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Characterization of Tank 17 Residual Waste (open access)

Characterization of Tank 17 Residual Waste

Plans are to close Tank 17, a type IV waste tank in the F-area Tank Farm, by filling it with pumpable backfills. Most of the waste was removed from the tank in the late 1980s, and the remainder of the waste was removed in a short spray washing campaign that began on 11 April 1997. More details on the planned closure can be found in the Closure Plan for the High-Level Waste (HLW) Tanks and the specific closure module for Tank 17. To show that closure of the tank is environmentally sound, a performance evaluation has been performed for Tank 17. The performance evaluation projected the concentration of contaminants at various locations and times after closure. This report documents the basis for the inventories of contaminants that were used in the Tank 17 performance evaluation.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: D'Entremont, P. & Thomas Caldwell, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford strong motion accelerometer network: A summary of the first year of operation (open access)

Hanford strong motion accelerometer network: A summary of the first year of operation

The Hanford Seismic Monitoring Network consists of two designs of equipment and sites: seismometer sites and strong motion accelerometer (SMA) sites. Seismometer sites are designed to locate earthquakes on and near the Hanford Site and determine their magnitude and hypocenter location. The US Department of Energy (DOE) Order 5480.28, Natural Phenomena Hazards (DOE 1993) requires that facilities or sites that have structures or components in Performance Category 2 with hazardous material, and all Performance Category 3 and 4 facilities shall have instrumentation or other means to detect and record the occurrence and severity of seismic events. In order to comply with DOE Order 5480.28, the Hanford Seismic Monitoring Network seismometer sites needed to be complemented with strong motion accelerometers to record the ground motion at specific sites. The combined seismometer sites and strong motion accelerometer sites provide the Hanford Site with earthquake information to comply with DOE Order 5480.28. The data from these instruments will be used by the PHMC staff to assess the damage to facilities following a significant earthquake.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Conrads, T. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
[News Clip: Volunteerism] captions transcript

[News Clip: Volunteerism]

Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story. This story aired at 10:00 P.M.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: KXAS-TV (Television station : Fort Worth, Tex.)
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library
[News Clip: Court Filing] captions transcript

[News Clip: Court Filing]

Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story. This story aired at 5:00 P.M.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: KXAS-TV (Television station : Fort Worth, Tex.)
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library
[News Clip: Big Tex] captions transcript

[News Clip: Big Tex]

Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story. This story aired at 6:00 P.M.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: KXAS-TV (Television station : Fort Worth, Tex.)
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 278, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997 (open access)

The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 278, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997

Daily newspaper from Baytown, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Dobbs, Gary
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
A Study of Betatron and Momentum Collimators in RHIC (open access)

A Study of Betatron and Momentum Collimators in RHIC

None
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Trbojevic, D.; Stevens, A. J. & Harrison, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pollution prevention-waste minimization program 1998 fiscal year work plan -- WBS 1.11.2.1 (open access)

Pollution prevention-waste minimization program 1998 fiscal year work plan -- WBS 1.11.2.1

Pollution Prevention/Waste Minimization (P2/WMin) is the Department of Energy`s preferred approach to environmental management. The P2/WMin mission is to eliminate or minimize waste generation, pollutant releases to the environment, use of toxic substances, and to conserve resources by implementing cost-effective pollution prevention technologies, practices, and polices. Technical objectives are to: Coordinate the Hanford Site Pollution Prevention and Waste Minimization Program in support of Fluor Daniel Hanford (FDH) and the Department of Energy, Richland Operations office in the development and implementation of the Sitewide Program; Develop site-specific guidance for implementing P2 activities established by the US Department of Energy Headquarters in the 1996 P2 Program Plan and for ensuring consistent generator programs; Provide leadership to promote a Sitewide program to reduce both the volume and toxicity of radioactive, mixed, hazardous and sanitary waste types, to promote recycling, and resource conservation to reduce future risks and costs associated with managing wastes and pollutants; Maintain a program that complies with federal, state and DOE directives; Compile reports on Site P2 progress, including compliance reporting; Establish site-specific goals to minimize the generation of wastes and pollutants, including hazardous, radioactive, mixed, and sanitary from site operations; Establish performance measures to track P2/WMin progress against established …
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Merry, D. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Altus Times (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 98, No. 159, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997 (open access)

Altus Times (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 98, No. 159, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997

Daily newspaper from Altus, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Cole, Carol
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 107, No. 152, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997 (open access)

Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 107, No. 152, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997

Daily newspaper from Chickasha, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Bush, Kent
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 107, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997 (open access)

The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 107, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997

Weekly newspaper from Alvin, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Schwind, Jim & Dodson, Doug
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
The Town Tattler (Electra, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 39, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997 (open access)

The Town Tattler (Electra, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 39, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997

Weekly newspaper from Electra, Texas that includes local and regional news along with advertising.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 7, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997 (open access)

Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 7, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997

Daily newspaper from Sapulpa, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Diehl, Don
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Non-equilibrium many body dynamics (open access)

Non-equilibrium many body dynamics

This Riken BNL Research Center Symposium on Non-Equilibrium Many Body Physics was held on September 23-25, 1997 as part of the official opening ceremony of the Center at Brookhaven National Lab. A major objective of theoretical work at the center is to elaborate on the full spectrum of strong interaction physics based on QCD, including the physics of confinement and chiral symmetry breaking, the parton structure of hadrons and nuclei, and the phenomenology of ultra-relativistic nuclear collisions related to the up-coming experiments at RHIC. The opportunities and challenges of nuclear and particle physics in this area naturally involve aspects of the many body problem common to many other fields. The aim of this symposium was to find common theoretical threads in the area of non-equilibrium physics and modern transport theories. The program consisted of invited talks on a variety topics from the fields of atomic, condensed matter, plasma, astrophysics, cosmology, and chemistry, in addition to nuclear and particle physics. Separate abstracts have been indexed into the database for contributions to this workshop.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Creutz, M. & Gyulassy, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Explanation of significant differences for the TNX groundwater operable unit (open access)

Explanation of significant differences for the TNX groundwater operable unit

This Explanation of Significant Differences (ESD) is being issued by the Department of Energy (DOE), the lead agency for the Savannah River Site (SRS), with concurrence by the Environmental Protection Agency-Region IV (EPA) and South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) to announce changes in the interim remediation strategy selected for the TNX Groundwater Operable Unit. The TNX Area is located adjacent to the Savannah River in the southwestern portion of SRS. The remedy selected in the Interim Record of Decision (IROD) to achieve the interim action goals was the Hybrid Groundwater Corrective Action (HGCA). The HGCA consisted of a recirculation well system and an air stripper with a series of groundwater extraction wells. The original remediation strategy needs to be modified because the recirculation well system was determined to be ineffective in this area due to geological factors and the nature of the contamination.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Palmer, E. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Survey of plutonium and uranium atom ratios and activity levels in Mortandad Canyon (open access)

Survey of plutonium and uranium atom ratios and activity levels in Mortandad Canyon

For more than three decades Mortandad Canyon has been the primary release area of treated liquid radioactive waste from the Los Alamos National Laboratory (Laboratory). In this survey, six water samples and seven stream sediment samples collected in Mortandad Canyon were analyzed by thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS) to determine the plutonium and uranium activity levels and atom ratios. Be measuring the {sup 240}Pu/{sup 239}Pu atom ratios, the Laboratory plutonium component was evaluated relative to that from global fallout. Measurements of the relative abundance of {sup 235}U and {sup 236}U were also used to identify non-natural components. The survey results indicate the Laboratory plutonium and uranium concentrations in waters and sediments decrease relatively rapidly with distance downstream from the major industrial sources. Plutonium concentrations in shallow alluvial groundwater decrease by approximately 1000 fold along a 3000 ft distance. At the Laboratory downstream boundary, total plutonium and uranium concentrations were generally within regional background ranges previously reported. Laboratory derived plutonium is readily distinguished from global fallout in on-site waters and sediments. The isotopic ratio data indicates off-site migration of trace levels of Laboratory plutonium in stream sediments to distances approximately two miles downstream of the Laboratory boundary.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Gallaher, B. M.; Benjamin, T. M.; Rokop, D. J. & Stoker, A. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
US/Russian MPC{ampersand}A program at the VNIITF Institute, Chelyabinsk 70 (open access)

US/Russian MPC{ampersand}A program at the VNIITF Institute, Chelyabinsk 70

The All Russian Institute of Technical Physics (VNIITF) is one of the major sites in the nuclear weapons complex in Russia. The site contains a number of research facilities which use nuclear material as well as assembly, disassembly, and testing of prototypes (pilot samples) of nuclear weapons. Chelyabinsk-70 (C-70) also has ties to the major nuclear materials production facilities in the Urals region of Russia. Under the U.S./Russian Materials Protection Control and Accounting (MPC&A) cooperative program, enhanced safeguards systems are being implemented, initially at a reactor test area that contains two pulse reactors and a nuclear material storage facility. Current year projects include site-wide improvements and next year, expansion of work into other facilities at the site. C-70 has developed an extensive computerized system that integrates the physical security alarm station with elements of the nuclear material control system. Under the MPC&A program, the existing systems have been augmented with Russian and US technologies. Additional facilities were added in 1997 to broaden the impact of the MPC&A program at the site. The integrated MPC&A system will be demonstrated to US and Russian audiences when completed in the spring, 1998. This paper describes the on-going activities and describe the cooperative effort …
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Teryohin, V.; Tsygankov, G. & Churikov, Y,
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Tanks Initiative mission analysis report (open access)

Hanford Tanks Initiative mission analysis report

This mission analysis report for the Hanford Tanks Initiative (HTI) supports the Hanford Site`s Single-Shell Tank (SST) Waste Retrieval Program in its commitment to remove waste from the SSTs for treatment and final closure of the tanks. The results of the HTI will support the US Department of Energy`s (DOE) privatization of retrieval efforts. This report addresses the HTI problem statement: Alternative technologies to past practice sluicing (PPS) have not yet been demonstrated to remove the hard heel from a sluiced tank or to remove waste from a leaking SST. Nor have performance-based criteria for cleanout and closure been demonstrated to the degree necessary to validate them as technically and economically achievable. This report also defines the mission statement and mission boundaries; the known interfaces, both programmatic and project; the mission level requirements; the test and evaluation methodology; and measures of success.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Schaus, P.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
FY 1997 Hanford telecommunication and informations system user profile, milestone IRM-097-003 (open access)

FY 1997 Hanford telecommunication and informations system user profile, milestone IRM-097-003

This document reports survey data collected from the U.S. Department of Energy, Richland Operations Office (DOE-RL), Project Hanford Management Contract (PHMC) companies, and the PHMC enterprise companies for purposes of characterizing the Hanford Local Area Network (HLAN) user profile. Telephone, radio, and pager data are also provided. The data reveal that job tasks of the 8,500 Hanford Site workers who use the HLAN are highly, if not completely, computer dependent. Employees use their computers as their pens and paper, calculators, drafting tables and communication devices. Fifty eight percent of the survey respondents predict 90 to 100% loss in productivity if they had no access to a computer. Additionally, 30% of the users felt they would have a 50 to 80% loss in productivity without computers; and more than 68 % use their computers between 4 and 8 hours per day. The profile also shows th at the software packages used most heavily are cc:Mail` the Windows version, Hanford Information, WordPerfece, Site Forms and Look-up. Use of Windows-based products is very high. Regarding the productivity tools that are seldom used, 49 % of the respondents say they ``never use`` the Hanford Help and Hints (HUH). The use of the external intemet …
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Witherspoon, T.T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intercampus Institute for Research at Particle Accelerators. Final Report, March 15, 1992--September 30, 1995 (open access)

Intercampus Institute for Research at Particle Accelerators. Final Report, March 15, 1992--September 30, 1995

This is the final report to the DOE for the Intercampus Institute for Research at Particle Accelerators, or IIRPA, at least for the San Diego branch. Over the years that DOE supported IIRPA, we were told that yearly reports (and the final report) were not necessary because the previous year`s summary in our annual request for funds constituted those reports. Therefore, it has taken some effort, and a corresponding long time, to put something together, after the fact. The IIRPA was born as an idea that arose during discussions at the 1974 PEP summer study, and began to be funded by DoE during the early stages of PEP detector design and construction. The intent was for the members of the Institute to be responsible for the PEP-9 Facility; all of the PEP experiments were supposed to be facilities, rather than just experimental setups for a particular group or research goal. IIRPA was approved as a Multicampus Research Unit (MRU) in 1977 by the University of California, and it was active on the UCD, UCSB and UCSD campuses for 10 years. This report concentrates on the period of time when the Directorship of IIRPA was once again at the San Diego …
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Attrition Resistant Iron-Based Fischer-Tropsch Catalysts. (open access)

Attrition Resistant Iron-Based Fischer-Tropsch Catalysts.

The Fischer-Tropsch (F-T) reaction provides a way of converting coal-derived synthesis gas (CO and H{sub 2}) to liquid fuels. Since the reaction is highly exothermic, one of the major problems in control of the reaction is heat removal. Recent work has shown that the use of slurry bubble column reactors (SBCRs) can largely solve this problem. Iron-based (Fe) catalysts are preferred catalysts for F-T when using low CO/H{sub 2} ratio synthesis gases derived from modern coal gasifiers. This is because in addition to reasonable F-T activity, the F-T catalysts also possess high water gas shift (WGS) activity. However, a serious problem with the use of Fe catalysts in a SBCR is their tendency to undergo attrition. This can cause fouling/plugging of downstream filters and equipment, making the separation of catalyst from the oil/wax product very difficult if not impossible, and results in a steady loss of catalyst from the reactor. The objectives of this research are to develop a better understanding of the parameters affecting attrition resistance of Fe F-T catalysts suitable for use in SBCRs and to incorporate this understanding into the design of novel Fe catalysts having superior attrition resistance. Catalyst preparations will be based on the use …
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Jothimurugesan, K.; Goodwin, J. S.; Spivey, J. J. & Gangwal, S. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Density of simulated americium/curium melter feed solution (open access)

Density of simulated americium/curium melter feed solution

Vitrification will be used to stabilize an americium/curium (Am/Cm) solution presently stored in F-Canyon for eventual transport to Oak Ridge National Laboratory and use in heavy isotope production programs. Prior to vitrification, a series of in-tank oxalate precipitation and nitric/oxalic acid washes will be used to separate these elements and lanthanide fission products from the bulk of the uranium and metal impurities present in the solution. Following nitric acid dissolution and oxalate destruction, the solution will be denitrated and evaporated to a dissolved solids concentration of approximately 100 g/l (on an oxide basis). During the Am/Cm vitrification, an airlift will be used to supply the concentrated feed solution to a constant head tank which drains through a filter and an in-line orifice to the melter. Since the delivery system is sensitive to the physical properties of the feed, a simulated solution was prepared and used to measure the density as a function of temperature between 20 to 70{degrees} C. The measured density decreased linearly at a rate of 0.0007 g/cm3/{degree} C from an average value of 1.2326 g/cm{sup 3} at 20{degrees} C to an average value of 1.1973g/cm{sup 3} at 70{degrees} C.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Rudisill, T.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Strategy for analysis of coatings and subsurface sludge recovered during hot cell examinations of N Reactor elements from Hanford K Basins (open access)

Strategy for analysis of coatings and subsurface sludge recovered during hot cell examinations of N Reactor elements from Hanford K Basins

Subsurface sludge and/or surface coating material have been collected for four N Reactor fuel elements from K West Basin and one element from K East Basin. It is proposed that examinations of the fairly small volumes of recovered material proceed in order to identify the constituents and their potential impacts on fuel and sludge processing. Lists of potential examination techniques and material allocations are given in this report.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: Makenas, B. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Pony Express (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 1, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997 (open access)

The Pony Express (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 1, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1997

Newspaper from Panola College in Carthage, Texas that includes news of interest to the college community along with advertising.
Date: September 22, 1997
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History