DACS upgrade acceptance test report (open access)

DACS upgrade acceptance test report

The DACS, which is housed in a trailer located just outside of the north fence at the SY tank farm, receives input signals from a variety of sensors located in and around the SY-101 tank. These sensors provide information such as: (1) tank vapor space and ventilation system H{sub 2} concentration; (2) tank waste temperature; (3) tank pressure; (4) waste density; (5) operating pump parameters such as speed, flow, rotational position, discharge pressure, and internal temperature; (6) strain (for major equipment); and (7) waste level. The output of these sensors is conditioned and transmitted to the DACS computers where these signals are displayed, recorded, and monitored for out-of-specification conditions. If abnormal conditions are detected, then, in certain situations, the DACS automatically generates alarms and causes the system to abort pump operations. The report documents testing performed per WHC-SD-WM-ATP-082. Rev. 0-13.
Date: December 21, 1994
Creator: Zuehlke, A. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hazard control indices for radiological and non-radiological materials (open access)

Hazard control indices for radiological and non-radiological materials

This document devises a method of comparing radiological and non-radiological hazard control levels. Such a comparison will be useful in determining the design control features for facilities that handle radioactive mixed waste. The design control features of interest are those that assure the protection of workers and the environment from unsafe airborne levels of radiological or non-radiological hazards.
Date: December 21, 1994
Creator: Boothe, G. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear criticality safety analysis summary report: The S-area defense waste processing facility (open access)

Nuclear criticality safety analysis summary report: The S-area defense waste processing facility

The S-Area Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF) can process all of the high level radioactive wastes currently stored at the Savannah River Site with negligible risk of nuclear criticality. The characteristics which make the DWPF critically safe are: (1) abundance of neutron absorbers in the waste feeds; (2) and low concentration of fissionable material. This report documents the criticality safety arguments for the S-Area DWPF process as required by DOE orders to characterize and to justify the low potential for criticality. It documents that the nature of the waste feeds and the nature of the DWPF process chemistry preclude criticality.
Date: October 21, 1994
Creator: Ha, B. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Operability test procedure for 211BA flow proportional sampler (open access)

Operability test procedure for 211BA flow proportional sampler

The purpose of this operability test procedure (OTP) is to verify the 211-BA flow proportional sampler system and components function correctly as intended by design. System test will include the sampling system, all associated instrumentation, and Facility Process Monitor and Control System (FPMCS). The combined chemical sewer stream from B Plant flows through sump 211BA-SMP-01 located in 211-BA and is continuously monitored for gamma and beta radiation and pH. 211-BA has been upgraded to include a flow proportional sampler. A specified sample volume will be withdrawn at programmed intervals from the 211BA sump and deposited in a 19 liter plastic carboy. The sampler will be programmed per the vendor installation and operations manual by B Plant instrument maintenance personnel. Samples will be taken during five consecutive sample cycles with the sample volumes and sample frequencies recorded for comparison purposes. Additional tests related to the sampler include the alarm circuitry for loss of power and failure to obtain sample.
Date: November 21, 1994
Creator: Weissenfels, R. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test procedure, 241-SY-101 Flexible Receiver System, Phase III testing (open access)

Acceptance test procedure, 241-SY-101 Flexible Receiver System, Phase III testing

This Acceptance Test Procedure is for the 241-SY-101 Flexible Receiver System, Phase III Testing. This procedure will test the sealing integrity of the Flexible Receiver System to ensure that release of waste and aerosols will be minimized during the removal of the test mixer pump from tank SY-101.
Date: November 21, 1994
Creator: Ritter, G. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bases for PUREX deactivation safety equipment list (open access)

Bases for PUREX deactivation safety equipment list

None
Date: November 21, 1994
Creator: Walser, R. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Argonne mechanical design proposal for the ATLAS hadron calorimeter (open access)

Argonne mechanical design proposal for the ATLAS hadron calorimeter

The uniqueness of the Argonne design is given here: (1) by overlapping the spacer plates the compression load is carried through the module without affecting the scintillator slots; (2) flat thin straps are used in place of tie rods; (3) a supermodule is constructed of six 1 meter modules; (4) it is not necessary to drill holes through the scintillator; (5) absorber structure can be assembled independent of scintillator; (6) straps provide better load distribution across the plates; and (7) this design, as currently drawn, does not include internal sourcing, but does not preclude it being used.
Date: June 21, 1994
Creator: Hill, N. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical assessment of workplace air sampling requirements at tank farm facilities. Revision 1 (open access)

Technical assessment of workplace air sampling requirements at tank farm facilities. Revision 1

WHC-CM-1-6 is the primary guidance for radiological control at Westinghouse Hanford Company (WHC). It was written to implement DOE N 5480.6 ``US Department of Energy Radiological Control Manual`` as it applies to programs at Hanford which are now overseen by WHC. As such, it complies with Title 10, Part 835 of the Code of Federal Regulations. In addition to WHC-CM-1-6, there is HSRCM-1, the ``Hanford Site Radiological Control Manual`` and several Department of Energy (DOE) Orders, national consensus standards, and reports that provide criteria, standards, and requirements for workplace air sampling programs. This document provides a summary of these, as they apply to WHC facility workplace air sampling programs. This document also provides an evaluation of the compliance of Tank Farms` workplace air sampling program to the criteria, standards, and requirements and documents compliance with the requirements where appropriate. Where necessary, it also indicates changes needed to bring specific locations into compliance.
Date: September 21, 1994
Creator: Olsen, P. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical Tokamak Project code comparison (open access)

Numerical Tokamak Project code comparison

None
Date: June 21, 1994
Creator: Waltz, R. E.; Cohen, B. I. & Beer, M. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Concept study: Use of grout vaults for disposal of long-length contaminated equipment (open access)

Concept study: Use of grout vaults for disposal of long-length contaminated equipment

Study considers the potential for use of grout vaults for disposal of untreated long length equipment removed from waste tanks. Looks at ways to access vaults, material handling, regulatory aspects, and advantages and disadvantages of vault disposal.
Date: September 21, 1994
Creator: Clem, D. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feasibility study of tank leakage mitigation using subsurface barriers (open access)

Feasibility study of tank leakage mitigation using subsurface barriers

The US Department of Energy (DOE) has established the Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) to satisfy manage and dispose of the waste currently stored in the underground storage tanks. The retrieval element of TWRS includes a work scope to develop subsurface impermeable barriers beneath SSTs. The barriers could serve as a means to contain leakage that may result from waste retrieval operations and could also support site closure activities by facilitating cleanup. Three types of subsurface barrier systems have emerged for further consideration: (1) chemical grout, (2) freeze walls, and (3) desiccant, represented in this feasibility study as a circulating air barrier. This report contains analyses of the costs and relative risks associated with combinations retrieval technologies and barrier technologies that from 14 alternatives. Eight of the alternatives include the use of subsurface barriers; the remaining six nonbarrier alternative are included in order to compare the costs, relative risks and other values of retrieval with subsurface barriers. Each alternative includes various combinations of technologies that can impact the risks associated with future contamination of the groundwater beneath the Hanford Site to varying degrees. Other potential risks associated with these alternatives, such as those related to accidents and airborne contamination resulting …
Date: September 21, 1994
Creator: Treat, R. L.; Peters, B. B.; Cameron, R. J.; McCormak, W. D.; Trenkler, T.; Walters, M. F. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ukraine's Uncertain Future and U .S . Policy (open access)

Ukraine's Uncertain Future and U .S . Policy

None
Date: September 21, 1994
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Grout to meet physical and chemical requirements for closure at Hanford grout vaults. Final report (open access)

Grout to meet physical and chemical requirements for closure at Hanford grout vaults. Final report

The US Army Engineer Waterways Experiment Station (WES) developed a grout based on portland cement, Class F fly ash, and bentonite clay, for the Hanford Grout Vault Program. The purpose of this grout was to fill the void between a wasteform containing 106-AN waste and the vault cover blocks. Following a successful grout development program, heat output, volume change, and compressive strength were monitored with time in simulated repository conditions and in full-depth physical models. This research indicated that the cold-cap grout could achieve and maintain adequate volume stability and other required physical properties in the internal environment of a sealed vault. To determine if contact with 106-AN liquid waste would cause chemical deterioration of the cold-cap grout, cured specimens were immersed in simulated waste. Over a period of 21 days at 150 F, specimens increased in mass without significant changes in volume. X-ray diffraction of reacted specimens revealed crystallization of sodium aluminum silicate hydrate. Scanning electron microscopy used with X-ray fluorescence showed that clusters if this phase had formed in grout pores, increasing grout density and decreasing its effective porosity. Physical and chemical tests collectively indicate a sealing component. However, the Hanford Grout Vault Program was cancelled before completion …
Date: July 21, 1994
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank 241-BY-108 tank characterization plan (open access)

Tank 241-BY-108 tank characterization plan

None
Date: October 21, 1994
Creator: Carpenter, B. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer simulation of laboratory leaching and washing of tank waste sludges (open access)

Computer simulation of laboratory leaching and washing of tank waste sludges

None
Date: October 21, 1994
Creator: Meng, C. D.; MacLean, G. T. & Landeene, B. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plutonium Finishing Plant Transition Project mission analysis report (open access)

Plutonium Finishing Plant Transition Project mission analysis report

This report defines the mission for the Plutonium Finishing Plant Transition Project (PFPTP) using a systems engineering approach. This mission analysis will be the basis for the functional analysis which will further define and break down the mission statement into all of the detailed functions required to accomplish the mission. The functional analysis is then used to develop requirements, allocate those requirements to functions, and eventually be used to design the system. This report: presents the problem which will be addressed, defines PFP Transition Project, defines the overall mission statement, describes the existing, initial conditions, defines the desired, final conditions, identifies the mission boundaries and external interfaces, identifies the resources required to carry out the mission, describes the uncertainties and risks, and discusses the measures which will be used to determine success.
Date: September 21, 1994
Creator: Courson, D. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Musings on Event Timing for the ATR (open access)

Musings on Event Timing for the ATR

None
Date: December 21, 1994
Creator: MacKay, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
[CarbBank and the Complex Carbohydrate Structure Database. Annual Report 1994] (open access)

[CarbBank and the Complex Carbohydrate Structure Database. Annual Report 1994]

A brief status report and forthcoming changes to the CarbBank, a carbohydrate database, is provided.
Date: April 21, 1994
Creator: Albersheim, Peter & Doubet, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kearney and Trecker Milwaukee Matic 600 (open access)

Kearney and Trecker Milwaukee Matic 600

A computer model of a Kearney and Tracker (K and T) Milwaukee Matic 600 (MM600) with a Gemini controller for use under the Deneb Robotics, Inc. simulation environment has been constructed. The simulation uses the K and T controller and standard MM600 machine geometry. Both the machine geometry and the controller are provided. The machine has been constructed using K and T`s standard machine dimensions and setup. The controller simulation addresses the most typically used NC codes, but may not be setup for extremely specialized functions. The machine geometry has been reduced to simulate only those components and surfaces which could possibly interfere or collide with other machine components or the workpiece envelope. The level of detail has been reduced to a functional level to enhance computational performance during simulation. The model may be directly used in the Virtual-NC environment for a complete machining simulator, or the model with kinematics may be used in IGRIP. The geometry is suitable for translation into standard file formats for importation into other systems.
Date: October 21, 1994
Creator: Seat, J. E. & Rogers, K. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Japan-U.S. Relations: Issues for Congress in the 1990s (open access)

Japan-U.S. Relations: Issues for Congress in the 1990s

Japan-U.S. relations are more uncertain and subject to greater strain today than at any time since World War II. Longstanding military allies and increasingly interdependent economic partners, Japan and the United States have worked closely together to build a strong, multifaceted relationship based on democratic values and interests in world stability and development. But Japan today is our foremost economic and technological competitor.
Date: November 21, 1994
Creator: Sutter, Robert G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Japan's Politics and Government in Transition (open access)

Japan's Politics and Government in Transition

Japan's politics and government are undergoing a historic transition. The 38-year one-party rule of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) came to an end on July 18, 1993, when the party was voted out of power, even as it remained the single largest party in the lower house of Japan's bicameral Diet, or parliament. Seven non-communist parties, with little in common save their shared interest in dethroning the LDP, formed a shaky coalition.
Date: January 21, 1994
Creator: Shinn, Rinn-Sup
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization and scale-up of fermentation process for production of microbial polysaccharide. Final technical progress report (open access)

Optimization and scale-up of fermentation process for production of microbial polysaccharide. Final technical progress report

This grant was awarded to provide for the scale-up of the process of production of a (1 {r_arrow})-{beta}-D-glucan which is produced by Cellulomonas flavigena. One of the goals was to provide sufficient amounts of the polysaccharide polymer to conduct a field test of its usefulness in subterranean permeability modification procedures of enhanced oil recovery. During September and October, 1994, fermentations and recoveries were done by Abbott Laboratories, to develop a process to provide at least 400 lbs of the glucan polymer for field testing. Shake flask runs and four fermentation runs were completed. A summary of the fourth fermentation run, conducted in a 40,000 liter fermentor, follows.
Date: December 21, 1994
Creator: Buller, C.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Program status 1. quarter -- FY 1994: ITER and technology (open access)

Program status 1. quarter -- FY 1994: ITER and technology

During this period work was continued on analyzing the use of the shield for the thermal energy storage in the PULSAR reactor design and it was found that this design approach was also applicable to the Li-self-cooled V-alloy structure blanket option. The ARIES-IV toroidal blanket final report was completed. The conceptual design for a 2in x 8in distributed gyrotron window was completed and long lead parts are on order. A dedicated DiMES experiment was successfully run in DIII-D. Useful material erosion and redeposition results were obtained and input for modeling analysis.
Date: January 21, 1994
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal performance of steel-framed walls. Final report (open access)

Thermal performance of steel-framed walls. Final report

In wall construction, highly conductive members spaced along the wall, which allow higher heat transfer than that through less conductive areas, are referred to as thermal bridges. Thermal bridges in walls tend to increase heat loss and, under certain adverse conditions, can cause dust streaking (``ghosting``) on interior walls over studs due to temperature differentials, as well as condensation in and on walls. Although such adverse conditions can be easily avoided by proper thermal design of wall systems, these effects have not been well understood and thermal data has been lacking. Therefore, the present study was initiated to provide (1) a better understanding of the thermal behavior of steel-framed walls, (2) a set of R-values for typical wall constructions, and (3) information that could be used to develop improved methods of predicting R-values. An improved method for estimating R-value would allow an equitable comparison of thermal performance with other construction types and materials. This would increase the number of alternative materials for walls available to designers, thus allowing them to choose the optimum choice for construction. Twenty-three wall samples were tested in a calibrated hot box (ASTM C9761) to measure the thermal performance of steel-framed wall systems. The tests included …
Date: November 21, 1994
Creator: Barbour, E.; Goodrow, J.; Kosny, J. & Christian, J.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library