Options to upgrade the Mirror Fusion Test Facility (open access)

Options to upgrade the Mirror Fusion Test Facility

In this document we describe three options for upgrading MFTF-B, and the nomenclature used for these options is shown on the chart, MFTF-B Upgrade Options. We propose to add a 4-m-long reactor-like insert to the central cell, or to change the end plugs to the new MARS-type configuration, or both. LLNL prefers the third option, labeled MFTF-..cap alpha../sup +/T in the chart, in which both the central cell insert is added and the end plugs are modified. All options are long-pulse or steady-state DT burning experiments. Those upgrades with the insert would be constructed beginning in FY 86, with operation beginning in mid-FY 92. Confirmation of our intent to modify the end plugs would be sought in FY 88 based on positive results from MFTF-B experiments. The upgrade with only the end plug modification would not start until MFTF-B data are available. The timeline for constructing and operating the MFTF-B Upgrade included at the end of this preface is for reference while reading the text. The various modes of operation shown on the chart are described later.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Thomassen, K.I. & Doggett, J.N. (eds.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Raft River binary-cycle geothermal pilot power plant final report (open access)

Raft River binary-cycle geothermal pilot power plant final report

The design and performance of a 5-MW(e) binary-cycle pilot power plant that used a moderate-temperature hydrothermal resource, with isobutane as a working fluid, are examined. Operating problems experienced and solutions found are discussed and recommendations are made for improvements to future power plant designs. The plant and individual systems are analyzed for design specification versus actual performance figures.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Bliem, C.J. & Walrath, L.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Porosity, permeability, and their relationship in granite, basalt, and tuff (open access)

Porosity, permeability, and their relationship in granite, basalt, and tuff

This report discusses the porosity, storage, and permeability of fractured (mainly crystalline) rock types proposed as host rock for nuclear waste repositories. The emphasis is on the inter-relationships of these properties, but a number of reported measurements are included as well. The porosity of rock is shown to consist of fracture porosity and matrix porosity; techniques are described for determining the total interconnected porosity through both laboratory and field measurement. Permeability coefficient, as obtained by experiments ranging from laboratory to crustal scale, is discussed. Finally, the problem of determining the relationship between porosity and permeability is discussed. There is no simple, all encompassing relationship that describes the dependence of permeability upon porosity. However, two particular cases have been successfully analyzed: flow through a single rough fracture, and flow through isotropic porous rock. These two cases are discussed in this report.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Containment-emergency-sump performance. Technical findings related to Unresolved Safety Issue A-43. [PWR] (open access)

Containment-emergency-sump performance. Technical findings related to Unresolved Safety Issue A-43. [PWR]

This report summarizes key technical findings related to the Unresolved Safety Issue A-43, Containment Emergency Sump Performance, and provides recommendations for resolution of attendant safety issues. The key safety questions relate to: (a) effects of insulation debris on sump performance; (b) sump hydraulic performance as determined by design features, submergence, and plant induced effects, and (c) recirculation pump performance wherein air and/or particulate ingestion can occur. The technical findings presented in this report provide information relevant to the design and performance evaluation of the containment emergency sump.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Water geochemistry of the Lucero Uplift, New Mexico: geothermal investigation of low-temperature mineralized fluids (open access)

Water geochemistry of the Lucero Uplift, New Mexico: geothermal investigation of low-temperature mineralized fluids

A detailed geochemical investigation of 27 waters of the Lucero uplift, central New Mexico, was performed to determine if the fluids originate from a high-temperature geothermal system along the Rio Grande rift. Two types of mineralized water issue from the Lucero region: a relatively saline (high-Cl, high-SO/sub 4/) type and a relatively dilute (low-Cl, high-SO/sub 4/) type. Emergence temperatures of both types range from 12 to 26/sup 0/C. Chemical data and thermodynamic and geothermometer calculations all indicate that both water types are in equilibrium with carbonate and evaporite minerals found in local Colorado Plateau rocks at surface temperatures or slightly higher. Stable isotope data do not indicate high-temperature rock-water interaction. Although evidence is seen for mixing between mineralized waters and dilute surface waters, no evidence for mixing of a deep hot fluid and surface waters is seen. Dilute mineral waters, which issue from a large area of Chinle Formation on the west side of the Lucero uplift, may be useful for low-temperature geothermal applications with appropriate design of equipment. Saline mineral waters, which leak from a zone of faulted and folded rocks along the Comanche fault zone, do not appear to have much, if any, geothermal potential due to their …
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Goff, F.; McCormick, T.; Gardner, J.N.; Trujillo, P.E.; Counce, D.; Vidale, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of critical temperature as a function of field (open access)

Measurement of critical temperature as a function of field

The critical temperature has been measured for various magnet conductors as a function of the perpendicular applied magnetic field. The isothermal environment was provided by a variable temperature cryostat which fits into the bore of a 10.0 tesla solenoid. The temperature gradient across the sample volume was measured to be less than 25 millikelvins. The superconducting the normal state transition was measured resistively, using sample current densities from 0.01 to 2 A/cm/sup 2/. The maximum applied magnetic field was 10.0 T and varied less than 0.5% in the sample volume. The critical transport current range of the samples measured was from tens to thousands of amperes in the presence of a 10.0 T perpendicular magnetic field at 4.2K.
Date: April 23, 1983
Creator: McInturff, A.D.; Ishibashi, K. & Heard, G.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford beta-gamma personnel dosimeter prototypes and evaluation (open access)

Hanford beta-gamma personnel dosimeter prototypes and evaluation

Upgraded and modified Hanford dosimeter prototypes were evaluated for possible use at Hanford as a primary beta-gamma dosimeter. All prototypes were compatible with the current dosimeter card and holder design, as well as processing with the automated Hanford readers. Shallow- and deep-dose response was determined for selected prototypes using several beta sources, K-fluorescent x rays and filtered x-ray techniques. All prototypes included a neutron sensitive chip. A progressive evaluation of the performance of each of the upgrades to the current dosimeter is described. In general, the performance of the current dosimeter can be upgraded using individual chip sensitivity factors to improve precision and an improved algorithm to minimize bias. The performance of this dosimeter would be adequate to pass all categories of the ANSI N13.11 performance criteria for dosimeter procesors, provided calibration techniques compatible with irradiations adopted in the standard were conducted. The existing neutron capability of the dosimeter could be retained. Better dosimeter performance to beta-gamma radiation can be achieved by modifying the Hanford dosimeter so that four of the five chip positions are devoted to calculating these doses instead of the currently used two chip positions. A neutron sensitive chip was used in the 5th chip position, but …
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Fix, J.J.; Holbrook, K.L. & Soldat, K.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annealing studies of amorphous alloys (open access)

Annealing studies of amorphous alloys

Amorphous films of the alloys Ni-Nb, Ni-Mo, Mo-Si, and W-Si were sputter deposited on single-crystal semiconductor substrates. One-hour crystallization temperatures of the films were determined to within +-25/sup 0/C by annealing and x-ray diffraction measurements. Interdiffusion between Au or Cu overlayers and the amorphous films were studied by annealing combined with Auger Electron Spectroscopy (AES) profiling, and by Rutherford Backscatter (RBS) analysis. Supplementary measurements used to study structural relaxation and crystallization included resistivity as a function of temperature; DTA and DSC; and electron microscopy.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Wiley, J.D.; Perepezko, J.H. & Nordman, J.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preparation of Residual Gravity Maps for the Southern Cascade Mountains, Washington Using Fourier Analysis (open access)

Preparation of Residual Gravity Maps for the Southern Cascade Mountains, Washington Using Fourier Analysis

A continuation of gravity work in the Cascade Mountains of Washington is presented. Baseline gravity data were collected for use in geothermal resource evaluation. The purpose of this report is to describe a Fourier analysis method for separating residual and regional gravity anomalies from a complete Bouguer gravity anomaly field. The technique has been applied to gravity data from the Southern Cascade Mountains, Washington. Residual gravity anomaly maps at a scale of 1:250,000 are presented for various regional wavelength filters, and a power spectrum of the frequency components in the South Cascade gravity data is displayed. No attempt is made to interpret the results of this study in terms of geologic structures.
Date: April 1983
Creator: Dishberger, D. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of GA thermochemical water-splitting process for the Mirror Advanced Reactor System (open access)

Design of GA thermochemical water-splitting process for the Mirror Advanced Reactor System

GA interfaced the sulfur-iodine thermochemical water-splitting cycle to the Mirror Advanced Reactor System (MARS). The results of this effort follow as one section and part of a second section to be included in the MARS final report. This section describes the process and its interface to the reactor. The capital and operating costs for the hydrogen plant are described.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Brown, L.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
1982 Environmental Monitoring Report Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico (open access)

1982 Environmental Monitoring Report Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico

Because radionuclides are potentially released from its research activities, SNL has a continuing environmental monitoring program which analyzes for cesium-137, tritium, uranium, alpha emitter, and beta emitters in water, soil, air, and vegetation. Measured radiation levels in public areas were consistent with local background in 1982. The Albuquerque population received an estimated 0.170 person-rem from airborne radioactive releases, whereas it received greater than 50,400 person-rem from naturally occurring radionuclides.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Millard, Gloria Chavez; Gray, Charles E.; Simmons, Theodore N. & O'Neal, Bill L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fast-ion orbit effects during ion-cyclotron range of frequency experiments on the Princeton large torus (open access)

Fast-ion orbit effects during ion-cyclotron range of frequency experiments on the Princeton large torus

The angular dependence of the flux of fast neutrals was measured in conjunction with Ion Cyclotron Range of Frequency (ICRF) experiments on the Princeton Large Torus (PLT). We found a regime where the energetic tail of the charge-exchange neutral flux was strongly anisotropic. Unexpectedly, however, the flux from co-moving ions was peaked at an angle intermediate between perpendicular and parallel. This could be the consequence of a preferential filling of that class of banana orbits whose tips are localized within the ion cyclotron resonance layer.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Kaita, R.; Goldston, R. J.; Beiersdorfer, P.; Herndon, D. L.; Hosea, J.; Hwang, D. Q. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reactor-safety research programs. Quarterly report, October-December 1982. Volume 4 (open access)

Reactor-safety research programs. Quarterly report, October-December 1982. Volume 4

Evaluations of nondestructive examination (NDE) techniques and instrumentation are reported; areas of investigation include demonstrating the feasibility of determining the strength of structural graphite, evaluating the feasibility of detecting and analyzing flaw growth in reactor pressure boundary systems, examining NDE reliability and probabilistic fracture mechanics, and assessing the integrity of pressurized-water-reactor steam-generator tubes where service-induced degradation has been indicated. Experimental data and analytical models are being provided to aid in decision making regarding pipe-to-pipe impacts following postulated breaks in high-energy fluid system piping. Core thermal models being developed to provide better digital codes to compute the bahavior of full-scale reactor systems under postulated accident conditions. Fuel assemblies and analytical support are being provided for experimental programs at other facilities.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Edler, S.K. (ed.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal progress monitor. Progress report No. 7 (open access)

Geothermal progress monitor. Progress report No. 7

A state-by-state review of major geothermal-development activities during 1982 is presented. It also inlcudes a summary of recent drilling and exploration efforts and the results of the 1982 leasing program. Two complementary sections feature an update of geothermal direct-use applications and a site-by-site summary of US geothermal electric-power development.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
FED-R: a fusion engineering device utilizing resistive magnets (open access)

FED-R: a fusion engineering device utilizing resistive magnets

The principal purpose of the FED-R tokamak facility is to provide a substantial quasi-steady flux of fusion neutrons irradiating a large test area in order to carry out thermal, neutronic, and radiation effects testing of experimental blanket assemblies having a variety of configurations, compositions, and purposes. The design of the FED-R device also suggests potential for an upgrade that could be employed as a full-scale demonstration reactor for some specific fusion-neutron application when required.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Jassby, D. L. & Kalsi, S. S. (eds.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Regulatory cost-risk study (open access)

Regulatory cost-risk study

This study is intended to provide some quantitative perspective by selecting certain examples of criteria for which estimates of risks and costs can be obtained, and the balance of the various risks, (i.e., internal versus external risks), can be put into perspective. 35 refs., 39 tabs. (JDB)
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary report on optimized designs for shipping casks containing 2-, 3-, 5-, 7-, or 10-year-old PWR spent fuel (open access)

Summary report on optimized designs for shipping casks containing 2-, 3-, 5-, 7-, or 10-year-old PWR spent fuel

The purpose of this study was to develop new conceptual designs for large Pb, Fe, and U-shielded spent fuel casks which have been optimized for the shipment of 2-, 3-, 5-, 7-, or 10-year-old PWR spent fuel assemblies. Design specifications for about 100 cases of potential interest are presented along with a brief 20-page synopsis of the associated analyses. Optimized shielding requirements are presented for each type of cask as a function of the age of the spent fuel and the number of assemblies in the cask. With respect to criticality, a new type of inherently subcritical fuel assembly separator is described which uses hollow, borated stainless-steel tubes in the wall-forming structure between the assemblies. Steady-state and transient heat transfer analyses for casks under nominal and accident conditions were performed using the SCOPE code for Shipping Cask Optimization and Parametric Evaluation. Based on criticality, shielding, and heat transfer considerations, it appears that optimized cask designs could be developed to carry 15 to 18 five-year-old PWR fuel assemblies or as many as 18 to 21 ten-year-old PWR fuel assemblies. 4 figures, 4 tables.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Bucholz, J.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Closed expressions for the magnetic field of toroidal multipole configurations (open access)

Closed expressions for the magnetic field of toroidal multipole configurations

Closed analytic expressions for the vector potential and the magnetic field for the lower order toroidal multipoles are presented. These expressions can be applied in the study of tokamak plasma cross section shaping. An example of such an application is included. These expressions also allow the vacuum fields required for plasma equilibrium to be specified in a general form independent of a particular coil configuration.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Sheffield, G.V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biology and Medicine Division annual report, 1981-1982. [Lead abstract] (open access)

Biology and Medicine Division annual report, 1981-1982. [Lead abstract]

Separate abstracts were prepared for the 61 research reports in the 1981-1982 annual report for the Biology and Medicine Division of the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. Programs reviewed include research medicine, Donner Pavilion, environmental physiology, radiation biophysics and structural biophysics. (KRM)
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
FED baseline engineering studies report (open access)

FED baseline engineering studies report

Studies were carried out on the FED Baseline to improve design definition, establish feasibility, and reduce cost. Emphasis was placed on cost reduction, but significant feasibility concerns existed in several areas, and better design definition was required to establish feasibility and provide a better basis for cost estimates. Design definition and feasibility studies included the development of a labyrinth shield ring concept to prevent radiation streaming between the torus spool and the TF coil cryostat. The labyrinth shield concept which was developed reduced radiation streaming sufficiently to permit contact maintenance of the inboard EF coils. Various concepts of preventing arcing between adjacent shield sectors were also explored. It was concluded that installation of copper straps with molybdenum thermal radiation shields would provide the most reliable means of preventing arcing. Other design studies included torus spool electrical/structural concepts, test module shielding, torus seismic response, poloidal conditions in the magnets, disruption characteristics, and eddy current effects. These additional studies had no significant impact on cost but did confirm the feasibility of the basic FED Baseline concept.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Sager, P.H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impact of Improved Building Thermal Efficiency on Residential Energy Demand (open access)

Impact of Improved Building Thermal Efficiency on Residential Energy Demand

The impact of improved building shell thermal efficiency on residential energy demand is explored in a theoretical framework. The important economic literature on estimating the price elasticity of residential energy demand is reviewed. The specification of the residential energy demand model is presented. The data used are described. The empirical estimation of the residential energy demand model is described. (MHR)
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Adams, R. C. & Rockwood, A. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improved silica geothermometer for low temperature geothermal resource assessment. Monthly progress report, March-April 1983 (open access)

Improved silica geothermometer for low temperature geothermal resource assessment. Monthly progress report, March-April 1983

Progress is reported on the water chemistry data base and water sampling. (MHR)
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Publications in biomedical and environmental sciences programs, 1982 (open access)

Publications in biomedical and environmental sciences programs, 1982

This bibliography contains 725 references to articles in journals, books, and reports published in the subject area of biomedical and environmental sciences during 1982. There are 553 references to articles published in journals and books and 172 references to reports. The citations appear once ordered by the first author's division or by the performing division. Staff members in the Biomedical and Environmental Sciences divisions have other publications not included in this bibliography; for example, theses, book reviews, abstracts published in journals or symposia proceedings, pending journal publications and reports such as monthly, bimonthly, and quarterly progress reports, contractor reports, and reports for internal distribution. This document is sorted by the division, and then alphabetically by author. The sorting by divisions separates the references by subject area in a simple way. The divisions are represented alphabetically. Indexes are provided by author, title, and journal reference. Reprints of articles referenced in this bibliography can be obtained from the author or the author's division.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Moody, J.B. (comp.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of CRBR Design-Basis Events With Those of Foreign LMFBR Plants (open access)

Comparison of CRBR Design-Basis Events With Those of Foreign LMFBR Plants

As part of the Construction Permit (CP) review of the Clinch River Breeder Reactor Plant (CRBR), the Brookhaven National Laboratory was asked to compare the Design Basis Accidents that are considered in CRBR Preliminary Safety Analysis Report with those of the foreign contemporary plants (PHENIX, SUPER-PHENIX, SNR-300, PFR, and MONJU). A brief introductory review of any special or unusual characteristics of these plants is given. This is followed by discussions of the design basis accidents and their acceptance criteria. In spite of some discrepancies due either to semantics or to licensing decisions, there appears to be a considerable degree of unanimity in the selection (definition) of DBAs in all of these plants.
Date: April 1, 1983
Creator: Agrawal, A. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library