Studies of Plasma Transport (open access)

Studies of Plasma Transport

This report discusses the charge-coupled device camera and other plasma diagnostic equipment used to measure plasma density and other plasma properties. (LSP)
Date: July 22, 1991
Creator: Malmberg, J. H.; O'Neil, T. M. & Driscoll, C. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inclusive large mass muon pair production in ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions for colliding beams (open access)

Inclusive large mass muon pair production in ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions for colliding beams

For colliding beams of several species of ions we compare thermal to perturbative quantum chromodynamic contributions for inclusive large mass muon pair production by using a hydrodynamic model to estimate the temperatures of the quark-gluon plasma produced by each species. The production of high energy dimuons with M {approx equal}-4 GeV, will be favored energetically by the quark-gluon plasma. 10 refs., 4 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: July 22, 1988
Creator: Roberts, L.E. (Lincoln Univ., PA (United States). Dept. of Physics Argonne National Lab., IL (United States). High Energy Physics Div. Institute for Scientific Studies, Wheaton, IL (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of pressure transient propagation in pressurized water reactor feedwater lines (open access)

Investigation of pressure transient propagation in pressurized water reactor feedwater lines

Results are reported of a study for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to provide a general understanding of pressure transient (water hammer) propagation in pressurized water reactor (PWR) steam generator feedwater piping systems. A typical feedwater network is defined, and pressure transient initiation is discussed, as well as the plausible pulse shapes reported. The analysis is performed by using the computer codes PTA and WHAM. Forces are calculated at elbows and valves by using momentum principles. The effects of pipe yielding, pipe wall friction, and elbow and value losses are included. Pipe yielding and elbow/valve effects are found to be important, and pressure magnitudes and forces are substantially reduced when these effects are included in the analysis. Typical pressure and force time histories are also given.
Date: July 22, 1977
Creator: Sutton, S. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Produce More Oil and Gas via eBusiness Data Sharing (open access)

Produce More Oil and Gas via eBusiness Data Sharing

GWPC, DOGGR, and other state agencies propose to build eBusiness applications based on a .NET front-end user interface for the DOE's Energy 100 Award-winning Risk Based Data Management System (RBDMS) data source and XML Web services. This project will slash the costs of regulatory compliance by automating routine regulatory reporting and permit notice review and by making it easier to exchange data with the oil and gas industry--especially small, independent operators. Such operators, who often do not have sophisticated in-house databases, will be able to use a subset of the same RBDMS tools available to the agencies on the desktop to file permit notices and production reports online. Once the data passes automated quality control checks, the application will upload the data into the agency's RBDMS data source. The operators also will have access to state agency datasets to focus exploration efforts and to perform production forecasting, economic evaluations, and risk assessments. With the ability to identify economically feasible oil and gas prospects, including unconventional plays, over the Internet, operators will minimize travel and other costs. Because GWPC will coordinate these data sharing efforts with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), this project will improve access to public lands and …
Date: July 22, 2005
Creator: Jehn, Paul; Stettner, Mike & Grunewald, Ben
System: The UNT Digital Library
A design chart for long vacuum pipes and shells (open access)

A design chart for long vacuum pipes and shells

This paper presents a design chart to aid designers in the selection of a wall thickness for long cylindrical shells having atmospheric pressure outside the shell and a pressure less than atmospheric inside the shell. The chart indicates a conservative value for the minimum wall thickness for a given shell diameter and material when the shell is completely evacuated.
Date: July 22, 1986
Creator: Krempetz, K.; Grimson, J. & Kelly, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental investigation of Duct/ESP phenomena: 1. 7 MW pilot parametric testing results (open access)

Fundamental investigation of Duct/ESP phenomena: 1. 7 MW pilot parametric testing results

Radian Corporation was contracted to investigate duct injection and electrostatic precipitator phenomena in a 1.7-MW pilot plant constructed for this test program. This study was an attempt to resolve previous problems and to answer remaining questions with the technology using an approach which concentrated on the fundamental mechanisms of the process. The goal of the study was to obtain a better understanding of the basic physical and chemical phenomena that control: (1) the desulfurization of flue gas by calcium-based reagent, and (2) the coupling of the duct injection process to an existing ESP particulate collection device. (VC)
Date: July 22, 1991
Creator: McGuire, L. M. & Brown, C. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Power to detect normal mixtures: Simulation results (open access)

Power to detect normal mixtures: Simulation results

Twenty tests for normality were compared for the purpose of detecting mixtures of two normal components with unequal means but equal variance. The purpose of this study was to determine the power of tests specifically designed to detect mixtures, i.e., the likelihood ratio and Engelman-Hartigan tests, relative to other tests for normality. We considered the entire range of mixing proportions [pi], 0 < [pi] < 1. For mixtures that are nearly symmetric (0.35 < [pi] < 0.65) the Engelman-Hartigan test was the most powerful. When [pi] > 0.85 or [pi] < 0.15, [radical]b[sub 1] was among the best tests. For intermediate mixing proportions, the likelihood ratio test was best. For situations in which the preferred test had power 50% or more, the power of the likelihood ratio test was also above 50% and within 15 percentage points of the preferred test.
Date: July 22, 1992
Creator: Thode, H.C. Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fact sheet for the Hawaii Geothermal Project (HGP) (open access)

Fact sheet for the Hawaii Geothermal Project (HGP)

This fact sheet for distribution at the flash and flow test of HGP-A, July 22, 1976 contains a temperature-depth plot, a brief chronology, and a budget summary. (MHR)
Date: July 22, 1976
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Processing Department Monthly Report: June 1963 (open access)

Chemical Processing Department Monthly Report: June 1963

This report, from the Chemical Processing Department at HAPO for June 1963, discusses the following: Production operation; Purex and Redox operation; Finished products operation; maintenance; Financial operations, facilities engineering; research; and employee relations; weapons manufacturing operation; and power and crafts operation.
Date: July 22, 1963
Creator: Hanford Atomic Products Operation. Chemical Processing Department.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Power to detect normal mixtures: Simulation results (open access)

Power to detect normal mixtures: Simulation results

Twenty tests for normality were compared for the purpose of detecting mixtures of two normal components with unequal means but equal variance. The purpose of this study was to determine the power of tests specifically designed to detect mixtures, i.e., the likelihood ratio and Engelman-Hartigan tests, relative to other tests for normality. We considered the entire range of mixing proportions {pi}, 0 < {pi} < 1. For mixtures that are nearly symmetric (0.35 < {pi} < 0.65) the Engelman-Hartigan test was the most powerful. When {pi} > 0.85 or {pi} < 0.15, {radical}b{sub 1} was among the best tests. For intermediate mixing proportions, the likelihood ratio test was best. For situations in which the preferred test had power 50% or more, the power of the likelihood ratio test was also above 50% and within 15 percentage points of the preferred test.
Date: July 22, 1992
Creator: Thode, H. C. Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final report on program for using X-8001 aluminum alloy cladding material for Hanford fuel elements: PT-IP-43-A-84-MT, IP-80-A-91-FP and IP-2-I-99-FP (open access)

Final report on program for using X-8001 aluminum alloy cladding material for Hanford fuel elements: PT-IP-43-A-84-MT, IP-80-A-91-FP and IP-2-I-99-FP

Use of X-8001 Al alloy as cladding for Hanford reactors was initiated because of superior (laboratory) resistance to intergranular corrosion over that of C-64 alloy. However, since severe pitting attack was observed intermittently, an evaluation was carried out on X-8001 alloy fuel element cladding.
Date: July 22, 1960
Creator: Hodgson, W. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Processing Department Monthly Report: June 1964 (open access)

Chemical Processing Department Monthly Report: June 1964

This report, for June 1964 from the Chemical Processing Department at HAPO, discusses the following: Production operation; Purex and Redox operation; Finished products operation; maintenance; Financial operations; facilities engineering; research; employee relations; weapons manufacturing operation; and safety and security.
Date: July 22, 1964
Creator: Hanford Atomic Products Operation. Chemical Processing Department.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Processing Department Monthly Report: June 1958 (open access)

Chemical Processing Department Monthly Report: June 1958

This report for June 1958, from the Chemical Processing Department at HAPO, discusses the following: Production operation; Purex and Redox operation; Finished products operation; maintenance; Financial operations; facilities engineering; research; and employee relations.
Date: July 22, 1958
Creator: Hanford Atomic Products Operation. Chemical Processing Department.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quarterly report contamination control - Columbia River, January-March 1968 (open access)

Quarterly report contamination control - Columbia River, January-March 1968

None
Date: July 22, 1968
Creator: Geier, R. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ultrasonic Examination of Double-Shell Tank 241-SY-101. Examination Completed March 2004. (open access)

Ultrasonic Examination of Double-Shell Tank 241-SY-101. Examination Completed March 2004.

COGEMA Engineering Corporation (COGEMA), under a contract from CH2M Hill Hanford Group (CH2M Hill), has performed an ultrasonic nondestructive examination of selected portions of Double-Shell Tank 241-SY-101. The purpose of this examination was to provide information that could be used to evaluate the integrity of the wall of the primary tank. The requirements for the ultrasonic examination of Tank 241-SY-101 were to detect, characterize (identify, size, and locate), and record measurements made of any wall thinning, pitting, or cracks that might be present in the wall of the primary tank. Any measurements that exceed the requirements set forth in the Engineering Task Plan (ETP), RPP-17750 (Jensen 2003) and summarized on page 1 of this document, are reported to CH2M Hill and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) for further evaluation. Under the contract with CH2M Hill, all data is to be recorded on disk and paper copies of all measurements are provided to PNNL for third-party evaluation. PNNL is responsible for preparing a report that describes the results of the COGEMA ultrasonic examinations.
Date: July 22, 2004
Creator: Pardini, Allan F. & Posakony, Gerald J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deep Eutectic Salt Formulations Suitable as Advanced Heat Transfer Fluids (open access)

Deep Eutectic Salt Formulations Suitable as Advanced Heat Transfer Fluids

Concentrating solar power (CSP) facilities are comprised of many miles of fluid-filled pipes arranged in large grids with reflective mirrors used to capture radiation from the sun. Solar radiation heats the fluid which is used to produce steam necessary to power large electricity generation turbines. Currently, organic, oil-based fluid in the pipes has a maximum temperature threshold of 400 °C, allowing for the production of electricity at approximately 15 cents per kilowatt hour. The DOE hopes to foster the development of an advanced heat transfer fluid that can operate within higher temperature ranges. The new heat transfer fluid, when used with other advanced technologies, could significantly decrease solar electricity cost. Lower costs would make solar thermal electricity competitive with gas and coal and would offer a clean, renewable source of energy. Molten salts exhibit many desirable heat transfer qualities within the range of the project objectives. Halotechnics developed advanced heat transfer fluids (HTFs) for application in solar thermal power generation. This project focused on complex mixtures of inorganic salts that exhibited a high thermal stability, a low melting point, and other favorable characteristics. A high-throughput combinatorial research and development program was conducted in order to achieve the project objective. Over …
Date: July 22, 2013
Creator: Raade, Justin; Roark, Thomas; Vaughn, John & Bradshaw, Robert
System: The UNT Digital Library
LULESH 2.0 Updates and Changes (open access)

LULESH 2.0 Updates and Changes

None
Date: July 22, 2013
Creator: Karlin, I; Keasler, J & Neely, J R
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Report for Enhancing the MPI Programming Model for PetaScale Systems (open access)

Final Report for Enhancing the MPI Programming Model for PetaScale Systems

This project performed research into enhancing the MPI programming model in two ways: developing improved algorithms and implementation strategies, tested and realized in the MPICH implementation, and exploring extensions to the MPI standard to better support PetaScale and ExaScale systems.
Date: July 22, 2013
Creator: Gropp, William Douglas
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of Distortion and Residual Stress Development During Heat Treatment of Steel Castings (open access)

Simulation of Distortion and Residual Stress Development During Heat Treatment of Steel Castings

Heat treatment and associated processing, such as quenching, are critical during high strength steel casting production. These processes must be managed closely to prevent thermal and residual stresses that may result in distortion, cracking (particularly after machining), re-work, and weld repair. The risk of casting distortion limits aggressive quenching that can be beneficial to the process and yield an improved outcome. As a result of these distortions, adjustments must be made to the casting or pattern design, or tie bars must be added. Straightening castings after heat treatments can be both time-consuming and expensive. Residual stresses may reduce a casting’s overall service performance, possibly resulting in catastrophic failure. Stress relieving may help, but expends additional energy in the process. Casting software is very limited in predicting distortions during heat treatment, so corrective measures most often involve a tedious trial-and-error procedure. An extensive review of existing heat treatment residual stress and distortion modeling revealed that it is vital to predict the phase transformations and microstructure of the steel along with the thermal stress development during heat treatment. After reviewing the state-of-the-art in heat treatment residual stress and distortion modeling, an existing commercial code was selected because of its advanced capabilities in …
Date: July 22, 2011
Creator: Beckermann, Christoph & Carlson, Kent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Soil structure interaction calculations: a comparison of methods (open access)

Soil structure interaction calculations: a comparison of methods

Two approaches for calculating soil structure interaction (SSI) are compared: finite element and lumped mass. Results indicate that the calculations with the lumped mass method are generally conservative compared to those obtained by the finite element method. They also suggest that a closer agreement between the two sets of calculations is possible, depending on the use of frequency-dependent soil springs and dashpots in the lumped mass calculations. There is a total lack of suitable guidelines for implementing the lumped mass method of calculating SSI, which leads to the conclusion that the finite element method is generally superior for calculative purposes.
Date: July 22, 1976
Creator: Wight, L. & Zaslawsky, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Formation and evaluation of convex-curved crystals of lithium fluoride for use in analyzing x-ray spectra (open access)

Formation and evaluation of convex-curved crystals of lithium fluoride for use in analyzing x-ray spectra

Lithium fluoride as received from the vendor in boule form is 38 x 38 x 13 mm thick. This block is cleaved to wafers of the desired thickness, x-ray-evaluated for ''d'' spacing and greatest intensity, bent to the required radius, and then acid-etched to remove foreign material. The diffraction and dispersion characteristics of a wafer are analyzed using well-collimated tungsten x rays that strike the crystal and are diffracted onto no-screen x-ray film. If the crystal is satisfactory, it is mounted in a spectrogoniometer and rotated through an x-ray beam while a detector is set at the optimized angle for the diffracted x rays. The average intensity across the length of the crystal is recorded by multichannel scaling. Any imperfections appear as peaks or dips compared to the average intensity. The crystal next goes to a 10-channel, filter-fluorescer x-ray unit that compares zero-order intensity to diffracted K..cap alpha.. and K..beta.. intensity. Counts for 100-s intervals are taken in groups of three and averaged. Correction factors for instrument geometry, air, pinhole diameter at zero order, K..cap alpha..-K..beta.., barometric pressure, temperature, etc., are added to the efficiency calculations to obtain the crystal efficiency (epsilon) vs keV data. The crystal is mounted in …
Date: July 22, 1976
Creator: Sellick, Barton O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental And Theoretical High Energy Physics Research At UCLA (open access)

Experimental And Theoretical High Energy Physics Research At UCLA

This is the final report of the UCLA High Energy Physics DOE Grant No. DE-FG02- 91ER40662. This report covers the last grant project period, namely the three years beginning January 15, 2010, plus extensions through April 30, 2013. The report describes the broad range of our experimental research spanning direct dark matter detection searches using both liquid xenon (XENON) and liquid argon (DARKSIDE); present (ICARUS) and R&D for future (LBNE) neutrino physics; ultra-high-energy neutrino and cosmic ray detection (ANITA); and the highest-energy accelerator-based physics with the CMS experiment and CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. For our theory group, the report describes frontier activities including particle astrophysics and cosmology; neutrino physics; LHC interaction cross section calculations now feasible due to breakthroughs in theoretical techniques; and advances in the formal theory of supergravity.
Date: July 22, 2013
Creator: Cousins, Robert D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Error field across the aperture of the ISABELLE dipole (open access)

Error field across the aperture of the ISABELLE dipole

Error field multipoles due to systematic errors in the current distribution are computed and compared with the error field multipoles due to random errors in the current distribution. The systematic field error multipoles are found to vary rapidly across the aperture, and in some cases may be the dominant error multipoles.
Date: July 22, 1976
Creator: Parzen, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Atomic Products Operation monthly report, June 1953 (open access)

Hanford Atomic Products Operation monthly report, June 1953

This document presents a summary of work and progress at the Hanford Engineer Works for June 1953. The report is divided into sections by department. A plant wide general summary is included at the beginning of the report, after which the departmental summaries begin. The Manufacturing Department reports plant statistics, and summaries for the Metal Preparation, Reactor and Separation sections. The Engineering Department`s section summaries work the Technical, Design, and Project Sections. Costs for the various departments are presented in the Financial Department`s summary. The Medical, Radiological Sciences, Utilities and General Services, Employee and Public Relations, and Community Real Estate and Services departments have sections presenting their monthly statistics, work, progress, and summaries.
Date: July 22, 1953
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library