REPORT ON GLOVE BOXES AND CONTAINMENT ENCLOSURES (open access)

REPORT ON GLOVE BOXES AND CONTAINMENT ENCLOSURES

Criteria and guide lines are presented for the design, construction, and operation of safe, economical, and efficient glove boxes and associated facilities based upon present conditions and anticipated changes. Comprehensive discussion of glove box materials and components, safety and fire prevention methods, health physics problems, operational considerations, and brief descriptions of AEC installations are included. (39 references) (C.H.)
Date: June 20, 1962
Creator: Garden, N.B. ed.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Knowledges and abilities catalog for nuclear power plant operators: Savannah River Site (SRS) production reactors (open access)

Knowledges and abilities catalog for nuclear power plant operators: Savannah River Site (SRS) production reactors

The Knowledges and Abilities Catalog for Nuclear Power Plant Operations: Savannah River Site (SRS) Production Reactors, provides the basis for the development of content-valid certification examinations for Senior Reactor Operators (SROs) and Central Control Room Supervisors (SUP). The position of Shift Technical Engineer (STE) has been included in the catalog for completeness. This new SRS reactor operating shift crew position is held by an individual holding a CCR Supervisor Certification who has received special engineering and technical training. Also, the STE has a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering or a related technical field. The SRS catalog contains approximately 2500 knowledge and ability (K/A) statements for SROs and SUPs at heavy water moderated production reactors. Each K/A statement has been rated for its importance to the safe operation of the plant in a manner ensuring the health and safety of the public. The SRS K/A catalog is presently organized into five major sections: Plant Systems grouped by Safety Function, Plant Wide Generic K/As, Emergency Plant Evolutions, Theory and Components (to be developed).
Date: June 20, 1990
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catalogue of monitoring activities at Rocky Flats: 1978, 1979 (open access)

Catalogue of monitoring activities at Rocky Flats: 1978, 1979

A listing of environmental surveillance sampling endeavors for the years 1978 and 1979 is given in which sampling media, i.e., ambient air, stack effluent air, water, and soil are considered. Sampling locations, frequency of sampling, parameters analyzed, and control limits also are given. The objectives of the sampling are considered in defining the program.
Date: June 20, 1980
Creator: Werkema, M. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pilot Plant Development Studies of a Continuous Process for Recovering Uranium From Nichrome Fuels (open access)

Pilot Plant Development Studies of a Continuous Process for Recovering Uranium From Nichrome Fuels

Pilot plant studies were conducted to develop a continuous process for recovering uranium from nichrome fuels (HTRE). The process consisted of dissolution of fuel in mixed HCl--HNO/sub 3/ solution, removal of the chloride ion by stripping with HNO/sub 3/ in a packed column, and then recovery of the uranium by TBP solvent extraction. Recovery of uranium from nichrome fuels at satisfactory rates and efficiencies can be obtained by this process. Reactor fuels containing large amounts of silica may present a solids problem during chloride removal. Titanium is a suitable material of construction for the dissolver, stripping column, and their associated equipment (feed, off-gas, and product vessels). Stainless steel equipment is suitable for the solvent extraction system. (auth)
Date: June 20, 1962
Creator: Chamberlain, H. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advective-diffusive/dispersive transport of chemically reacting species in hydrothermal systems. Final report, FY83-85 (open access)

Advective-diffusive/dispersive transport of chemically reacting species in hydrothermal systems. Final report, FY83-85

A general formulation of multi-phase fluid flow coupled to chemical reactions was developed based on a continuum description of porous media. A preliminary version of the computer code MCCTM was constructed which implemented the general equations for a single phase fluid. The computer code MCCTM incorporates mass transport by advection-diffusion/dispersion in a one-dimensional porous medium coupled to reversible and irreversible, homogeneous and heterogeneous chemical reactions. These reactions include aqueous complexing, oxidation/reduction reactions, ion exchange, and hydrolysis reactions of stoichiometric minerals. The code MCCTM uses a fully implicit finite difference algorithm. The code was tested against analytical calculations. Applications of the code included investigation of the propagation of sharp chemical reaction fronts, metasomatic alteration of microcline at elevated temperatures and pressures, and ion-exchange in a porous column. Finally numerical calculations describing fluid flow in crystalline rock in the presence of a temperature gradient were compared with experimental results for quartzite.
Date: June 20, 1986
Creator: Lichtner, P. C. & Helgeson, H. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Strontium, Strontium-90, and Calcium Analyses of Clinch and Tennessee River Clams (open access)

Strontium, Strontium-90, and Calcium Analyses of Clinch and Tennessee River Clams

Analyses of clam shells for Sr, Sr/sup 90/, and Ca are reported. The data include 208 Sr, 80 Sr/sup 90/, and 35 Ca analyses. Information on age of the clam and shell weight are also included because the Sr concentration in some shells is affected by age and growth rate. A detailed description of sample treatment and preparation is also included. (auth)
Date: June 20, 1962
Creator: Nelson, D. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anomalous isotopic composition of cosmic rays (open access)

Anomalous isotopic composition of cosmic rays

Recent measurements of nonsolar isotopic patterns for the elements neon and (perhaps) magnesium in cosmic rays are interpreted within current models of stellar nucleosynthesis. One possible explanation is that the stars currently responsible for cosmic-ray synthesis in the Galaxy are typically super-metal-rich by a factor of two to three. Other possibilities include the selective acceleration of certain zones or masses of supernovas or the enhancement of /sup 22/Ne in the interstellar medium by mass loss from red giant stars and planetary nebulas. Measurements of critical isotopic ratios are suggested to aid in distinguishing among the various possibilities. Some of these explanations place significant constraints on the fraction of cosmic ray nuclei that must be fresh supernova debris and the masses of the supernovas involved. 1 figure, 3 tables.
Date: June 20, 1980
Creator: Woosley, S. E. & Weaver, T. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fusion breeder blanket nucleonics (open access)

Fusion breeder blanket nucleonics

Refined nuclear analysis, including the treatment of resonance and spatial self-shielding, coupled with an optimization procedure, has resulted in improved performance estimates for two conceptual fission-suppressed blankets. Net specific breeding in these two blankets maximized at 0.024 and 0.023 U-233 atoms/MeV, which is about an order of magnitude higher than in fission breeders.
Date: June 20, 1986
Creator: Lee, J. D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Resonance localization in tokamaks excited with ICRF waves (open access)

Resonance localization in tokamaks excited with ICRF waves

Advanced wave models used to evaluate ICRH in tokamaks typically use warm plasma theory and allow inhomogeneity in one dimension. The majority of these calculations neglect the fact that gyrocenters experience the inhomogeneity via their motion parallel to the magnetic field. The non-local effects of rotational transform and toroidicity can play a significant role in both the propagation and the absorption physics. In strongly driven systems, wave damping can distort the particle distribution function supporting the wave and this produces changes in the absorption. The most common approach is to use Maxwellian absorption rates. We have developed a bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck quasilinear computational model which evolves the population of particles on more realistic orbits. Each wave-particle resonance has its own specific interaction amplitude within any given volume element; these data need only be generated once, and appropriately stored for efficient retrieval. The wave-particle resonant interaction then serves as a mechanism by which the diffusion of particle populations can proceed among neighboring orbits. The local specific spectral energy absorption rate is directly calculable once the orbit geometry and populations are determined. The code is constructed in such fashion as to accommodate wave propagation models which provide the wave spectral energy density on …
Date: June 20, 1985
Creator: Kerbel, G. D. & McCoy, M. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam deflection into a quadrant by a positionally stationary magnetic bending system (open access)

Beam deflection into a quadrant by a positionally stationary magnetic bending system

A system of postionally stationary magnets is analyzed for the continuously variable deflection of a 50 MeV electron beam. The system is composed of a collection of horizontal and vertical bending magnets, quadrupoles, and a final deflection magnet that is conical in shape and capable of deflections of plus or minus 50 degrees simultaneously in both horizonal and vertical planes. Throughout the system the beam is assumed to be focused by its own magnetic self-field, the electric self-field being neutralized by background ions. The motion of the beam in the externally applied magnetic fields may then be considered as single particle motion. The system of bending magnets and quadrupoles pre-conditions the beam by introducing the proper displacements and angles at the entrance to the final deflection magnet for momentum deviations up to plus or minus one percent. The displacements and angles are determined by the chromaticity of the final deflection and are a function of the bending angles in the two planes. The total system is then doubly achromatic in both planes. The preconditioning magnets are of standard accelerator beam transport design while the conical deflection magnet is of a design fashioned from a television deflection coil scaled up by …
Date: June 20, 1980
Creator: Paul, A.C. & Neil, V.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transmission-line access for hydrothermal target prospects in the five Pacific Rim states: a legal/institutional analysis. Report No. 1022 (open access)

Transmission-line access for hydrothermal target prospects in the five Pacific Rim states: a legal/institutional analysis. Report No. 1022

Transmission line access is discussed as a legal and institutional problem impacting geothermal commercialization. A legal and regulatory overview is presented starting with the Federal Power Act of 1935. The legal and institutional attributes of both Bonneville Power Authority and the California Power Pool as well as their satellite transmission systems are examined, with an eye towards the setting that they, as institutions, will present to geothermal commercialization. The physical realities of the problem are presented for the Geysers, Mono-Long Valley and Coso, Imperial Valley, and Oregon. (MHR)
Date: June 20, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of soil and water at the Four Mile Creek seepline near the F H Areas of SRS (open access)

Analysis of soil and water at the Four Mile Creek seepline near the F H Areas of SRS

Until 1988, solutions containing sodium hydroxide, nitride acid, low levels of radionuclides (mostly tritiated water) and some metals were discharged to unlined seepage basins at the F and H Areas of the Savannah River Site (SRS) as part of normal operations (Killian et al, 1987a,b). The basins are now being closed according to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). As part of the closure, a Part B Post-Closure Care Permit is being prepared. The information included in this report will fulfill some of the data requirements for that Part B permit. Several soil and water samples were collected along the Four Mile Creek (FMC) seepline at the F H Areas of the Savannah River Site. The samples were analyzed for concentrations of metals, radionuclides, and inorganic constituents. The goal of the work reported herein is to document the impacts from the basins of FMC has been completed in a phased approach.
Date: June 20, 1990
Creator: Haselow, J. S.; Harris, M.; Looney, B. B.; Halverson, N. V. & Gladden, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ATA operations (open access)

ATA operations

Four accelerator parameters were found to control the condition of the electron beam entering the Intergrated Fast Reactor (IFR). These parameters were the matching of the electron beam to the ion channel, the laser timing, the benzene pressure at the entrance to the IFR, and the timing of the accelerator gaps. Manipulation of these parameters make possible the control of the total current, the emittance, the pulse length, the mixture of laser induced current and cathode current, the radial growth in time, the final size of the beam, and the energy variation through the pulse. 1 fig.
Date: June 20, 1986
Creator: Weir, J.T.; Caporaso, G.J.; Chambers, F.W.; Chong, Y.P.; Prono, D.S. & Rainer, F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of soil and water at the Four Mile Creek seepline near the F H areas of SRS (open access)

Analysis of soil and water at the Four Mile Creek seepline near the F H areas of SRS

Several soil and water samples were collected along the Four Mile Creek (FMC) seepline at the F H Areas of the Savannah River Site. The samples were analyzed for concentrations of metals, radionuclides, and inorganic constituents. The results of the analyses are summarized below for the soil and water samples.
Date: June 20, 1990
Creator: Haselow, J. S.; Harris, M.; Looney, B. B.; Halverson, N. V. & Gladden, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computational Science Research in Support of Petascale Electromagnetic Modeling (open access)

Computational Science Research in Support of Petascale Electromagnetic Modeling

Computational science research components were vital parts of the SciDAC-1 accelerator project and are continuing to play a critical role in newly-funded SciDAC-2 accelerator project, the Community Petascale Project for Accelerator Science and Simulation (ComPASS). Recent advances and achievements in the area of computational science research in support of petascale electromagnetic modeling for accelerator design analysis are presented, which include shape determination of superconducting RF cavities, mesh-based multilevel preconditioner in solving highly-indefinite linear systems, moving window using h- or p- refinement for time-domain short-range wakefield calculations, and improved scalable application I/O.
Date: June 20, 2008
Creator: Lee, L.; Akcelik, V.; Ge, L.; Chen, S.; Schussman, G.; Candel, A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sculpting the shape of semiconductor heteroepitaxial islands: fromdots to rods (open access)

Sculpting the shape of semiconductor heteroepitaxial islands: fromdots to rods

In the Ge on Si model heteroepitaxial system, metal patterns on the silicon surface provide unprecedented control over the morphology of highly ordered Ge islands. Island shape including nanorods and truncated pyramids is set by the metal species and substrate orientation. Analysis of island faceting elucidates the prominent role of the metal in promoting growth of preferred facet orientations while investigations of island composition and structure reveal the importance of Si-Ge intermixing in island evolution. These effects reflect a remarkable combination of metal-mediated growth phenomena that may be exploited to tailor the functionality of island arrays in heteroepitaxial systems.
Date: June 20, 2006
Creator: Robinson, J. T.; Walko, D. A.; Arms, D. A.; Tinberg, D. S.; Evans, P. G.; Cao, Y. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress on the Design and Fabircation of the MICE SpectrometerSolenoids (open access)

Progress on the Design and Fabircation of the MICE SpectrometerSolenoids

The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) willdemonstrate ionization cooling in a short section of a realistic coolingchannel using a muon beam at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) in theUK. A five-coil, superconducting spectrometer solenoid magnet at each endof the cooling channel will provide a 4 T uniform field region for thescintillating fiber tracker within the magnet bore tubes. The trackermodules are used to measure the muon beam emittance as it enters andexits the cooling channel. The cold mass for the 400 mm warm bore magnetconsists of two sections: a three-coil spectrometer magnet and a two-coilmatching section that matches the uniform field of the solenoid into theMICE cooling channel. The spectrometer solenoid detailed designandanalysis has been completed, and the fabrication of the magnets is wellunder way. The primary features of the spectrometer solenoid magnet andmechanical designs are presented along with a summary of key fabricationissues and photos of the construction.
Date: June 20, 2007
Creator: Virostek, S.P.; Green, M.A.; Lia, D. & Sizman, M.S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Report on X-ray Yields from OMEGA II Targets (open access)

Final Report on X-ray Yields from OMEGA II Targets

We present details about X-ray yields measured with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) diagnostics in soft and moderately hard X-ray bands from laser-driven, doped-aerogel targets shot on 07/14/06 during the OMEGA II test series. Yields accurate to {+-}25% in the 5-15 keV band are measured with Livermore's HENWAY spectrometer. Yields in the sub-keV to 3.2 keV band are measured with LLNL's DANTE diagnostic, the DANTE yields are accurate to 10-15%. SNL ran a PCD-based diagnostic that also measured X-ray yields in the spectral region above 4 keV, and also down to the sub-keV range. The PCD and HENWAY and DANTE numbers are compared. The time histories of the moderately hard (h{nu} > 4 keV) X-ray signals are measured with LLNL's H11 PCD, and from two SNL PCDs with comparable filtration. There is general agreement between the H11 PCD and SNL PCD measured FWHM except for two of the shorter-laser-pulse shots, which is shown not to be due to analysis techniques. The recommended X-ray waveform is that from the SNL PCD p66k10, which was recorded on a fast, high-bandwidth TDS 6804 oscilloscope. X-ray waveforms from target emission in two softer spectral bands are also shown; the …
Date: June 20, 2007
Creator: Fournier, K. B.; May, M. J.; MacLaren, S. A.; Coverdale, C. A. & Davis, J. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production, Characterization, and Acceleration of Optical Microbunches (open access)

Production, Characterization, and Acceleration of Optical Microbunches

Optical microbunches with a spacing of 800 nm have been produced for laser acceleration research. The microbunches are produced using a inverse Free-Electron-Laser (IFEL) followed by a dispersive chicane. The microbunched electron beam is characterized by coherent optical transition radiation (COTR) with good agreement to the analytic theory for bunch formation. In a second experiment the bunches are accelerated in a second stage to achieve for the first time direct net acceleration of electrons traveling in a vacuum with visible light. This dissertation presents the theory of microbunch formation and characterization of the microbunches. It also presents the design of the experimental hardware from magnetostatic and particle tracking simulations, to fabrication and measurement of the undulator and chicane magnets. Finally, the dissertation discusses three experiments aimed at demonstrating the IFEL interaction, microbunch production, and the net acceleration of the microbunched beam. At the close of the dissertation, a separate but related research effort on the tight focusing of electrons for coupling into optical scale, Photonic Bandgap, structures is presented. This includes the design and fabrication of a strong focusing permanent magnet quadrupole triplet and an outline of an initial experiment using the triplet to observe wakefields generated by an electron …
Date: June 20, 2008
Creator: Sears, Christopher M.S. & /SLAC, /Stanford U.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gamma-Ray Compton Light Source Development at LLNL (open access)

Gamma-Ray Compton Light Source Development at LLNL

None
Date: June 20, 2007
Creator: Hartemann, F. V.; Anderson, S. G.; Barty, C. J.; Gibson, D. J.; Hagmann, C. A.; Johnson, M. S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Protection Department, Operations and Regulatory Affairs Division, LLNL NESHAPs 2006 Annual Report (open access)

Environmental Protection Department, Operations and Regulatory Affairs Division, LLNL NESHAPs 2006 Annual Report

NESHAPs limits the emission of radionuclides to the ambient air from DOE facilities to levels resulting in an annual effective dose equivalent (EDE) of 10 mrem (100 {micro}Sv) to any member of the public. The EDEs for the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) site-wide maximally exposed members of the public from operations in 2006 are summarized here. Livermore site: 0.0045 mrem (0.045 {micro}Sv) (36% from point source emissions, 64% from diffuse source emissions). The point source emissions include gaseous tritium modeled as tritiated water vapor as directed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region IX; the resulting dose is used for compliance purposes. Site 300: 0.016 mrem (0.16 {micro}Sv) (87.5% from point source emissions, 12.5% from diffuse source emissions). The EDEs were calculated using the EPA-approved CAP88-PC air dispersion/dose-assessment model, except for doses for two diffuse sources that were estimated using measured radionuclide concentrations and dose coefficients. Specific inputs to CAP88-PC for the modeled sources included site-specific meteorological data and source emissions data, the latter variously based on continuous stack effluent monitoring data, stack flow or other release-rate information, ambient air monitoring data, and facility knowledge.
Date: June 20, 2007
Creator: Larson, J; Peterson, S & Wilson, K R
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Errata Sheet for the Closure Report (DOE/NV--1246) for Corrective Action Unit 543: Liquid Disposal Units, Nevada (open access)

Errata Sheet for the Closure Report (DOE/NV--1246) for Corrective Action Unit 543: Liquid Disposal Units, Nevada

None
Date: June 20, 2008
Creator: National Security Technologies, LLC
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress on the Design of the Coupling coils for MICE andMUCOOL (open access)

Progress on the Design of the Coupling coils for MICE andMUCOOL

The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) [1]willdemonstrate ionization cooling in a short section of a realistic coolingchannel using a muon beam at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) in theUK. The MICE RF and Coupling Coil (RFCC) Module consists of asuperconducting solenoid mounted around four normal conducting 201.25-MHzRF cavities. The coil package that surrounds the RF cavities is to bemounted in a 1.4 m diameter vacuum vessel. The coupling coil confines thebeam in the RFCC module within the radius of the RF cavity beam windows.Each coupling magnet will be powered by a 300 A, 10 V power supply. Themaximum design longitudinal force that will be carried by the cold masssupport system is 0.5 MN. The detailed design and analysis of thecoupling magnet has been completed by ICST. The primary magnetic andmechanical design features of the coils are presented in thispaper.
Date: June 20, 2007
Creator: Green, M. A.; Li, D.; Virostek, Steve P.; Wang, L.; Wu, H.; Li, L. K. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
On Graphical Representation of Stability Criteria - Summary (open access)

On Graphical Representation of Stability Criteria - Summary

This paper compares various approaches to stability analysis of linear (and of linearized) circuits. In particular it clarifies the limits of application of a widely used but generally erroneous method. It also compares the criteria formulated in terms of impedances versus those expressed in S-parameters.
Date: June 20, 2008
Creator: Odyniec, Michal
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library