Language

8:1 thermal cavity problem (open access)

8:1 thermal cavity problem

We present results for the 8:1 thermal cavity problem using FIDAP on 3 meshes--each using 3 elements. A brief summary of related results is also included. This contribution comes via the rather versatile and general commercial finite element code, FIDAP. This code still offers the user a wide selection with respect to element choices, statement of governing equations, (e.g., advective form, divergence form) implicit time integrators (variable-step or fixed step, first-order or second-order), and solution techniques for both the nonlinear and linear sets of equations. We have tested quite a number of these variations on this problem; here we report on an interesting subset and will present the remainder at the conference.
Date: October 11, 2000
Creator: Gresho, P M & Sutton, S
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
100-keV Faraday cup design: materials and structure (open access)

100-keV Faraday cup design: materials and structure

A Faraday cup design for a 1 mA.cm/sup -2/ 100-keV, light-ion-beam measurement in background plasma is proposed. Features of this shielded, three-grid structure with deep target are described, and a mechanical draft is included. In the appendix, we reference and survey results of experiments reporting the number and energy range of secondary electrons and back-scattered ions originating on various metal surfaces bombarded with approximately 100-keV hydrogen and deuterium ions. Choice of target and grid materials in cup assembly follow from this survey.
Date: October 11, 1976
Creator: Jones, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
200 Area stack contamination. Interim report, August 2, 1948--October 11, 1948 (open access)

200 Area stack contamination. Interim report, August 2, 1948--October 11, 1948

In connection with the problem of eliminating contamination of the atmosphere by the exhaust from the 221 Building ventilation air stacks, sand filters were previously recommended. Construction of a sand filter in West Area is about completed and construction of a filter in East Area is well underway. This report summarizes the status, technical findings, and comments and suggestions since the writer`s last Interim Report, dated August 6, 1948, was issued.
Date: October 11, 1948
Creator: Lapple, C. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-SY-101 air lance removal lessons learned (open access)

241-SY-101 air lance removal lessons learned

An emergency task was undertaken to remove four air lances and one thermocouple (TC) tree from tank 241-SY-101 (SY-101). This resulted from video observation that these pipes were being severely bent during periodic gas release events that regularly occurred every three to four months. At the time, the gas release events were considered to be the number one safety issue within the US Department of Energy (DOE) complex. This emergency removal task was undertaken on an extremely short schedule that required all activities possible to be completed in parallel. This approach and extremely short schedule, while successful, resulted in some undesirable consequences from less than desired time for design, reviews, equipment testing, operations training, and bad weather conditions. These consequences included leakage of liquid waste from the containers to the ground, higher than expected dose rates at the container surface, difficult field operations, and unexpected pipe configuration during removal. In addition, changes to environmental regulations and severe winter weather impacted the packaging and shipping activities required the prepare the removed pipes for storage at the Central Waste Complex (CWC). The purpose of this document is to identify lessons to be learned for future activities. In context of the emergency conditions …
Date: October 11, 1994
Creator: Moore, T. L. & Titzler, P. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
300 Area treated effluent disposal facility sampling schedule (open access)

300 Area treated effluent disposal facility sampling schedule

This document is the interface between the 300 Area Liquid Effluent Process Engineering (LEPE) group and the Waste Sampling and Characterization Facility (WSCF), concerning process control samples. It contains a schedule for process control samples at the 300 Area TEDF which describes the parameters to be measured, the frequency of sampling and analysis, the sampling point, and the purpose for each parameter.
Date: October 11, 1994
Creator: Loll, C. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2006 U.S. Department of Energy Strategic Plan: Discovering the Solutions to Power and Secure America’s Future (open access)

2006 U.S. Department of Energy Strategic Plan: Discovering the Solutions to Power and Secure America’s Future

The Department of Energy Organization Act, which created DOE, was enacted in 1977 and DOE officially came into existence in October of that year. That law brought together for the first time, not only most of the government’s energy programs, but also science and technology programs and defense responsibilities that included the design, construction, and testing of nuclear weapons. Over its history, DOE has shifted its emphasis and focus as the energy and security needs of the Nation have changed. Today, DOE stands at the forefront of helping the Nation meet our energy, scientific, environmental, and national security goals. These include developing and deploying new energy technologies, reducing our dependence on foreign energy sources, protecting our nuclear weapons stockpile, and ensuring that America remains competitive in the global marketplace. To help achieve these goals, President Bush has launched two key initiatives: the American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI) and the Advanced Energy Initiative (AEI). The President launched these initiatives recognizing that science, technology, and engineering hold the answers to many of the critical challenges our world faces. These new initiatives to spur scientific innovation and technology development expand DOE’s continuing support for the competitive energy markets, both domestically and internationally, and of …
Date: October 11, 2006
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
2011 Community Earth System Model (CESM) Tutorial, August 1-5, 2011 (open access)

2011 Community Earth System Model (CESM) Tutorial, August 1-5, 2011

In fiscal year 2011, the Community Earth System Model (CESM) tutorial was taught at NCAR from 1-5 August 2011. This project hosted 79 full participants (1 accepted participant from China couldn't get a visa) selected from 180 applications. The tutorial was advertised through emails to CESM mailing lists. NCAR staff and long-term visitors (who were not eligible to attend) were also invited to 'audit' the climate and practical lectures and to work on the practical sessions on their own. 15 NCAR staff and long-term visitors took advantage of this opportunity. The majority of the students were graduate students, but several post-docs, faculty, and other research scientists also attended. Additionally, many people are using the on-line lessons and practical sessions. As of August 18, 2011, 407 people had registered to access and use the tutorial from 33 countries all over the world, but a majority from US universities. In fiscal year 2011, the Climate and Global Dynamics Division Information Systems Group (CGD/ISG) built and operated a temporary computer laboratory in a meeting room. This project was made possible through funding from the National Science Foundation Directorate of Geosciences, and the Department of Energy Office of Science.
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Hurrell, James W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
48Ti(n,xnypz ag) reactions for neutron energies up to 250 MeV (open access)

48Ti(n,xnypz ag) reactions for neutron energies up to 250 MeV

Cross section measurements were made of prompt {gamma}-ray production as a function of incident neutron energy on a {sup 48}Ti sample. Partial {gamma}-ray cross sections for transitions in {sup 45--48}Ti, {sup 44--48}Sc, {sup 42--45}Ca, {sup 41--44}K, and {sup 41--42}Ar have been determined. Energetic neutrons were delivered by the Los Alamos National Laboratory spallation neutron source located at the LANSCE/WNR facility. The prompt-reaction {gamma} rays were detected with the large-scale Compton-suppressed germanium array for neutron induced excitations (GEANIE). Neutron energies were determined by the time-of-flight technique. The {gamma}-ray excitation functions were converted to partial {gamma}-ray cross sections taking into account the dead-time correction, target thickness, detector efficiency and neutron flux (monitored with an in-line fission chamber). The data will be presented for neutron energies between 1 to 250 MeV. These results are compared with model calculations which include compound nuclear and pre-equilibrium emission.
Date: October 11, 2004
Creator: Dashdorj, D.; Garrett, P. E.; Becker, J. A.; Bernstein, L. A.; Cooper, J. R.; Devlin, M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceleration of compact toruses and fusion applications (open access)

Acceleration of compact toruses and fusion applications

The Compact Torus (Spheromak-type) is a near ideal plasma confinement configuration for acceleration. The fields are mostly generated by internal plasma currents, plasma confinement is toroidal, and the compact torus exhibits resiliency and stability in virtue of the ``rugged`` helicity invariant. Based on these considerations we are developing a coaxial rail-gun type Compact Torus Accelerator (CTA). In the CTA, the CT ring is formed between coaxial electrodes using a magnetized Marshall gun, it is quasistatically ``precompressed`` in a conical electrode section for inductive energy storage, it is accelerated in a straight-coaxial electrode section as in a conventional rail-gun, and it is focused to small size and high energy and power density in a final ``focus`` cone section. The dynamics of slow precompression and acceleration have been demonstrated experimentally in the RACE device with results in good agreement with 2-D MHD code calculations. CT plasma rings with 100 {micro}gms mass have been accelerated to 40 Kj kinetic energy at 20% efficiency with final velocity = 1 X 10{sup 8} cm/s (= 5 KeV/H{sup +}). Preliminary focus tests exhibi dynamics of radius compression, deceleration, and bouncing. Compression ratios of 2-3 have been achieved. A scaled-up 10-100 MJ CTA is predicted to achieve …
Date: October 11, 1990
Creator: Hartman, C. W.; Eddleman, J. L.; Hammer, J. H.; Logan, B. G.; McLean, H. S. & Molvik, A. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance Test Procedure for New Pumping and Instrumentation Control Skid L (open access)

Acceptance Test Procedure for New Pumping and Instrumentation Control Skid L

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) provides for the inspection and testing of the new Pumping and Instrumentation Control (PIC) skid designed as ''L''. The ATP will be performed after the construction of the PIC skid in the shop.
Date: October 11, 1999
Creator: Koch, M. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accounting of test specimens for the long-term corrosion testing (open access)

Accounting of test specimens for the long-term corrosion testing

The purpose of this TIP is to describe the procedures that will be employed for identification and con-trol of test specimens for Activity E-20-50, �Long-Term Corrosion Studies�. This TIP was written tocomply with LLNL YMP procedure 033-YMP-QP 8.0, �Identification and Control of Items, Samples,and Data.�
Date: October 11, 1995
Creator: Gdowski, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Active Cathodes for Super-High Power Density Solid Oxide Fuel Cells Through Space Charge Effects (open access)

Active Cathodes for Super-High Power Density Solid Oxide Fuel Cells Through Space Charge Effects

This report summarizes the work done during the second quarter of the project. Effort is directed in two areas: (1) The use of a novel method to achieve a given porosity level with high contiguity and thus conductivity. (2) Relate the measured conductivity to porosity and contiguity. The rationale for these experiments was to develop cathodes with high ionic conductivity, so that the effective polarization resistance will be concomitantly lowered.
Date: October 11, 2003
Creator: Virkar, Anil V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE ALGEBRA OF TAYLOR SERIES AND THE ROOTS OF A GENERAL POLYNOMIAL. (open access)

THE ALGEBRA OF TAYLOR SERIES AND THE ROOTS OF A GENERAL POLYNOMIAL.

We develop the basic elements of the algebra of Taylor series. This knowledge allows us to derive a series expression for an exact root of a general polynomial of arbitrary degree.
Date: October 11, 2002
Creator: Herrera, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis Methods for Milky Way Dark Matter Halo Detection (open access)

Analysis Methods for Milky Way Dark Matter Halo Detection

We present methods for the analysis of dark matter annihilation in the smooth halo of the Milky Way galaxy. We model the diffuse gamma-ray background using GALPROP, and model the halo using an NFW profile and the gamma-ray spectrum for WIMP pair annihilation. We plan to combine these models with the point source catalog and a simple model for the extragalactic gamma ray background. Using the downhill simplex method to converge on the maximum likelihood value, we can vary key parameters in these models and fit them to the gamma-ray data. Through the use of the Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method we can then map out the likelihood as a function of the model parameters to estimate the correlated errors on these parameters.
Date: October 11, 2007
Creator: Sander, Aaron; Winer, Brian; Hughes, Richard; U., /Ohio State; Wai, Larry; /KIPAC, Menlo Park et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of differences in the ENDL99 and ENDL2009 nuclear data libraries pertaining to 238U (open access)

Analysis of differences in the ENDL99 and ENDL2009 nuclear data libraries pertaining to 238U

None
Date: October 11, 2012
Creator: Ormand, W E; Beck, B; Thompson, I J; Dietrich, F S & Descalle, M A
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Failed and Nickel-coated 3093 Beam Clamp Components at the East Tennessee Technology Park (ettp) (open access)

Analysis of Failed and Nickel-coated 3093 Beam Clamp Components at the East Tennessee Technology Park (ettp)

The U.S. Department of Energy and its contractor, Bechtel Jacobs Company (BJC), are undertaking a major effort to clean up the former gaseous diffusion facility (K-25) located in Oak Ridge, TN. The decontamination and decommissioning activities require systematic removal of contaminated equipment and machinery followed by demolition of the buildings. As part of the cleanup activities, a beam clamp, used for horizontal life lines (HLLs) for fall protection, was discovered to be fractured during routine inspection. The beam clamp (yoke and D-ring) was a component in the HLL system purchased from Reliance Industries LLC. Specifically, the U-shaped stainless steel yoke of the beam clamp failed in a brittle mode at under less than 10% of the rated design capacity of 14,500 lb. The beam clamp had been in service for approximately 16 months. Bechtel Jacobs approached Argonne National Laboratory to assist in identifying the root cause of the failure of the beam clamp. The objectives of this study were to (1) review the prior reports and documents on the subject, (2) understand the possible failure mechanism(s) that resulted in the failed beam clamp components, (3) recommend approaches to mitigate the failure mechanism(s), and (4) evaluate the modified beam clamp assemblies. …
Date: October 11, 2010
Creator: Singh, D.; Pappacena, K.; Gaviria, J.; Burtsteva, T. & Division, Nuclear Engineering
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Raster Scanning Damage and Conditioning Experiments (open access)

Analysis of Raster Scanning Damage and Conditioning Experiments

The raster scan technique is used for large optics damage tests and laser conditioning. We show that the ''effective area'' concept enables the possibility to compare various scanning schemes and to use raster scan experiments for NIF optics damage prediction. It is shown that the hexagonal lattice of laser beam imprints yields optimal use of each shot for most of the typically used parameters. The effects of beam fluence fluctuations and pointing inaccuracies on experiments are evaluated. To analyze raster scan conditioning experiments, we introduce the concept of ''effective dose'', i.e. total dose averaged over a unit cell of the scan lattice. This allows various scanning schemes to be compared quantitatively.
Date: October 11, 2002
Creator: Feit, M D & Rubenchik, A M
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Vernier Scans during RHIC Run-13 (open access)

Analysis of Vernier Scans during RHIC Run-13

N/A
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Drees, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Analytical Modeling Method for Calculating the Current Delivery Capacity of a Thin-Film Cathode and the Stability of Localized Corrosion Under Atmospheric Environemnts (open access)

An Analytical Modeling Method for Calculating the Current Delivery Capacity of a Thin-Film Cathode and the Stability of Localized Corrosion Under Atmospheric Environemnts

Corrosion resistant materials under atmospheric conditions can suffer from localized corrosion (e.g., pitting, crevice, stress-corrosion cracking). The stability of such a localized corrosion site requires that the site (anode) must dissolve at a sufficiently high rate to maintain the critical chemistry and that it be coupled to a wetted surrounding area (cathode) that can provide a matching cathodic current. The objectives of this study were to computationally characterize the stability of such a local corrosion system and to explore the effects of physiochemical and electrochemical parameters. The overall goal of the work is to contribute to the establishment of a scientific basis for the prediction of the stabilization of localized attack. An analytical method is presented for evaluating the stability of localized corrosion of corrosion-resistant alloys under thin-layer (or atmospheric) conditions. The method requires input data that are either thermodynamic in nature or easily obtained experimentally. The maximum cathode current available depends on the cathode geometry, temperature, relative humidity, deposition density of salt (i.e., mass of salt per unit area of cathode), and interfacial electrochemical kinetics. The anode demand depends on the crevice geometry, the position of attack within the crevice, and the localized corrosion stability product. The localized corrosion …
Date: October 11, 2006
Creator: Chen, Z.Y. & Kelly, R.G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of Ab Initio and CALPHAD Thermodynamics to Mo-Ta-W Alloys (open access)

Application of Ab Initio and CALPHAD Thermodynamics to Mo-Ta-W Alloys

None
Date: October 11, 2004
Creator: Turchi, P. A.; Drchal, V.; Kudrnovsky, J.; Colinet, C.; Kaufman, L. & Liu, Z.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of pulsed plasma NO{sub x} reduction to diesel engine exhaust (open access)

Application of pulsed plasma NO{sub x} reduction to diesel engine exhaust

We have studied the effect of pulsed plasma discharges on gas mixtures simulating diesel engine exhaust by modeling and by experiment. Our modeling results have shown that the pulsed plasma can convert NO{sub x} to N{sub 2} using the nitrogen itself as a reductant. However, this process is energetically unfavorable for the plasma regime of our measurements. In our experiments we found that addition of hydrocarbons improves substantially the energy efficiency of pulsed plasma NO{sub x} reduction. Real exhaust gas contains some gaseous hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide that may prove sufficient for improving the energy efficiency of the ``right`` pulsed plasma reduction process.
Date: October 11, 1993
Creator: Wallman, P. H.; Penetrante, B. M.; Vogtlin, G. E. & Hsiao, M. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Arkansas' Anemometer Loan Program (open access)

Arkansas' Anemometer Loan Program

The measurement campaign had one year duration from 04/01/2011 to 03/31/2012 and was taken at 20m and 34m with NRG instrumentation. The data was analyzed weekly to check inconsistencies and validity and processed using Excel, Flexpro and Windographer standard Edition Version 2.04. The site analyzed is located in the Waldron, Arkansas in Scott County. It is an open site for most of the direction sectors with immediate roughness class of 1.5. It has seasonally directional winds, of which the most energetic come from the southern direction. The vertical wind profile shows moderate wind shear that varies by season as well.
Date: October 11, 2012
Creator: Vego, Fernando
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic-Based Calculations of Two-Detector Doppler-Broadening Spectra (open access)

Atomic-Based Calculations of Two-Detector Doppler-Broadening Spectra

We present a simplified approach for calculating Doppler broadening spectra based purely on atomic calculations. This approach avoids the need for detailed atomic positions, and can provide the characteristic Doppler broadening momentum spectra for any element. We demonstrate the power of this method by comparing theory and experiment for a number of elemental metals and alkali halides. In the alkali halides, the annihilation appears to be entirely with halide electrons.
Date: October 11, 2001
Creator: Asoka-Kumar, P & Howell, R
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bazaar Diplomacy: Examining Iran's Nuclear Bargaining Tactics (open access)

Bazaar Diplomacy: Examining Iran's Nuclear Bargaining Tactics

This report addresses the Bazaar diplomacy examining Iran's nuclear bargaining tactics.
Date: October 11, 2012
Creator: Lin, Y
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library