Variable temperature effects on release rates of readily soluble nuclides (open access)

Variable temperature effects on release rates of readily soluble nuclides

In this paper we study the effect of temperature on the release rate of readily soluble nuclides, as affected by a time-temperature dependent diffusion coefficient. In this analysis ground water fills the voids in the waste package at t = 0 and one percent of the inventories of cesium and iodine are immediately dissolved into the void water. Mass transfer resistance of partly failed container and cladding is conservatively neglected. The nuclides move through the void space into the surrounding rock under a concentration gradient. We use an analytic solution to compute the nuclide concentration in the gap or void, and the mass flux rate into the porous rock. 8 refs., 4 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Kim, C. L.; Light, W. B.; Lee, W. W. L.; Chambre, P. L.; Pigford, T. H. (Korea Advanced Energy Research Inst., Daeduk (Republic of Korea) & Lawrence Berkeley Lab, C A (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
New topological invariants for non-abelian antisymmetric tensor fields from extended BRS algebra (open access)

New topological invariants for non-abelian antisymmetric tensor fields from extended BRS algebra

Extended non-linear BRS and Gauge transformations containing Lie algebra cocycles, and acting on non-abelian antisymmetric tensor fields are constructed in the context of free differential algebras. New topological invariants are given in this framework. 6 refs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Boukraa, S.; Maillet, J.M. & Nijhoff, F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Partitioning of hydrogen in the vanadium-lithium-hydrogen system at elevated temperatures (open access)

Partitioning of hydrogen in the vanadium-lithium-hydrogen system at elevated temperatures

Equilibrium concentrations of hydrogen in vanadium-base alloys exposed to flowing lithium at temperatures from 350 to 550/degree/C in a forced-circulation loop were measured by residual gas analysis and the vacuum fusion method. Residual gas analysis and removal of material from the surface allowed a determination of the spatial hydrogen distribution in the alloys. These experimental results were compared with calculated thermodynamic distribution coefficients for hydrogen in the vanadium/lithium system. Small amounts of other solutes in the molten lithium and in the alloys affected the solubility, diffusivity, and resultant distribution of hydrogen. Thermodynamic calculations demonstrated the importance of major alloying elements to the partitioning of hydrogen. 12 refs., 5 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Hull, A. B.; Chopra, O. K.; Loomis, B. A. & Smith, D. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Induction linac drivers for heavy ion fusion (open access)

Induction linac drivers for heavy ion fusion

The Heavy Ion Fusion Accelerator Research (HIFAR) program of the USDOE has for several years concentrated on developing linear induction accelerators as Inertial Fusion (IF) drivers. This accelerator technology is suitable for the IF application because it is readily capable of accelerating short, intense pulses of charged particles with good electrical efficiency. The principal technical difficulty is in injecting and transporting the intense pulses while maintaining the necessary beam quality. The approach used has been to design a system of multiple beams so that not all of the charge has to be confined in a single beam line. The beams are finally brought together in a common focus at the target. This paper will briefly present the status and future plans of the program, and will also briefly review systems study results for HIF. 2 refs., 5 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Herrmannsfeldt, W.B. & Keefe, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A high energy neutral beam system for reactors (open access)

A high energy neutral beam system for reactors

High energy neutral beams provide a promising method of heating and driving current in steady-state tokamak fusion reactors. As an example, we have made a conceptual design of a neutral beam system for current drive on the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER). The system, based on electrostatic acceleration of D/sup /minus// ions, can deliver up to 100 MW of 1.6 MeV D/sup 0/ neutrals through three ports. Radiation protection is provided by locating sensitive beamline components 35 to 50 m from the reactor. In an application to a 3300 MW power reactor, a system delivering 120 MW of 2-2.4 MeV deuterium beams assisted by 21 MW of lower hybrid wave power drives 25 MA and provides an adequate plasma power gain (Q = 24) for a commercial fusion power plant. 8 refs., 1 fig., 2 tabs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Anderson, O. A.; Chan, C. F.; Cooper, W. S.; Leung, K. N.; Lietzke, A. F.; Kim, C. H. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The production of beams from solid materials at the LBL ECR source (open access)

The production of beams from solid materials at the LBL ECR source

Two ovens are described for the feed of vapor from solid materials in the LBL ECR source. A low temperature oven, operating up to 700 /degree/ C, has been used for Li, Mg, P, K, Ca, Ti and Bi. A high temperature oven operating up to 2000/degree/C, has been used for Sc, Fe, Ni, Cu, Ag, La and Tb. At the 1 e..mu..A level the charge states from the oven beams are very close to those from gases. 4 refs., 5 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Clark, D. J. & Lyneis, C. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pion production in relativistic collisions of nuclear drops (open access)

Pion production in relativistic collisions of nuclear drops

In a continuation of the long-standing effort of the nuclear physics community to model atomic nuclei as droplets of a specialized nuclear fluid, we have developed a hydrodynamic model for simulating the collisions of heavy nuclei at relativistic speeds. Our model couples ideal relativistic hydrodynamics with a new Monte Carlo treatment of dynamic pion production and tracking. The collective flow for low-energy (200 MeV/N) collisions predicted by this model compares favorably with results from earlier hydrodynamic calculations which used quite different numerical techniques. Our pion predictions at these lower energies appear to differ, however, from the experimental data on pion multiplicities. In this case of ultra-relativistic (200 GeV/N) collisions, our hydrodynamic model has produced baryonic matter distributions which are in reasonable agreement with recent experimental data. These results may shed some light on the sensitivity of relativistic collision data to the nuclear equation of state. 20 refs., 12 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Alonso, C. T.; Wilson, J. R.; McAbee, T. L. & Zingman, J. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the technical review on advances in geothermal reservoir technology---Research in progress (open access)

Proceedings of the technical review on advances in geothermal reservoir technology---Research in progress

This proceedings contains 20 technical papers and abstracts describing most of the research activities funded by the Department of Energy (DOE's) Geothermal Reservoir Technology Program, which is under the management of Marshall Reed. The meeting was organized in response to several requests made by geothermal industry representatives who wanted to learn more about technical details of the projects supported by the DOE program. Also, this gives them an opportunity to personally discuss research topics with colleagues in the national laboratories and universities.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Lippmann, M.J. (ed.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shielding effectiveness of superconductive particles in plastics (open access)

Shielding effectiveness of superconductive particles in plastics

The ability to cool superconductors with liquid nitrogen instead of liquid helium has opened the door to a wide range of research. The well known Meissner effect, which states superconductors are perfectly diamagnetic, suggests shielding applications. One of the drawbacks to the new ceramic superconductors is the brittleness of the finished material. Because of this drawback, any application which required flexibility (e.g., wire and cable) would be impractical. Therefore, this paper presents the results of a preliminary investigation into the shielding effectiveness of YBa/sub 2/Cu/sub 3/O/sub 7-x/ both as a composite and as a monolithic material. Shielding effectiveness was measured using two separate test methods. One tested the magnetic (near field) shielding, and the other tested the electromagnetic (far field) shielding. No shielding was seen in the near field measurements on the composite samples, and only one heavily loaded sample showed some shielding in the far field. The monolithic samples showed a large amount of magnetic shielding. 5 refs., 5 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Pienkowski, T.; Kincaid, J.; Lanagan, M.T.; Poeppel, R.B.; Dusek, J.T.; Shi, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
PEGASYS: A proposed internal target-spectrometer facility for the PEP storage ring (open access)

PEGASYS: A proposed internal target-spectrometer facility for the PEP storage ring

A proposal for an internal gas-jet target and forward spectrometer for the PEP storage ring is described. The beam structure, allowable luminosity (L=10/sup 33/ cm/sup /minus/2/s/sup /minus/1/ for H/sub 2/, D/sub 2/ decreasing as Z/sup /minus/1.75/ for nuclear targets) and energy (E/sub e/less than or equal to 15 GeV) make the ring ideal for multiparticle coincidence studies in the scaling regime, and where perturbative QCD may be an apt description of some exclusive and semi-inclusive reactions. 17 refs., 5 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Van Bibber, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Environmental Effects of Nuclear War (open access)

The Environmental Effects of Nuclear War

Substantial environmental disruption will significantly add to the disastrous consequences caused by the direct thermal, blast, and radiological effects brought on by a major nuclear war. Local fallout could cover several percent of the Northern Hemisphere with potentially lethal doses. Smoke from post-nuclear fires could darken the skies and induce temperature decreases of tens of degrees in continental interiors. Stratospheric ozone could be significantly reduced due to nitric oxide injections and smoke-induced circulation changes. The environmental effects spread the consequences of a nuclear war to the world population, adding to the potentially large disruptive effects a further reason to avoid such a catastrophe. 27 refs., 4 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: MacCracken, Michael C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Licensing Experience of the Modular High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (MHTGR) (open access)

The Licensing Experience of the Modular High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (MHTGR)

The MHTGR is an advanced reactor concept being developed under a cooperative program involving the US Government, the nuclear industry, and the utilities. The design utilizes the basic HTGR features of ceramic fuel, helium coolant, and a graphite moderator. However, the specific size and configuration are selected to utilize the inherent characteristics of these materials to develop passive safety features that provide a significantly higher margin of safety than current generation reactors. The design meets the US Environmental Protection Agency's Protective Action Guidelines at the site boundary, hence precluding the need for sheltering or vacation of the public during any licensing basis event. This safe behavior is not dependent upon operator action and is insensitive to operator error. The MHTGR Licensing Plan agreed to with the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is discussed with particular attention to the framework of the preapplication review. The objective and scope of each key document prepared for the NRC review is presented. A summary is provided of the safety response to events challenging the functions relied on to retain radionuclides within the coated fuel particles. The regulatory interaction process and results are discussed through the NRC staff, NRC contractor, and ACRS reviews. 11 refs., …
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Silady, F.A.; Cunliffe, J.C. & Walker, L.P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear effects in J//psi/ and lepton-pair production (open access)

Nuclear effects in J//psi/ and lepton-pair production

High-energy processes in nuclear media provide important tests of quantum chromodynamics, since in principle one can use the nuclear environment to perturb and study the mechanisms involved in confinement and hadronization. In this talk several examples of nuclear effects in QCD will be discussed that affect the propagation and hadronization of quarks and gluons in nuclear matter. The issues include: possible signatures for quark-gluon plasma formation in heavy ion collisions, particularly J//psi/ production; hadronization due to jet coalescence; the limits of validity of QCD factorization formulae due to initial- and final-state interactions; formation zone physics; shadowing of the quark and gluon structure functions of nuclei; and color transparency in hard quasielastic reactions inside of nuclei. 29 refs., 4 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
In situ ion irradiation/implantation studies in the HVEM-Tandem Facility at Argonne National Laboratory (open access)

In situ ion irradiation/implantation studies in the HVEM-Tandem Facility at Argonne National Laboratory

The HVEM-Tandem User Facility at Argonne National Laboratory interfaces two ion accelerators, a 2 MV tandem accelerator and a 650 kV ion implanter, to a 1.2 MV high voltage electron microscope. This combination allows experiments involving simultaneous ion irradiation/ion implantation, electron irradiation and electron microscopy/electron diffraction to be performed. In addition the availability of a variety of microscope sample holders permits these as well as other types of in situ experiments to be performed at temperatures ranging from 10-1300 K, with the sample in a stressed state or with simultaneous determination of electrical resistivity of the specimen. This paper summarizes the details of the Facility which are relevant to simultaneous ion beam material modification and electron microscopy, presents several current applications and briefly describes the straightforward mechanism for potential users to access this US Department of Energy supported facility. 7 refs., 1 fig., 1 tab.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Allen, C. W.; Funk, L. L.; Ryan, E. A. & Taylor, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pioneering the nuclear age (open access)

Pioneering the nuclear age

This paper reviews the historical aspects of nuclear physics. The scientific aspects of the early transuranium elements are discussed and arms control measures are reviewed. 11 refs., 14 figs. (LSP)
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Seaborg, G. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of the SSC superconducting magnet program (open access)

Status of the SSC superconducting magnet program

The work that has been done on the SSC dipole over the past year is summarized in this paper, which is divided into four sections: cable development and production, cryostat design, cold mass design, and model magnet testing. 13 refs., 2 figs., 7 tabs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Peoples, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Personnel neutron dosimetry applications of track-size distributions on electrochemically etched CR-39 foils (open access)

Personnel neutron dosimetry applications of track-size distributions on electrochemically etched CR-39 foils

The track-size distribution on electrochemically etched CR-39 foils can be used to obtain some limited information on the incident neutron spectra. Track-size distributions on CR-39 foils can also be used to determine if the tracks were caused by neutrons or if they are merely background tracks (which have a significantly different track-size distribution). Identifying and discarding the high-background foils reduces the number of foils that must be etched. This also lowers the detection limit of the dosimetry system. We have developed an image analyzer program that can more efficiently determine the track density and track-size distribution, as well as read the laser-cut identification numbers on each foil. This new image analyzer makes the routine application of track-size distributions on CR-39 foils feasible. 2 refs., 3 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Hankins, D.E.; Homann, S.G. & Westermark, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
RTNS-II (Rotating Target Neutron Source II) operational summary (open access)

RTNS-II (Rotating Target Neutron Source II) operational summary

The Rotating Target Neutron Source II facility (RTNS-II) operated for over nine years. Its purpose was to provide high intensities of 14 MeV neutrons for materials studies in the fusion energy program. For the period from 1982-1987, the facility was supported by both the US (Department of Energy) and Japan (Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science). RTNS-II contains two accelerator-based neutron sources which use the T(d,n)/sup 4/He reaction. In this paper, we will summarize the operational history of RTNS-II. Typical operating parameters are given. In addition, a brief description of the experimental program is presented. The current status and future options for the facility are discussed. 7 refs., 5 tabs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Heikkinen, D.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exclusive processes in QCD and spin-spin correlations (open access)

Exclusive processes in QCD and spin-spin correlations

The unexpected spin behavior observed in hard proton-proton collisions is described in terms of new degrees of freedom associated with the onset of strange and charmed thresholds. The deviation from dimensional scaling laws, the anomalous broadening of angular distributions, and the unusual energy dependence of pp quasielastic scattering in nuclear targets are also consistent with the onset of highly inelastic contributions to elastic pp amplitudes interfering with a perturbative QCD background. The model predicts significant charm production above 12 GeV/c and a relaxation of the spin correlation parameters to their scaling values at higher energies. 13 refs., 3 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: de Teramond, G.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The rf phase system of the SLC (open access)

The rf phase system of the SLC

The phases of the rf throughout the SLC accelerator complex play an important part not only in the energy and energy spread of the beams at the end of the linac, but also in the production process of both electrons and positrons. Proper machine operation requires that certain phase relationships be maintained between the rf systems of the electron source, the electron and positron damping rings, the linac, and the positron source. This paper presents an overview of the interplay of the various rf phases throughout the SLC accelerator complex as well as describing various hardware and software inter-connections which have been made to facilitate control of the system as a whole. In addition, a description is given of rf phase monitoring required for system control. Operational experience and future plans are also discussed. 6 refs., 4 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Jobe, R. K.; Clendenin, J. E.; Schwarz, H. D.; Seeman, J. T.; Sheppard, J. C. & Stiening, R. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transient analysis of multicavity klystrons (open access)

Transient analysis of multicavity klystrons

We describe a model for analytic analysis of transients in multicavity klystron output power and phase. Cavities are modeled as resonant circuits, while bunching of the beam is modeled using linear space-charge wave theory. Our analysis has been implemented in a computer program which we use in designing multicavity klystrons with stable output power and phase. We present as examples transient analysis of a relativistic klystron using a magnetic pulse compression modulator, and of a conventional klystron designed to use phase shifting techniques for RF pulse compression. 4 refs., 4 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Lavine, T. L.; Miller, R. H.; Morton, P. L. & Ruth, R. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress in Heavy Ion Fusion (open access)

Progress in Heavy Ion Fusion

The progress of the field of Heavy Ion Fusion has been documented in the proceedings of the series of International Symposia that, in recent years, have occurred every second year. The latest of these conferences was hosted by Gesellshaft fuer Schwerionenforshung (GSI) in Darmstadt, West Germany, June 28-30, 1988. For this report, a few highlights from the conference are selected, stressing experimental progress and prospects for future advances. A little extra time is devoted to report on the developments at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL) which is the center for most of the HIFAR program. The Director of the HIFAR program at LBL is Denis Keefe, who presented the HIF report at the last two of the meetings in this series, and in whose place the author is appearing now. 4 refs., 1 fig.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Herrmannsfeldt, W.B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design of a bright electron injector based on a laser-driven photocathode rf electron gun (open access)

Conceptual design of a bright electron injector based on a laser-driven photocathode rf electron gun

Conceptual design of a bright electron injector for the 1 GeV high gradient test experiment, envisaged by the LLNL-SLAC-LBL collaboration on the Relativistic Klystron is presented. The design utilizes a high-brightness laser-driven rf photocathode electron gun, similar to the pioneering LANL early studies in concept (different parametrically however), together with achromatic magnetic bunching and transport systems and diagnostics. The design is performed with attention to possible use in an FEL as well. A simple but realistic analytic model including longitudinal and transverse space-charge and rf effects and extensive computer simulation form the basis of the parametric choice for the source. These parameters are used as guides for the design of the picosecond laser system and magnetic bunching section. 4 refs., 5 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Chattopadhyay, S.; Chen, Y. J.; Hopkins, D.; Kim, K. J.; Kung, A.; Miller, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam determination of quadrupole misalignments and beam position monitor biases in the SLC linac (open access)

Beam determination of quadrupole misalignments and beam position monitor biases in the SLC linac

Misalignments of magnetic quadrupoles and biases in beam position monitors (BPMs) in the Stanford Linear Collider (SLC) linac can lead to a situation in which the beam is off-center in the disk-loaded waveguide accelerator structure. The off-center beam produces wakefields which can limit SLC performance by causing unacceptably large emittance growth. We present a general method for determining quadrupole misalignments and BPM biases in the SLC linac by using beam trajectory measurements. The method utilizes both electron and positron beams on opposite rf cycles in the same linac lattice to determine simultaneously magnetic quadrupole misalignments and BPM biases. The two-beam trajectory data may be acquired without interrupting SLC colliding beam operations. 2 refs., 5 figs.
Date: September 1, 1988
Creator: Lavine, T. L.; Seeman, J. T.; Atwood, W. B.; Himel, T. M.; Petersen, A. & Adolphsen, C. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library