polycubes stored at PFP.
Date: April 12, 1999
Creator: RISENMAY, H.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library