Language

OECD/MCCI 2-D Core Concrete Interaction (CCI) tests : final report February 28, 2006. (open access)

OECD/MCCI 2-D Core Concrete Interaction (CCI) tests : final report February 28, 2006.

Although extensive research has been conducted over the last several years in the areas of Core-Concrete Interaction (CCI) and debris coolability, two important issues warrant further investigation. The first issue concerns the effectiveness of water in terminating a CCI by flooding the interacting masses from above, thereby quenching the molten core debris and rendering it permanently coolable. This safety issue was investigated in the EPRI-sponsored Melt Attack and Coolability Experiments (MACE) program. The approach was to conduct large scale, integral-type reactor materials experiments with core melt masses ranging up to two metric tons. These experiments provided unique, and for the most part repeatable, indications of heat transfer mechanism(s) that could provide long term debris cooling. However, the results did not demonstrate definitively that a melt would always be completely quenched. This was due to the fact that the crust anchored to the test section sidewalls in every test, which led to melt/crust separation, even at the largest test section lateral span of 1.20 m. This decoupling is not expected for a typical reactor cavity, which has a span of 5-6 m. Even though the crust may mechanically bond to the reactor cavity walls, the weight of the coolant and the …
Date: May 23, 2011
Creator: Farmer, M. T.; Lomperski, S.; Kilsdonk, D. J.; Aeschlimann, R. W. & Basu, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Argon Purification Reference and Recommendation (open access)

Argon Purification Reference and Recommendation

This engineering note is a reference for future consideration on the purification of argon. The original concern was for the possibility of argon contamination from components in the cryostats over long-term storage. An argon purification system could also be useful for purifying the contents of the argon dewar. The general conclusion is that most of the systems researched are too expensive at this time, but the recommended choice would be Centorr Furnaces. There were three basic types of purification systems which were to be considered. The first was the molecular sieve. This method would have been the preferred one, because it was claimed that it could purify liquid argon, removing liquid oxygen from the argon. However, none of the commercial companies researched provided this type of purification for use with liquid argon. Most companies said that this type of purification was impossible, and tests at IB-4 confirmed this. The second system contained a copper oxide to remove gaseous oxygen from argon gas. The disadvantage of this system wass that the argon had to be heated to a gas, and then cooled back down to liquid. The third system was similar to the second, except that it used tungsten or another …
Date: May 23, 1991
Creator: Wu, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Future Electron-Hadron Colliders (open access)

Future Electron-Hadron Colliders

Outstanding research potential of electron-hadron colliders (EHC) was clearly demonstrated by first - and the only - electron-proton collider HERA (DESY, Germany). Physics data from HERA revealed new previously unknown facets of Quantum Chromo-Dynamics (QCD). EHC is an ultimate microscope probing QCD in its natural environment, i.e. inside the hadrons. In contrast with hadrons, electrons are elementary particles with known initial state. Hence, scattering electrons from hadrons provides a clearest pass to their secrets. It turns EHC into an ultimate machine for high precision QCD studies and opens access to rich physics with a great discovery potential: solving proton spin puzzle, observing gluon saturation or physics beyond standard model. Access to this physics requires high-energy high-luminosity EHCs and a wide reach in the center-of-mass (CM) energies. This paper gives a brief overview of four proposed electron-hadron colliders: ENC at GSI (Darmstadt, Germany), ELIC/MEIC at TJNAF (Newport News, VA, USA), eRHIC at BNL (Upton, NY, USA) and LHeC at CERN (Geneva, Switzerland). Future electron-hadron colliders promise to deliver very rich physics not only in the quantity but also in the precision. They are aiming at very high luminosity two-to-four orders of magnitude beyond the luminosity demonstrated by the very successful HERA. …
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Litvinenko, V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of Beam Dynamics for eRHIC (open access)

Studies of Beam Dynamics for eRHIC

We present our studies on various aspects of the beam dynamics in 'racetrack' design of the first stage electron-ion collider at RHIC (eRHIC), including transverse beam break up instabilities, energy loss due to wakefields, electron beam emittance growth and energy loss due to synchrotron radiation, electron beam losses due to Touschek effects and residue gas scattering, beam-beam effects at the interaction region and emittance growth of ion beam due to electron bunch to bunch noises. For all effects considered above, no showstopper has been found.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Wang, G.; Blaskiewicz, M.; Fedotov, A.; Hao, Y.; Kewisch, J.; Litvinenko, V. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
OECD MMCI Small-Scale Water Ingression and Crust Strength Tests (Sswics) Sswics-1 Final Data Report, Rev. 1 February 10, 2003.; Report, Rev. 1 (open access)

OECD MMCI Small-Scale Water Ingression and Crust Strength Tests (Sswics) Sswics-1 Final Data Report, Rev. 1 February 10, 2003.; Report, Rev. 1

The Melt Attack and Coolability Experiments (MACE) program at Argonne National Laboratory addressed the issue of the ability of water to cool and thermally stabilize a molten core/concrete interaction (MCCI) when the reactants are flooded from above. These tests provided data regarding the nature of corium interactions with concrete, the heat transfer rates from the melt to the overlying water pool, and the role of noncondensable gases in the mixing processes that contribute to melt quenching. However, due to the integral nature of these tests, several questions regarding the crust freezing behavior could not be adequately resolved. These questions include: (1) To what extent does water ingression into the crust increase the melt quench rate above the conduction-limited rate and how is this affected by melt composition and system pressure; and (2) What is the fracture strength of the corium crust when subjected to a thermal-mechanical load and how does it depend upon the melt composition? A series of separate-effects experiments are being conducted to address these issues. The first employs an apparatus designed to measure the quench rate of a pool of corium ({approx}{phi}30 cm; up to 20 cm deep). The main parameter to be varied in these quench …
Date: May 23, 2011
Creator: Lomperski, S.; Farmer, M. T.; Kilsdonk, D. & Aeschlimann, B. (Nuclear Engineering Division)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulations for preliminary design of a multi-cathode DC electron gun for eRHIC (open access)

Simulations for preliminary design of a multi-cathode DC electron gun for eRHIC

The proposed electron ion collider, eRHIC, requires a large average polarized electron current of 50 mA, which is more than 20 times higher than the present experimental output of a single, highly polarized electron source, based on cesiated super-lattice GaAs. To meet eRHIC's requirement for current, we designed a multicathode DC electron gun for injection. The twenty-four GaAs cathodes emit electrons in sequence, then are combined on axis by a rotating field (or 'funnelled'). In addition to its ultra-high vacuum requirements, the multicathode DC electron gun will place high demand on the electric field symmetry, the magnetic field shielding, and on preventing arcing. In this paper, we discuss our results from a 3D simulation of the latest model for this gun. The findings will guide the actual design in future. Their preliminary design of a multi-cathode electron source for eRHIC demonstrated tolerable fields and reasonable results in both field and particle simulations.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Wu, Q.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Chang, X. & Skaritka, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
On High Order Finite-Difference Metric Discretizations Satisfying GCL on Moving and Deforming Grids (open access)

On High Order Finite-Difference Metric Discretizations Satisfying GCL on Moving and Deforming Grids

None
Date: May 23, 2013
Creator: Sjogreen, B.; Yee, H. C. & Vinokur, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ALE3D Simulation and Measurement of Violence in a Fast Cookoff Experiment for LX-10 (open access)

ALE3D Simulation and Measurement of Violence in a Fast Cookoff Experiment for LX-10

Fast cookoff is of interest in the areas of fire hazard reduction and the development of directed energy systems for defense. During a fast cookoff (thermal explosion), high heat fluxes cause rapid temperature increases and ignition in thin boundary layers. We are developing ALE3D models to describe the thermal, chemical, and mechanical behavior during the heating, ignition, and explosive phases. The candidate models and numerical strategies are being evaluated using benchmark cookoff experiments. Fast cookoff measurements were made in a Scaled-Thermal-Explosion-eXperiment (STEX) for LX-10 (94.7% HMX, 5.3% Viton A) confined in a 4130 steel tube with reinforced end caps. Gaps were present at the side and top of the explosive charge to allow for thermal expansion. The explosive was heated until explosion using radiant heaters. Temperatures were measured using thermocouples positioned on the tube wall and in the explosive. During the explosion, the tube expansion and fragment velocities were measured with strain gauges, Photonic-Doppler-Velocimeters (PDVs), and micropower radar units. A fragment size distribution was constructed from fragments captured in Lexan panels. ALE3D models for chemical, thermal, and mechanical behavior were developed for the heating and explosive processes. A multi-step chemical kinetics model is employed for the HMX while a one-step …
Date: May 23, 2006
Creator: McClelland, M. A.; Maienschein, J. L.; Howard, W. M. & Dehaven, M. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Size Effects in Angle-Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy of Free Rare-Gas Clusters (open access)

Size Effects in Angle-Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy of Free Rare-Gas Clusters

The photoionization of free Xe clusters is investigated by angle-resolved time-of-flight photoelectron spectroscopy. The measurements probe the evolution of the photoelectron angular distribution parameter as a function of photon energy and cluster size. While the overall photon-energy-dependent behavior of the photoelectrons from the clusters is very similar to that of the free atoms, distinct differences in the angular distribution point at cluster-size-dependent effects. Multiple scattering calculations trace their origin to elastic photoelectron scattering.
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Rolles, D.; Zhang, H.; Pesic, Z.D.; Bilodeau, R.C.; Wills, A.; Kukk, E. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Noise and zero point drift in 1.7 mu m cutoff detectors forSNAP (open access)

Noise and zero point drift in 1.7 mu m cutoff detectors forSNAP

We present the results of a detailed study of the noiseperformance of candidate NIR detectors for the proposed Super-NovaAcceleration Probe. Effects of Fowler sampling depth and frequency,temperature, exposure time, detector material, detector reverse-bias andmultiplexer type are quantified. We discuss several tools for determiningwhich sources of low frequency noise are primarily responsible for thesub-optimal noise improvement when multiple sampling.The effectivenessof reference pixel subtraction to mitigate zero point drifts isdemonstrated, and the circumstances under which reference pixelsubtraction should or should not be applied are examined. Spatial andtemporal noise measurements are compared, and a simple method forquantifying the effect of hot pixels and RTS noise on spatial noise isdescribed.
Date: May 23, 2006
Creator: Smith, Roger; Bebek, Christopher; Bonati, Marco; Brown, MatthewG.; Cole, David; Rahmer, Gustavo et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Near infrared detectors for SNAP (open access)

Near infrared detectors for SNAP

Large format (1k x 1k and 2k x 2k) near infrared detectors manufactured by Rockwell Scientific Center and Raytheon Vision Systems are characterized as part of the near infrared R&D effort for SNAP (the Super-Nova/Acceleration Probe). These are hybridized HgCdTe focal plane arrays with a sharp high wavelength cut-off at 1.7 um. This cut-off provides a sufficiently deep reach in redshift while it allows at the same time low dark current operation of the passively cooled detectors at 140 K. Here the baseline SNAP near infrared system is briefly described and the science driven requirements for the near infrared detectors are summarized. A few results obtained during the testing of engineering grade near infrared devices procured for the SNAP project are highlighted. In particular some recent measurements that target correlated noise between adjacent detector pixels due to capacitive coupling and the response uniformity within individual detector pixels are discussed.
Date: May 23, 2006
Creator: Schubnell, M.; Barron, N.; Bebek, C.; Brown, M. G.; Borysow, M.; Cole, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adsorbate structures and catalytic reactions studied in the torrpressure range by scanning tunneling microscopy (open access)

Adsorbate structures and catalytic reactions studied in the torrpressure range by scanning tunneling microscopy

High-pressure, high-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (HPHTSTM) was used to study adsorbate structures and reactions on single crystal model catalytic systems. Studies of the automobile catalytic converter reaction [CO + NO {yields} 1/2 N{sub 2} + CO{sub 2}] on Rh(111) and ethylene hydrogenation [C{sub 2}H{sub 4} + H{sub 2} {yields} C{sub 2}H{sub 6}] on Rh(111) and Pt(111) elucidated information on adsorbate structures in equilibrium with high-pressure gas and the relationship of atomic and molecular mobility to chemistry. STM studies of NO on Rh(111) showed that adsorbed NO forms two high-pressure structures, with the phase transformation from the (2 x 2) structure to the (3 x 3) structure occurring at 0.03 Torr. The (3 x 3) structure only exists when the surface is in equilibrium with the gas phase. The heat of adsorption of this new structure was determined by measuring the pressures and temperatures at which both (2 x 2) and (3 x 3) structures coexisted. The energy barrier between the two structures was calculated by observing the time necessary for the phase transformation to take place. High-pressure STM studies of the coadsorption of CO and NO on Rh(111) showed that CO and NO form a mixed (2 x 2) structure …
Date: May 23, 2003
Creator: Hwang, Kevin Shao-Lin
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling and Simulation of Fluid Mixing Laser Experiments and Supernova; Reporting Period 5/1/06-4/30/07 (open access)

Modeling and Simulation of Fluid Mixing Laser Experiments and Supernova; Reporting Period 5/1/06-4/30/07

The three year plan for this project is to develop novel theories and advanced simulation methods leading to a systematic understanding of turbulent mixing. A primary focus is the comparison of simulation models (both Direct Numerical Simulation and subgrid averaged models) to experiments. The comprehension and reduction of experimental and simulation data are central goals of this proposal. We will model 2D and 3D perturbations of planar interfaces. We will compare these tests with models derived from averaged equations (our own and those of others). As a second focus, we will develop physics based subgrid simulation models of diffusion across an interface, with physical but no numerical mass diffusion. We will conduct analytic studies of mix, in support of these objectives. Advanced issues, including multiple layers and reshock, will be considered.
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Glimm, James
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isotopic Generation and Confirmation of the PWR Application Model (open access)

Isotopic Generation and Confirmation of the PWR Application Model

None
Date: May 23, 2005
Creator: Radulesa, H.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Tanks 241-C-203 and 241 C 204: Residual Waste Contaminant Release Model and Supporting Data (open access)

Hanford Tanks 241-C-203 and 241 C 204: Residual Waste Contaminant Release Model and Supporting Data

This report was revised in May 2007 to correct 90Sr values in Chapter 3. The changes were made on page 3.9, paragraph two and Table 3.10; page 3.16, last paragraph on the page; and Tables 3.21 and 3.31. The rest of the text remains unchanged from the original report issued in October 2004. This report describes the development of release models for key contaminants that are present in residual sludge remaining after closure of Hanford Tanks 241-C-203 (C-203) and 241-C-204 (C-204). The release models were developed from data generated by laboratory characterization and testing of samples from these two tanks. Key results from this work are (1) future releases from the tanks of the primary contaminants of concern (99Tc and 238U) can be represented by relatively simple solubility relationships between infiltrating water and solid phases containing the contaminants; and (2) high percentages of technetium-99 in the sludges (20 wt% in C-203 and 75 wt% in C-204) are not readily water leachable, and, in fact, are very recalcitrant. This is similar to results found in related studies of sludges from Tank AY-102. These release models are being developed to support the tank closure risk assessments performed by CH2M HILL Hanford Group, …
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Deutsch, William J.; Krupka, Kenneth M.; Lindberg, Michael J.; Cantrell, Kirk J.; Brown, Christopher F. & Schaef, Herbert T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compositional tuning of ferromagnetism in Ga1-xMnxP (open access)

Compositional tuning of ferromagnetism in Ga1-xMnxP

We report the magnetic and transport properties of Ga{sub 1-x}Mn{sub x}P synthesized via ion implantation followed by pulsed laser melting over a range of x, namely 0.018 to 0.042. Like Ga{sub 1-x}Mn{sub x}As, Ga{sub 1-x}Mn{sub x}P displays a monotonic increase of the ferromagnetic Curie temperature with x associated with the hole-mediated ferromagnetic phase while thermal annealing above 300 C leads to a quenching of ferromagnetism that is accompanied by a reduction of the substitutional fraction of Mn. However, contrary to observations in Ga{sub 1-x}Mn{sub x}As, Ga{sub 1-x}Mn{sub x}P is non-metallic over the entire composition range. At the lower temperatures over which the films are ferromagnetic, hole transport occurs via hopping conduction in a Mn-derived band; at higher temperatures it arises from holes in the valence band which are thermally excited across an energy gap that shrinks with x.
Date: May 23, 2006
Creator: Farshchi, R.; Scarpulla, M. A.; Stone, P. R.; Yu, K. M.; Sharp, I. D.; Beeman, J. W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of NIR InGaAs imager arrays for the JDEM SNAPmission concept (open access)

Characterization of NIR InGaAs imager arrays for the JDEM SNAPmission concept

We present the results of a study of the performance of InGaAs detectors conducted for the SuperNova Acceleration Probe (SNAP) dark energy mission concept. Low temperature data from a nominal 1.7um cut-off wavelength 1kx1k InGaAs photodiode array, hybridized to a Rockwell H1RG multiplexer suggest that InGaAs detector performance is comparable to those of existing 1.7um cut-off HgCdTe arrays. Advances in 1.7um HgCdTe dark current and noise initiated by the SNAP detector research and development program makes it the baseline detector technology for SNAP. However, the results presented herein suggest that existing InGaAs technology is a suitable alternative for other future astronomy applications.
Date: May 23, 2006
Creator: Seshadri, S.; Cole, M. D.; Hancock, B.; Ringold, P.; Wrigley, C.; Bonati, M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Tank 241-C-106: Residual Waste Contaminant Release Model and Supporting Data (open access)

Hanford Tank 241-C-106: Residual Waste Contaminant Release Model and Supporting Data

This report was revised in May 2007 to correct values in Section 3.4.1.7, second paragraph, last sentence; 90Sr values in Tables 3.22 and 3.32; and 99Tc values Table 4.3 and in Chapter 5. In addition, the tables in Appendix F were updated to reflect corrections to the 90Sr values. The rest of the text remains unchanged from the original report issued in May 2005. CH2M HILL is producing risk/performance assessments to support the closure of single-shell tanks at the DOE's Hanford Site. As part of this effort, staff at PNNL were asked to develop release models for contam¬inants of concern that are present in residual sludge remaining in tank 241-C-106 (C-106) after final retrieval of waste from the tank. This report provides the information developed by PNNL.
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Deutsch, William J.; Krupka, Kenneth M.; Lindberg, Michael J.; Cantrell, Kirk J.; Brown, Christopher F. & Schaef, Herbert T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SATB1 packages densely-looped, transciptionally-active chromatinfor coordinated expression of cytokine genes (open access)

SATB1 packages densely-looped, transciptionally-active chromatinfor coordinated expression of cytokine genes

SATB1 is an important regulator of nuclear architecture that anchors specialized DNA sequences onto its cage-like network and recruits chromatin remodeling/modifying factors to control gene transcription. We studied the role of SATB1 in regulating the coordinated expression of Il5, Il4, and Il13 from the 200kb cytokine gene cluster region of mouse chromosome 11 during T-helper 2 (Th2)-cell activation. We show that upon cell activation, SATB1 is rapidly induced to form a unique transcriptionally-active chromatin structure that includes the cytokine gene region. Chromatin is folded into numerous small loops all anchored by SATB1, is histone H3 acetylated at lysine 9/14, and associated with Th2-specific factors, GATA3, STAT6, c-Maf, the chromatin-remodeling enzyme Brg-1, and RNA polymerase II across the 200kb region. Before activation, the chromatin displays some of these features, such as association with GATA3 and STAT6, but these were insufficient for cytokine gene expression. Using RNA interference (RNAi), we show that upon cell activation, SATB1 is not only required for chromatin folding into dense loops, but also for c-Maf induction and subsequently for Il4, Il5, and Il13 transcription. Our results show that SATB1 is an important determinant for chromatin architecture that constitutes a novel higher-order, transcriptionally-active chromatin structure upon Th2-cell activation.
Date: May 23, 2006
Creator: Cai, Shutao; Lee, Charles C. & Kohwi-Shigematsu, Terumi
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurements of CKM Angle Beta from BaBar (open access)

Measurements of CKM Angle Beta from BaBar

We present recent results of hadronic B meson decays related to the CKM angle beta. The data used were collected by the BABAR detector at the PEP-II asymmetric-energy e{sup +}e{sup -} collider operating at the Upsilon(4S) resonance located at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center.
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Ulmer, Keith A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the Branching Fractions for the Decays B+ tp rho+ gamma, B0 to rho0 gamma, and B0 to omega gamma (open access)

Measurement of the Branching Fractions for the Decays B+ tp rho+ gamma, B0 to rho0 gamma, and B0 to omega gamma

None
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Aubert, B.; Barate, R.; Bona, M.; Boutigny, D.; Couderc, F.; Karyotakis, Y. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library

Biomass and Biofuels: Technology and Economic Overview

Presentation on biomass and biofuels technology and economics presented at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, May 23, 2007.
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Aden, Andy
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
TECHNICAL EVALUATION OF THE APPLICATION & STORAGE & TRANSPORTATION OF POLYUREA COATED CONTAINERS (open access)

TECHNICAL EVALUATION OF THE APPLICATION & STORAGE & TRANSPORTATION OF POLYUREA COATED CONTAINERS

None
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: VAIL, T.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SUPPLEMENTAL PACKAGE FOR THE SCOPING SUMMARY FOR THE P-AREA OPERABLE UNIT (open access)

SUPPLEMENTAL PACKAGE FOR THE SCOPING SUMMARY FOR THE P-AREA OPERABLE UNIT

Arsenic and selenium were tentatively identified as ecological RCOCs for the PAOU Ash Basin (PAOU Post-Characterization/Problem Identification Scoping Meeting, March 2007). Core Team agreed to consider eliminating these constituents as RCOCs based on a revised uncertainty discussion. The ecological risk tables and revised text (in its entirety) for the PAOU Ash Basin are provided in the Supplemental Information Package for the FS Scoping Meeting (June 2007). Arsenic and selenium have been traditionally carried through as ecological RCOCs (D-Area Ash Basin, A-Area Ash Pile).
Date: May 23, 2007
Creator: Kupar, J; Sadika Baladi, S & Mark Amidon, M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library