Sodium pool fire phenomena, sodium pool fire modeling in SOFIRE II, and SOFIRE II calculations for the AFR-100 (open access)

Sodium pool fire phenomena, sodium pool fire modeling in SOFIRE II, and SOFIRE II calculations for the AFR-100

None
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Sienicki, J. J. & Moisseytsev, A. (Nuclear Engineering Division)
System: The UNT Digital Library
FY2012 Report on Fast Reactor Toolset Work (PROTEUS-Fast) (open access)

FY2012 Report on Fast Reactor Toolset Work (PROTEUS-Fast)

None
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Wolters, E. R.; Smith, M. A.; Derstine, K.; Lee, C. H.; Yesilyurt, G. & Marin-Lafleche, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multi-slit based emittance measurement study for BNL ERL (open access)

Multi-slit based emittance measurement study for BNL ERL

N/A
Date: October 12, 2012
Creator: C., Liu; Gassner, D.; Minty, M. & Thieberger, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
CRADA Final Report, 2011S003, Faraday Technologies (open access)

CRADA Final Report, 2011S003, Faraday Technologies

This Phase I SBIR program addressed the need for an improved manufacturing process for electropolishing niobium RF superconducting cavities for the International Linear Collider (ILC). The ILC is a proposed particle accelerator that will be used to gain a deeper understanding of the forces of energy and matter by colliding beams of electrons and positrons at nearly the speed of light. The energy required for this to happen will be achieved through the use of advanced superconducting technology, specifically ~16,000 RF superconducting cavities operating at near absolute zero. The RF superconductor cavities will be fabricated from highly pure Nb, which has an extremely low surface resistance at 2 Kelvin when compared to other materials. To take full advantage of the superconducting properties of the Nb cavities, the inner surface must be a) polished to a microscale roughness < 0.1 µm with removal of at least 100 µm of material, and b) cleaned to be free of impurities that would degrade performance of the ILC. State-of-the-art polishing uses either chemical polishing or electropolishing, both of which require hydrofluoric acid to achieve breakdown of the strong passive film on the surface. In this Phase I program, Faraday worked with its collaborators at …
Date: December 12, 2012
Creator: Technologies, Faraday
System: The UNT Digital Library
Site Environmental Report for 2011, Volumes 1& 2 (open access)

Site Environmental Report for 2011, Volumes 1& 2

The Site Environmental Report for 2011 summarizes Berkeley Lab’s environmental management performance, presents environmental monitoring results, and describes significant programs for calendar year (CY) 2011. Throughout this report, “Berkeley Lab” or “LBNL” refers both to (1) the multiprogram scientific facility the UC manages and operates on the 202-acre university-owned site located in the hills above the UC Berkeley campus, and the site itself, and (2) the UC as managing and operating contractor for Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The report is separated into two volumes. Volume I is organized into an executive summary followed by six chapters that include an overview of LBNL, a discussion of its Environmental Management System (EMS), the status of environmental programs, summarized results from surveillance and monitoring activities, and quality assurance (QA) measures. Volume II contains individual data results from surveillance and monitoring activities.
Date: September 12, 2012
Creator: Baskin, David; Bauters, Tim; Borglin, Ned; Fox, Robert; Horst, Blair; Jelinski, John et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
FY2012 Status Report on Subgroup Library Development (open access)

FY2012 Status Report on Subgroup Library Development

None
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Smith, M. A.; Lee, C. H. & Yesilyurt, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
RESULTS OF ANALYSES OF THE NEXT GENERATION SOLVENT FOR PARSONS (open access)

RESULTS OF ANALYSES OF THE NEXT GENERATION SOLVENT FOR PARSONS

Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) prepared a nominal 150 gallon batch of Next Generation Solvent (NGS) for Parsons. This material was then analyzed and tested for cesium mass transfer efficiency. The bulk of the results indicate that the solvent is qualified as acceptable for use in the upcoming pilot-scale testing at Parsons Technology Center. This report describes the analysis and testing of a batch of Next Generation Solvent (NGS) prepared in support of pilot-scale testing in the Parsons Technology Center. A total of {approx}150 gallons of NGS solvent was prepared in late November of 2011. Details for the work are contained in a controlled laboratory notebook. Analysis of the Parsons NGS solvent indicates that the material is acceptable for use. SRNL is continuing to improve the analytical method for the guanidine.
Date: March 12, 2012
Creator: Peters, T.; Washington, A. & Fink, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aircraft Integration and Flight Testing of 4STAR (open access)

Aircraft Integration and Flight Testing of 4STAR

Under funding from the U.S. Dept. of Energy, in conjunction with a funded NASA 2008 ROSES proposal, with internal support from Battelle Pacific Northwest Division (PNWD), and in collaboration with NASA Ames Research Center, we successfully integrated the Spectrometer for Sky-Scanning, Sun-Tracking Atmospheric Research (4STAR-Air) instrument for flight operation aboard Battelle’s G-1 aircraft and conducted a series of airborne and ground-based intensive measurement campaigns (hereafter referred to as “intensives”) for the purpose of maturing the initial 4STAR-Ground prototype to a flight-ready science-ready configuration.
Date: October 12, 2012
Creator: Flynn, C. J.; Kassianov, E.; Russell, P.; Redemann, J.; Dunagan, S. & Holben, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data Quality Objectives Supporting Radiological Air Emissions Monitoring for the PNNL Site (open access)

Data Quality Objectives Supporting Radiological Air Emissions Monitoring for the PNNL Site

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is in the process of developing a radiological air monitoring program for the PNNL Site that is distinct from that of the nearby Hanford Site. The original DQO (PNNL-19427) considered radiological emissions at the PNNL Site from Physical Sciences Facility (PSF) major emissions units. This first revision considers PNNL Site changes subsequent to the implementation of the original DQO. A team was established to determine how the PNNL Site changes would continue to meet federal regulations and address guidelines developed to monitor air emissions and estimate offsite impacts of radioactive material operations. The result is an updated program to monitor the impact to the public from the PNNL Site. The team used the emission unit operation parameters and local meteorological data as well as information from the PSF Potential-to-Emit documentation and Notices of Construction submitted to the Washington State Department of Health (WDOH). The locations where environmental monitoring stations would most successfully characterize the maximum offsite impacts of PNNL Site emissions from the three PSF buildings with major emission units were determined from these data. Three monitoring station locations were determined during the original revision of this document. This first revision considers expanded Department of …
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Barnett, J. M.; Meier, Kirsten M.; Snyder, Sandra F.; Fritz, Brad G.; Poston, Theodore M. & Antonio, Ernest J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final report for DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-07ER64404 - Field Investigations of Microbially Facilitated Calcite Precipitation for Immobilization of Strontium-90 and Other Trace Metals in the Subsurface (open access)

Final report for DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-07ER64404 - Field Investigations of Microbially Facilitated Calcite Precipitation for Immobilization of Strontium-90 and Other Trace Metals in the Subsurface

Subsurface radionuclide and metal contaminants throughout the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) complex pose one of DOE’s greatest challenges for long-term stewardship. One promising stabilization mechanism for divalent ions, such as the short-lived radionuclide 90Sr, is co-precipitation in calcite. We have previously found that that nutrient addition can stimulate microbial ureolytic activity that this activity accelerates calcite precipitation and co-precipitation of Sr, and that higher calcite precipitation rates can result in increased Sr partitioning. We have conducted integrated field, laboratory, and computational research to evaluate the relationships between ureolysis and calcite precipitation rates and trace metal partitioning under environmentally relevant conditions, and investigated the coupling between flow/flux manipulations and precipitate distribution. A field experimental campaign conducted at the Integrated Field Research Challenge (IFRC) site located at Rifle, CO was based on a continuous recirculation design; water extracted from a down-gradient well was amended with urea and molasses (a carbon and electron donor) and re-injected into an up-gradient well. The goal of the recirculation design and simultaneous injection of urea and molasses was to uniformly accelerate the hydrolysis of urea and calcite precipitation over the entire inter-wellbore zone. The urea-molasses recirculation phase lasted, with brief interruptions for geophysical surveys, for 12 …
Date: October 12, 2012
Creator: Smith, Robert W.; Fujita, Yoshiko; Ginn, Timothy R. & Hubbard, Susan S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Program Development Tools and Infrastructures (open access)

Program Development Tools and Infrastructures

Exascale class machines will exhibit a new level of complexity: they will feature an unprecedented number of cores and threads, will most likely be heterogeneous and deeply hierarchical, and offer a range of new hardware techniques (such as speculative threading, transactional memory, programmable prefetching, and programmable accelerators), which all have to be utilized for an application to realize the full potential of the machine. Additionally, users will be faced with less memory per core, fixed total power budgets, and sharply reduced MTBFs. At the same time, it is expected that the complexity of applications will rise sharply for exascale systems, both to implement new science possible at exascale and to exploit the new hardware features necessary to achieve exascale performance. This is particularly true for many of the NNSA codes, which are large and often highly complex integrated simulation codes that push the limits of everything in the system including language features. To overcome these limitations and to enable users to reach exascale performance, users will expect a new generation of tools that address the bottlenecks of exascale machines, that work seamlessly with the (set of) programming models on the target machines, that scale with the machine, that provide automatic …
Date: March 12, 2012
Creator: Schulz, M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reduction of Metal Oxide to Metal using Ionic Liquids (open access)

Reduction of Metal Oxide to Metal using Ionic Liquids

A novel pathway for the high efficiency production of metal from metal oxide means of electrolysis in ionic liquids at low temperature was investigated. The main emphasis was to eliminate the use of carbon and high temperature application in the reduction of metal oxides to metals. The emphasis of this research was to produce metals such as Zn, and Pb that are normally produced by the application of very high temperatures. The reduction of zinc oxide to zinc and lead oxide to lead were investigated. This study involved three steps in accomplishing the final goal of reduction of metal oxide to metal using ionic liquids: 1) Dissolution of metal oxide in an ionic liquid, 2) Determination of reduction potential using cyclic voltammetry (CV) and 3) Reduction of the dissolved metal oxide. Ionic liquids provide additional advantage by offering a wide potential range for the deposition. In each and every step of the process, more than one process variable has been examined. Experimental results for electrochemical extraction of Zn from ZnO and Pb from PbO using eutectic mixtures of Urea ((NH2)2CO) and Choline chloride (HOC2H4N(CH3)3+Cl-) or (ChCl) in a molar ratio 2:1, varying voltage and temperatures were carried out. Fourier Transform …
Date: April 12, 2012
Creator: Reddy, Dr. Ramana
System: The UNT Digital Library
Excitation energy transfer in natural photosynthetic complexes and chlorophyll trefoils: hole-burning and single complex/trefoil spectroscopic studies (open access)

Excitation energy transfer in natural photosynthetic complexes and chlorophyll trefoils: hole-burning and single complex/trefoil spectroscopic studies

In this project we studied both natural photosynthetic antenna complexes and various artificial systems (e.g. chlorophyll (Chl) trefoils) using high resolution hole-burning (HB) spectroscopy and excitonic calculations. Results obtained provided more insight into the electronic (excitonic) structure, inhomogeneity, electron-phonon coupling strength, vibrational frequencies, and excitation energy (or electron) transfer (EET) processes in several antennas and reaction centers. For example, our recent work provided important constraints and parameters for more advanced excitonic calculations of CP43, CP47, and PSII core complexes. Improved theoretical description of HB spectra for various model systems offers new insight into the excitonic structure and composition of low-energy absorption traps in very several antenna protein complexes and reaction centers. We anticipate that better understanding of HB spectra obtained for various photosynthetic complexes and their simultaneous fits with other optical spectra (i.e. absorption, emission, and circular dichroism spectra) provides more insight into the underlying electronic structures of these important biological systems. Our recent progress provides a necessary framework for probing the electronic structure of these systems via Hole Burning Spectroscopy. For example, we have shown that the theoretical description of non-resonant holes is more restrictive (in terms of possible site energies) than those of absorption and emission spectra. We …
Date: September 12, 2012
Creator: Jankowiak, Ryszard
System: The UNT Digital Library
ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Upgrade Electronics Test (open access)

ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Upgrade Electronics Test

None
Date: October 12, 2012
Creator: Oreglia, Mark; Anderson, Kelby; Ramberg, Erik & Drake, Gary
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Efficiency Nanostructured III-V Photovoltaics for Solar Concentrator Application (open access)

High Efficiency Nanostructured III-V Photovoltaics for Solar Concentrator Application

The High Efficiency Nanostructured III-V Photovoltaics for Solar Concentrators project seeks to provide new photovoltaic cells for Concentrator Photovoltaics (CPV) Systems with higher cell efficiency, more favorable temperature coefficients and less sensitivity to changes in spectral distribution. The main objective of this project is to provide high efficiency III-V solar cells that will reduce the overall cost per Watt for power generation using CPV systems.This work is focused both on a potential near term application, namely the use of indium arsenide (InAs) QDs to spectrally "tune" the middle (GaAs) cell of a SOA triple junction device to a more favorable effective bandgap, as well as the long term goal of demonstrating intermediate band solar cell effects. The QDs are confined within a high electric field i-region of a standard GaAs solar cell. The extended absorption spectrum (and thus enhanced short circuit current) of the QD solar cell results from the increase in the sub GaAs bandgap spectral response that is achievable as quantum dot layers are introduced into the i-region. We have grown InAs quantum dots by OMVPE technique and optimized the QD growth conditions. Arrays of up to 40 layers of strain balanced quantum dots have been experimentally demonstrated …
Date: September 12, 2012
Creator: Hubbard, Seth
System: The UNT Digital Library
Passive Acoustic Detection of Wind Turbine In-Flow Conditions for Active Control and Optimization (open access)

Passive Acoustic Detection of Wind Turbine In-Flow Conditions for Active Control and Optimization

Wind is a significant source of energy; however, the human capability to produce electrical energy still has many hurdles to overcome. One of these is the unpredictability of the winds in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL). The ABL is highly turbulent in both stable and unstable conditions (based on the vertical temperature profile) and the resulting fluctuations can have a dramatic impact on wind turbine operation. Any method by which these fluctuations could be observed, estimated, or predicted could provide a benefit to the wind energy industry as a whole. Based on the fundamental coupling of velocity fluctuations to pressure fluctuations in the nearly incompressible flow in the ABL, This work hypothesizes that a ground-based array of infrasonic pressure transducers could be employed to estimate the vertical wind profile over a height relevant for wind turbines. To analyze this hypothesis, experiments and field deployments were conducted. Wind tunnel experiments were performed for a thick turbulent boundary layer over a neutral or heated surface. Surface pressure and velocity probe measurements were acquired simultaneously. Two field deployments yielded surface pressure data from a 49 element array. The second deployment at the Reese Technology Center in Lubbock, TX, also included data from a …
Date: March 12, 2012
Creator: Murray, Nathan E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mission and Readiness Assessment for Fusion Nuclear Facilities (open access)

Mission and Readiness Assessment for Fusion Nuclear Facilities

Magnetic fusion development toward DEMO will most likely require a number of fusion nuclear facilities (FNF), intermediate between ITER and DEMO, to test and validate plasma and nuclear technologies and to advance the level of system integration. The FNF mission space is wide, ranging from basic materials research to net electricity demonstration, so there is correspondingly a choice among machine options, scope, and risk in planning such a step. Readiness requirements to proceed with a DEMO are examined, and two FNF options are assessed in terms of the contributions they would make to closing DEMO readiness gaps, and their readiness to themselves proceed with engineering design about ten years from now. An advanced tokamak (AT) pilot plant with superconducting coils and a mission to demonstrate net electricity generation would go a long way toward DEMO. As a next step, however, a pilot plant would entail greater risk than a copper-coil FNSF-AT with its more focussed mission and technology requirements. The stellarator path to DEMO is briefly discussed. Regardless of the choice of FNF option, an accompanying science and technology development program, also aimed at DEMO readiness, is absolutely essential.
Date: December 12, 2012
Creator: Neilson, G. H.; Brown, T. G.; Gates, D. A.; Kessel, C. E.; Menard, J. E.; Prager, S. C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SALTSTONE 3QCY11 TCLP RESULTS (open access)

SALTSTONE 3QCY11 TCLP RESULTS

A Saltstone waste form was prepared in the Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) from a Tank 50H sample and Z-Area premix material for the third quarter of calendar year 2011 (3QCY11). After the prescribed 32 day cure, samples of the saltstone were collected, and the waste form was shown to meet the South Carolina Hazardous Waste Management Regulations (SCHWMR) R.61-79.261.24 and R.61-79.268.48(a) requirements for a nonhazardous waste form with respect to RCRA metals and underlying hazardous constituents. These analyses met all quality assurance specifications of USEPA SW-846. The Saltstone Production Facility (SPF) receives waste from Tank 50H for treatment. In the third quarter of the 2011 calendar year (3QCY11), Tank 50H accepted transfers of approximately 20 kgal from the Effluent Treatment Project (ETP), approximately 236 kgal from the Actinide Removal Process/Modular Caustic Side Solvent Extraction Unit (ARP/MCU) Decontaminated Salt Solution Hold Tank (DSS-HT), and approximately 25 kgal from other sources. The Saltstone Grout Sampling plan provides the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) with the chemical and physical characterization strategy for the salt solution which is to be disposed of in the Z-Area Solid Waste Landfill (SWLF). During operation, samples were collected from Tank 50H and grout …
Date: January 12, 2012
Creator: Bannochie, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Attempted transverse impedance measurement in RHIC (open access)

Attempted transverse impedance measurement in RHIC

N/A
Date: July 12, 2012
Creator: M., Blaskiewicz & Montag, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation into Cause of Cs-137 Source Leakage (open access)

Investigation into Cause of Cs-137 Source Leakage

Reporting the findings of the investigation of the sealed source leak at BNL in Sept 2011.
Date: April 12, 2012
Creator: C., Czajkowski; Young,J, & Rovig,T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Compact Soft X-Ray Free-Electron Laser Facility Based on a Dielectric Wakefield Accelerator (open access)

A Compact Soft X-Ray Free-Electron Laser Facility Based on a Dielectric Wakefield Accelerator

X-ray free-electron lasers (FELs) are expensive instruments with the accelerator holding the largest portion of the cost of the entire facility. Using a high-energy gain dielecric wakefield accelerator (DWA) instead of the conventional accelerator may reduce the facility size and, significantly, its cost. We show that a collinear dielectric wakefield accelerator can, in principle, accelerate low charge and high peak current electron bunches to a few GeV energy with up to 100-kHz bunch repetition rate. Several such accelerators can share the same tunnel and cw superconducting lilac (operating with a few-MHz bunch repetition rate), whose sole purpose is feeding the DWAs with wake producing low-energy, high-charge electron bunches with the desired periodicity. Then, ten or more x-ray FELs can operate independently, each using its own linac. In this paper, we present an initial case study of a single-stage 850-GHz DWA based on a quartz tube with a ~100-MV/m loaded gradient sufficient to accelerate a 50-pC main electron beam to 2.4 GeV at a 100-kHz bunch repetition rate in just under 30 meters. While the accelerated electron beam has a large energy chirp, show that FEL gain can be maintained by appropriately tapering the undulator, although other schemes may be possible.
Date: September 12, 2012
Creator: Jing, C.; Schoessow, P.; Kanareykin, A.; Power, J. G.; Lindberg, R. R.; Zholents, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modular, High-Volume Fuel Cell Leak-Test Suite and Process (open access)

Modular, High-Volume Fuel Cell Leak-Test Suite and Process

Fuel cell stacks are typically hand-assembled and tested. As a result the manufacturing process is labor-intensive and time-consuming. The fluid leakage in fuel cell stacks may reduce fuel cell performance, damage fuel cell stack, or even cause fire and become a safety hazard. Leak check is a critical step in the fuel cell stack manufacturing. The fuel cell industry is in need of fuel cell leak-test processes and equipment that is automatic, robust, and high throughput. The equipment should reduce fuel cell manufacturing cost.
Date: March 12, 2012
Creator: Chen, Ru & Kaye, Ian
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Time Interval Distribution Between Neutron Counts in a 3He Proportional Counter with Detector Dead Time (open access)

On the Time Interval Distribution Between Neutron Counts in a 3He Proportional Counter with Detector Dead Time

None
Date: October 12, 2012
Creator: Walston, S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Support of Publication Costs, Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation Special Issue of Deep Sea Research II Journal (open access)

Support of Publication Costs, Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation Special Issue of Deep Sea Research II Journal

The contribution of funds from DOE supported publication costs of a special issue of Deep Sea Research arising from presentations at the First U.S. Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) Meeting held 4-6 May, 2009 to review the US implementation plan and its coordination with other monitoring activities. The special issue includes a total of 16 papers, including publications from three DOE-supported investigators (ie Sevellec, F., and A.V. Fedorov; Hu et. al., and Wan et. al.,). The special issue addresses DOE interests in understanding and simulation/modeling of abrupt climate change.
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Honchar, Amy
System: The UNT Digital Library