SY101 in situ viscometer instrument system design description (open access)

SY101 in situ viscometer instrument system design description

This documents the design and description of the in situ viscometer, developed for the hydrogen mitigation project.
Date: August 18, 1994
Creator: Pearce, K. L.; Stokes, T. I. & Vagelatos, N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An improved Thomas--Fermi treatment of nuclei (open access)

An improved Thomas--Fermi treatment of nuclei

I want to tell you about an improved Thomas-Fermi method for calculating shell-averaged nuclear properties, such as density distributions, binding energies, etc. A shell-averaged statistical theory is useful as the macroscopic component of microscopic-macroscopic theories of nuclei, such as the Strutinsky method, as well as in theories of nuclear matter in the bulk, relevant in astrophysical applications. In nuclear physics, as well as in atomic and molecular problems, the following question often has to be answered: you are given a potential well, say a deformed Woods-Saxon potential, into which you put N quantized fermions into the lowest N eigenstates, up to a ``Fermi energy`` To. You square the wave functions of the particles and add them up to get the total density {rho}({sub r}{sup {yields}}) = {Sigma}{sub i}{sup N}{vert_bar}{psi}{sub i}{vert_bar}{sup 2}. Is there some simple way of estimating {rho}({sub r}{sup {yields}}) without going through the misery of numerically solving N partial differential Schroedinger equations for the N particles?
Date: August 18, 1992
Creator: Swiatecki, W. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank monitor and control system (TMACS) software project Westronics Driver acceptance test (open access)

Tank monitor and control system (TMACS) software project Westronics Driver acceptance test

The acceptance test for the Westronics driver. This driver connects the Westronics Smart Multiplexer with the TMACS monitoring system.
Date: August 18, 1998
Creator: Glasscock, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solid Waste Information and Tracking System (SWITS) data change request log (open access)

Solid Waste Information and Tracking System (SWITS) data change request log

The Data Change Request (DCR) log is designed to promote data integrity within the Solid Waste Information and Tracking System (SWITS). It achieves this function by providing a record of all data changes performed on the database. This document contains records of those data changes from March 91 through June 94. The DCR log is also a supplement to an electronic database -- the DCR Tracking System, which provides an electronic record of all data changes preformed on the SWITS database. The records found in this document are Data Change Request forms. These forms are required for SWITS users who wish to request data changes in the database. The procedure formalizing this policy did not go into effect until September 1, 1994; therefore, some records created before that date may be incomplete.
Date: August 18, 1994
Creator: McKay, R. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dehumidifying water heater (open access)

Dehumidifying water heater

Drawings and specifications are included for the system to heat water for the swimming pool and dehumidify the building of the Glen Cove YMCA. An overview is presented of the Nautica product used in this system. (MHR)
Date: August 18, 1992
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank monitor and control system (TMACS) software project Acromag Driver acceptance test (open access)

Tank monitor and control system (TMACS) software project Acromag Driver acceptance test

The acceptance test report for the TMACS Acromag 1/0 Processor interface running under Windows NT.
Date: August 18, 1998
Creator: Glasscock, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dehumidifying water heater. Technical progress report (open access)

Dehumidifying water heater. Technical progress report

Drawings and specifications are included for the system to heat water for the swimming pool and dehumidify the building of the Glen Cove YMCA. An overview is presented of the Nautica product used in this system. (MHR)
Date: August 18, 1992
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) R&D Program (open access)

Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) R&D Program

The purpose of this workshop was to develop technical background facts necessary for planning continued research and development of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS). EGS are geothermal reservoirs that require improvement of their permeability or fluid contents in order to achieve economic energy production. The initial focus of this R&D program is devising and testing means to extract additional economic energy from marginal volumes of hydrothermal reservoirs that are already producing commercial energy. By mid-1999, the evolution of the EGS R&D Program, begun in FY 1988 by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), reached the stage where considerable expertise had to be brought to bear on what technical goals should be pursued. The main purpose of this Workshop was to do that. The Workshop was sponsored by the Office of Geothermal Technologies of the Department of Energy. Its purpose and timing were endorsed by the EGS National Coordinating Committee, through which the EGS R&D Program receives guidance from members of the U.S. geothermal industry. Section 1.0 of this report documents the EGS R&D Program Review Session. There, managers and researchers described the goals and activities of the program. Recent experience with injection at The Geysers and analysis of downhole conditions at …
Date: August 18, 1999
Creator: Entingh, Daniel J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oxidation Reactions of Ethane over Ba-Ce-O Based Perovskites (open access)

Oxidation Reactions of Ethane over Ba-Ce-O Based Perovskites

Ethane oxidation reactions were studied over pure and Ca-, Mg-, Sr-, La-, Nd-, and Y-substituted BaCeO{sub 3} perovskites under oxygen limited conditions. Several of the materials, notably the Ca- and Y-substituted materials, show activity for complete oxidation of the hydrocarbon to CO{sub 2} at temperatures below 650 C. At higher temperatures, the oxidative dehydrogenation (ODH) to ethylene becomes significant. Conversions and ethylene yields are enhanced by the perovskites above the thermal reaction in our system in some cases. The perovskite structure is not retained in the high temperature reaction environment. Rather, a mixture of carbonates and oxides is formed. Loss of the perovskite structure correlates with a loss of activity and selectivity to ethylene.
Date: August 18, 1999
Creator: Miller, James E.; Sault, Allen G.; Trudell, Daniel E.; Nenoff, Tina M.; Thoma, Steven G. & Jackson, Nancy B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Projected Consequence for Potential Sabotage Events Related to Spent Fuel Shipments (open access)

Projected Consequence for Potential Sabotage Events Related to Spent Fuel Shipments

There is a growing interest in understanding the potential consequences of malevolent acts against shipments of nuclear waste and/or material. Recently, Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) conducted a study' to evaluate the potential source terms available for release in a sabotage event for spent fuel shipments. Using these source terms, we developed an approach to assess the potential radiological consequences of the hypothesized events and to compare them to consequences of transportation accidents involving the same types of shipments. Our analysis showed that there could be orders of magnitude differences in consequence for urban, suburban, and rural events. Sabotage consequences could be orders of magnitude higher than those of transportation accidents with a probability of 10{sup {minus}12} or higher and be similar to events with a probability less than 10{sup {minus}12}. Also, explosive-induced buoyancy would disperse the source further out than a non-buoyant release in a transportation accident, which, therefore, would have a higher dose near the release point.
Date: August 18, 1999
Creator: Shyr, Lih-Jenn; Neuhauser, Sieglinde; Mills, Scott & Massey, Charles
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Creating a Comprehensive Solar Water Heating Deployment Strategy (open access)

Creating a Comprehensive Solar Water Heating Deployment Strategy

This report details the results of a research conducted in 1998 and 1999 and outlines a marketing deployment plan designed for businesses interested in marketing solar water heaters in the new home industry.
Date: August 18, 1999
Creator: Services, Focus Marketing
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production code control system for hydrodynamics simulations (open access)

Production code control system for hydrodynamics simulations

We describe how the Production Code Control System (pCCS), written in Perl, has been used to control and monitor the execution of a large hydrodynamics simulation code in a production environment. We have been able to integrate new, disparate, and often independent, applications into the PCCS framework without the need to modify any of our existing application codes. Both users and code developers see a consistent interface to the simulation code and associated applications regardless of the physical platform, whether an MPP, SMP, server, or desktop workstation. We will also describe our use of Perl to develop a configuration management system for the simulation code, as well as a code usage database and report generator. We used Perl to write a backplane that allows us plug in preprocessors, the hydrocode, postprocessors, visualization tools, persistent storage requests, and other codes. We need only teach PCCS a minimal amount about any new tool or code to essentially plug it in and make it usable to the hydrocode. PCCS has made it easier to link together disparate codes, since using Perl has removed the need to learn the idiosyncrasies of system or RPC programming. The text handling in Perl makes it easy to …
Date: August 18, 1997
Creator: Slone, D.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
BSCCO superconductors : hole-like fermi surface and doping dependence of the gap function. (open access)

BSCCO superconductors : hole-like fermi surface and doping dependence of the gap function.

We use the gradient of the energy-integrated angle resolved photoemission (ARPES) intensity in order to define precisely the Fermi surface (FS) in BSCCO superconductors. We show that, independent of the photon energy, the FS is a hole barrel centered at ({pi},{pi}), Then, the superconducting gap along the FS is precisely determined from ARPES measurements on over-doped and underdoped samples of Bi2212. As the doping decreases, the maximum gap increases, but the slope of the gap near the nodes decreases. Though consistent with d-wave symmetry, the gap with underdoping cannot be fit by the simple cos(k{sub x})-cos(k{sub y}) form. A comparison of our ARPES results with available penetration depth data indicates that the renormalization of the linear T suppression of the superfluid density at low temperatures due to quasiparticle excitations around the d-wave nodes is large and doping dependent.
Date: August 18, 1999
Creator: Campuzano, J. C.; Ding, H.; Fretwell, H. M.; Kadowaki, K.; Kaminski, A.; Mesot, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detection of concealed mercury with thermal neutrons (open access)

Detection of concealed mercury with thermal neutrons

In the United States today, governments at all levels and the citizenry are paying increasing attention to the effects, both real and hypothetical, of industrial activity on the environment. Responsible modem industries, reflecting this heightened public and regulatory awareness, are either substituting benign materials for hazardous ones, or using hazardous materials only under carefully controlled conditions. In addition, present-day environmental consciousness dictates that we deal responsibly with legacy wastes. The decontamination and decommissioning (D&D) of facilities at which mercury was used or processed presents a variety of challenges. Elemental mercury is a liquid at room temperature and readily evaporates in air. In large mercury-laden buildings, droplets may evaporate from one area only to recondense in other cooler areas. The rate of evaporation is a function of humidity and temperature; consequently, different parts of a building may be sources or sinks of mercury at different times of the day or even the year. Additionally, although mercury oxidizes in air, the oxides decompose upon heating. Hence, oxides contained within pipes or equipment, may be decomposed when those pipes and equipment are cut with saws or torches. Furthermore, mercury seeps through the pores and cracks in concrete blocks and pads, and collects as …
Date: August 18, 1994
Creator: Bell, Z.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
New Home Buyer Solar Water Heater Trade-Off Study (open access)

New Home Buyer Solar Water Heater Trade-Off Study

This report details the results of a research conducted in 1998 and 1999 and outlines a marketing deployment plan designed for businesses interested in marketing solar water heaters in the new home industry.
Date: August 18, 1999
Creator: Corporation, Symmetrics Marketing
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron streaming through shield ducts using a discrete ordinates/Monte Carlo method (open access)

Neutron streaming through shield ducts using a discrete ordinates/Monte Carlo method

A common problem in shield design is determining the neutron flux that streams through ducts in shields and also that penetrates the shield after having traveled partway down the duct. Obviously the determination of the neutrons that stream down the duct can be computed in a straightforward manner using Monte Carlo techniques. On the other hand those neutrons that must penetrate a significant portion of the shield are more easily handled using discrete ordinates methods. A hybrid discrete ordinates/Monte Carlo cods, TWODANT/MC, which is an extension of the existing discrete ordinates code TWODANT, has been developed at Los Alamos to allow the efficient, accurate treatment of both streaming and deep penetration problems in a single calculation. In this paper we provide examples of the application of TWODANT/MC to typical geometries that are encountered in shield design and compare the results with those obtained using the Los Alamos Monte Carlo code MCNP{sup 3}.
Date: August 18, 1993
Creator: Urban, W. T. & Baker, R. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Task plan: Temperatures in DWPF Glass Waste Storage Building (open access)

Task plan: Temperatures in DWPF Glass Waste Storage Building

The Bechtel National, Inc. Detailed Design Instructions for Structural Design (DDI-02) requires that concrete components of the GWSB not exceed 150{degrees}F for structural elements and 200{degrees}F locally over a 24 hour period. In addition, the Waste Acceptance Product Specifications (WAPS) sets the maximum post cooldown temperature of the glass waste-form at 400{degrees}C. Various scenarios can be postulated which result in elevated glass and concrete temperatures in the GWSB. Therefore, it is important to determine the concrete and glass temperatures during both normal and off-normal conditions. This document details specific tasks required to develop a technically defensible and verifiable methodology for determining maximum temperatures for the waste-forms and the GWSB concrete structures. All models used in this analysis will satisfy Quality Assurance requirements and be defensible to review and oversight committees.
Date: August 18, 1993
Creator: Hardy, B. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
EGS4 in `94: A decade of enhancements (open access)

EGS4 in `94: A decade of enhancements

This paper presents an overview of the developments made to the EGS4 code over the past decade. This code is a Monte Carlo code developed to study electron-photon transport properties. It is widely used, in particular in the medical physics field, it has been updated, expanded, benchmarked, and applied to a wide array of problems. The paper covers precursors to this code, a basic snapshop of its physics and calculation methods, and an overview of how it has been expanded during the past decade.
Date: August 18, 1994
Creator: Nelson, W. R.; Bielajew, A. F.; Rogers, D. W. O. & Hirayama, H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technology assessment of vertical and horizontal air drilling potential in the United States. Final report (open access)

Technology assessment of vertical and horizontal air drilling potential in the United States. Final report

The objective of the research was to assess the potential for vertical, directional and horizontal air drilling in the United States and to evaluate the current technology used in air drilling. To accomplish the task, the continental United States was divided into drilling regions and provinces. The map in Appendix A shows the divisions. Air drilling data were accumulated for as many provinces as possible. The data were used to define the potential problems associated with air drilling, to determine the limitations of air drilling and to analyze the relative economics of drilling with air versus drilling mud. While gathering the drilling data, operators, drilling contractors, air drilling contractors, and service companies were contacted. Their opinion as to the advantages and limitations of air drilling were discussed. Each was specifically asked if they thought air drilling could be expanded within the continental United States and where that expansion could take place. The well data were collected and placed in a data base. Over 165 records were collected. Once in the data base, the information was analyzed to determine the economics of air drilling and to determine the limiting factors associated with air drilling.
Date: August 18, 1993
Creator: Carden, R. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An improved Thomas--Fermi treatment of nuclei (open access)

An improved Thomas--Fermi treatment of nuclei

I want to tell you about an improved Thomas-Fermi method for calculating shell-averaged nuclear properties, such as density distributions, binding energies, etc. A shell-averaged statistical theory is useful as the macroscopic component of microscopic-macroscopic theories of nuclei, such as the Strutinsky method, as well as in theories of nuclear matter in the bulk, relevant in astrophysical applications. In nuclear physics, as well as in atomic and molecular problems, the following question often has to be answered: you are given a potential well, say a deformed Woods-Saxon potential, into which you put N quantized fermions into the lowest N eigenstates, up to a Fermi energy'' To. You square the wave functions of the particles and add them up to get the total density [rho]([sub r][sup [yields]]) = [Sigma][sub i][sup N][vert bar][psi][sub i][vert bar][sup 2]. Is there some simple way of estimating [rho]([sub r][sup [yields]]) without going through the misery of numerically solving N partial differential Schroedinger equations for the N particles
Date: August 18, 1992
Creator: Swiatecki, W. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Limits on high-order harmonic generation from single-atom calculations (open access)

Limits on high-order harmonic generation from single-atom calculations

In the quantum mechanical calculations of electron and photon emission from atoms in strong laser fields we have employed a single-active-electron (SAE) model. We determine the effect of the time varying electric field of the laser on each of the valence electrons separately. The active electron in each calculation moves in the time-independent mean field of the remaining, unexcited electrons and the nucleus. This approach works well for the rare gas atoms, at least partially because the neglected double or higher excitations involve states well above the ionization threshold. The photoelectron and photon emission spectra calculated using this technique agree quantitatively with observed emission rates. In this paper we will present a simple semiclassical model for high intensity ionization which reproduces the observed harmonic emission spectra obtained in this regime and which provides considerable insight into the dynamics of this process. The basic models has been used in the past to predict electron energy distributions in the tunneling regime and we will use it here for harmonics.
Date: August 18, 1993
Creator: Kulander, K. C. & Schafer, K. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerated test methods for predicting the life of motor materials exposed to refrigerant/lubricant mixtures. Phase 1, Conceptual design: Final report (open access)

Accelerated test methods for predicting the life of motor materials exposed to refrigerant/lubricant mixtures. Phase 1, Conceptual design: Final report

The federally mandated phase-out of chlorofluorocarbon refrigerants requires screening tests for motor materials compatibility with alternative refrigerant/lubricant mixtures. In the current phase of the program, ARTI is supporting tests of promising candidate refrigeration/lubricant systems in key refrigeration component systems such as bearings and hermetic motor insulation systems to screen for more subtle detrimental effects and allow estimates of motor-compressor life. This report covers: mechanisms of failure of hermetic motor insulation, current methods for estimation of life of hermetic motors, and conceptual design of improved stator simulator device for testing of alternative refrigerant/lubricant mixtures.
Date: August 18, 1993
Creator: Ellis, P. F., II & Ferguson, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Generation of harmonic radiation using the multi-cavity free-electron laser (open access)

Generation of harmonic radiation using the multi-cavity free-electron laser

An FEL provides a convenient method of reaching short wavelengths by resonating with an input source at the fundamental wavelength while providing bunching at a harmonic of the fundamental. Recently schemes have been proposed that use two wiggler segments, one resonant at the fundamental to pre-bunch the beam, the other lasing at the desired (third) harmonic. A similar effect, with some advantages and some disadvantages, can be achieved using the Multi-Cavity FEL (MC/FEL). The MC/FEL employs several short cavities, operating in an oscillator-like manner, to achieve high output power. In this paper we consider the use of the MC/FEL as a means of generating harmonics. We investigate the competitiveness of this option in comparison with other harmonic generation schemes, in terms of the total wiggler length needed, the saturated power achieved, and the restrictions imposed by mirror reflectivity.
Date: August 18, 1993
Creator: Krishnagopal, S. & Sessler, A. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Medical University of South Carolina Environmental Hazards Assessment Program. Deliverables: Volume 2, Annual report, July 1, 1993--June 30, 1994 (open access)

Medical University of South Carolina Environmental Hazards Assessment Program. Deliverables: Volume 2, Annual report, July 1, 1993--June 30, 1994

This reference is concerned with the Crossroads of Humanity workshop which is part of the Environmental Hazards Assessment Program at the Medical University of South Carolina. This workshop was held during the months of June and July 1994. Topics discussed include: Radioactive contamination, aging, medical ethics, and environmental risk analysis.
Date: August 18, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library