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High Resolution, High-Speed Photography, an Increasingly Prominent Diagnostic in Ballistic Research Experiments (open access)

High Resolution, High-Speed Photography, an Increasingly Prominent Diagnostic in Ballistic Research Experiments

High resolution, high-speed photography is becoming a prominent diagnostic in ballistic experimentation. The development of high speed cameras utilizing electro-optics and the use of lasers for illumination now provide the capability to routinely obtain high quality photographic records of ballistic style experiments. The purpose of this presentation is to review in a visual manner the progress of this technology and how it has impacted ballistic experimentation. Within the framework of development at LLNL, we look at the recent history of large format high-speed photography, and present a number of photographic records that represent the state of the art at the time they were made. These records are primarily from experiments involving shaped charges. We also present some examples of current photographic technology, developed within the ballistic community, that has application to hydro diagnostic experimentation at large. This paper is designed primarily as an oral-visual presentation. This written portion is to provide general background, a few examples, and a bibliography.
Date: October 22, 1999
Creator: Shaw, L. & Muelder, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Statement of Work (SOW) for services provided by the Waste Sampling and Characterization Facility for the Effluent and Environmental Monitoring Program during calendar year 1998 (open access)

Statement of Work (SOW) for services provided by the Waste Sampling and Characterization Facility for the Effluent and Environmental Monitoring Program during calendar year 1998

This document defines the services the Waste Sampling and Characterization Facility (WSCF) shall provide the Effluent and Environmental Monitoring Program (EEM) throughout the calendar year for analysis. The purpose of the EEM Program is to monitor liquid and gaseous effluents, and the environment immediately around the facilities which may contain radioactive and hazardous materials. Monitoring data are collected, evaluated, and reported to determine their degree of compliance with applicable federal and state regulations and permits.
Date: October 22, 1998
Creator: Gleckler, B. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oxidation of elemental mercury by chlorine: Gas phase, Surface,and Photo-induced reaction pathways (open access)

Oxidation of elemental mercury by chlorine: Gas phase, Surface,and Photo-induced reaction pathways

Accurate oxidation rate constants of mercury gas are needed for determining its dispersion and lifetime in the atmosphere. They would also help in developing a technology for the control of mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants. However, it is difficult to establish the accurate rate constants primarily due to the fact that mercury easily adsorbs on solid surface and its reactions can be catalyzed by the surface. We have demonstrated a procedure that allows the determination of gas phase, surface-induced, and photo-induced contributions in the kinetic study of the oxidation of mercury by chlorine gas. The kinetics was studied using reactors with various surface to volume ratios. The effect of the surface and the photo irradiation on the reaction was taken into consideration. The pressure dependent study revealed that the gas phase oxidation was a three-body collision process. The third order rate constant was determined to be 7.5({+-}0.2) x 10{sup -39} mL{sup 2} molecules{sup -2}s{sup -1} with N{sub 2} as the third body at 297 {+-} 1 K. The surface induced reaction on quartz window was second order and the rate constant was 2.7 x 10{sup -17} mL{sup 2} molecules{sup -1} cm{sup -2} sec. Meanwhile, the 253.7 nm photon employed …
Date: October 22, 2004
Creator: Yan, Nai-Qiang; Liu, Shou-Heng & Chang, Shih-Ger
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fiscal year 1998 Battelle performance evaluation agreement revision 1 (open access)

Fiscal year 1998 Battelle performance evaluation agreement revision 1

Fiscal Year 1998 represents the second full year utilizing a results-oriented, performance-based contract. This document describes the critical outcomes, objectives, performance indicators, expected levels of performance, and the basis for the evaluation of the Contractors performance for the period October 1, 1997 through September 30, 1998, as required by Articles entitled Use of Objective Standards of Performance, Self Assessment and Performance Evaluation and Critical Outcomes Review of the Contract DE-AC08-76RLO1830. In partnership with the Contractor and other key customers, the Department of Energy (DOE) Richland Operations Office has defined six critical outcomes that same as the core for the Contractors performance evaluation. The Contractor also utilizes these outcomes as a basis for overall management of the Laboratory. As stated above six critical outcomes have been established for FY 1998. These outcomes are based on the following needs identified by DOE-HQ, RL and other customers of the Laboratory. Our Energy Research customer desires relevant, quality and cost effective science. Our Environmental Management customer wants technology developed, demonstrated, and deployed to solve environmental cleanup issues. To ensure the diversification and viability of the Laboratory as a National asset, RL and HQ alike want to increase the Science and Technical contributions of PNNL …
Date: October 22, 1998
Creator: Davis, T. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics of Substorm Growth Phase, Onset, and Dipolarization (open access)

Physics of Substorm Growth Phase, Onset, and Dipolarization

A new scenario of substorm growth phase, onset, and depolarization during expansion phase and the corresponding physical processes are presented. During the growth phase, as a result of enhanced plasma convection, the plasma pressure and its gradient are continued to be enhanced over the quiet-time values in the plasma sheet. Toward the late growth phase, a strong cross-tail current sheet is formed in the near-Earth plasma sheet region, where a local magnetic well is formed, the plasma beta can reach a local maximum with value larger than 50 and the cross-tail current density can be enhanced to over 10nA/m{sup 2} as obtained from 3D quasi-static magnetospheric equilibrium solutions for the growth phase. The most unstable kinetic ballooning instabilities (KBI) are expected to be located in the tailward side of the strong cross-tail current sheet region. The field lines in the most unstable KBI region map to the transition region between the region-1 and region-2 currents in the ionosphere, which is consistent with the observed initial brightening location of the breakup arc in the intense proton precipitation region. The KBI explains the AMPTE/CCE observations that a low-frequency instability with a wave period of 50-75 seconds is excited about 2-3 minutes prior …
Date: October 22, 2003
Creator: Cheng, C. Z.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interim Stabilization Equipment Essential and Support Drawing Plan (open access)

Interim Stabilization Equipment Essential and Support Drawing Plan

The purpose of this document is to list the Interim Stabilization equipment drawings that are classified as Essential or Support drawings. Essential Drawings: Those drawings identified by the facility staff as necessary to directly support the safe operation of the facility or equipment. Support Drawings: Those drawings identified by the facility staff that further describe the design details of structures, systems or components shown on essential drawings.
Date: October 22, 1999
Creator: Koch, M. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Management of offshore wastes in the United States. (open access)

Management of offshore wastes in the United States.

During the process of finding and producing oil and gas in the offshore environment operators generate a variety of liquid and solid wastes. Some of these wastes are directly related to exploration and production activities (e.g., drilling wastes, produced water, treatment workover, and completion fluids) while other types of wastes are associated with human occupation of the offshore platforms (e.g., sanitary and domestic wastes, trash). Still other types of wastes can be considered generic industrial wastes (e.g., scrap metal and wood, wastes paints and chemicals, sand blasting residues). Finally, the offshore platforms themselves can be considered waste materials when their useful life span has been reached. Generally, offshore wastes are managed in one of three ways--onsite discharge, injection, or transportation to shore. This paper describes the regulatory requirements imposed by the government and the approaches used by offshore operators to manage and dispose of wastes in the US.
Date: October 22, 1998
Creator: Veil, J. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deposition and Characterization of Highly Oriented Mg(3)(VO(4))(2) Thin Film Catalyst (open access)

Deposition and Characterization of Highly Oriented Mg(3)(VO(4))(2) Thin Film Catalyst

Magnesium vanadates are potentially important catalytic materials for the conversion of alkanes to alkenes via oxidative dehydrogenation. However, little is known about the active sites at which the catalytic reactions take place. It may be possible to obtain a significant increase in the catalytic efficiency if the effects of certain material properties on the surface reactions could be quantified and optimized through the use of appropriate preparation techniques. Given that surface reactivity is often dependent upon surface structure and that the atomic level structure of the active sites in these catalysts is virtually unknown, we desire thin film samples consisting of a single magnesium vanadate phase and a well defined crystallographic orientation in order to reduce complexity and simplify the study of active sites. We report on the use of reactive RF sputter deposition to fabricate very highly oriented, stoichiometric Mg{sub 3}(VO{sub 4}){sub 2} thin films for use in these surface analysis studies. Deposition of samples onto amorphous substrates resulted in very poor crystallinity. However, deposition of Mg{sub 3}(VO{sub 4}){sub 2} onto well-oriented, lattice-matched thin film ''seed'' layers such as Ti(0001), Au(111), or Pt(111) resulted in very strong preferential (042) crystallographic orientation (pseudo-hexagonal oxygen planes parallel to the substrate). This …
Date: October 22, 1999
Creator: Rodriguez, Mark A.; Ruffner, Judith A.; Sault, Allen G. & Tissot, Ralph G., Jr.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
New Microscopic Model of the Staebler-Wronski Effect in Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon (open access)

New Microscopic Model of the Staebler-Wronski Effect in Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon

A new microscopic and kinetic model of light-induced metastability in hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) was recently proposed. Carrier recombination excites H from deep Si-H bonds into a mobile configuration, leaving a threefold-coordinated Si dangling bond (DB) defect at the site of excitation - a process long suspected to be an element of metastable DB production. Normally, mobile H are recaptured at DB defects and neither metastability nor net DB production results. However, when two mobile H collide, they form a metastable two-hydrogen complex and leave two spatially-uncorrelated Staebler-Wronski DBs. The model leads to differential equations describing the evolution of the mobile H and DB densities and a variety of new predictions. New directions for improving the stability of a-Si:H are discussed.
Date: October 22, 1998
Creator: Branz, H. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Combined Statistical-Microstructural Model for Simulation of Sintering (open access)

A Combined Statistical-Microstructural Model for Simulation of Sintering

Sintering theory has been developed either as the application of complex diffusion mechanisms to a simple geometry or as the deformation and shrinkage of a continuum body. They present a model that can treat in detail both the evolution of microstructure and the sintering mechanisms, on the mesoscale, so that constitutive equations with detail microstructural information can be generated. The model is capable of simulating vacancy diffusion by grain boundary diffusion, annihilation of vacancies at grain boundaries resulting in densification, and coarsening of the microstructural features. In this paper, they review the stereological theory of sintering and its application to microstructural evolution and the diffusion mechanism, which lead to sintering. They then demonstrate how these stereological concepts and diffusion mechanisms were incorporated into a kinetic Monte Carlo model to simulate sintering. Finally, they discuss the limitations of this model.
Date: October 22, 1999
Creator: BRAGINSKY,MICHAEL V.; DEHOFF,ROBERT T.; OLEVSKY,EUGENE A. & TIKARE,VEENA
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stress corrosion cracking of Ni-base and Ti alloys under controlled potential (open access)

Stress corrosion cracking of Ni-base and Ti alloys under controlled potential

Susceptibility to stress corrosion cracking (SCC) of alloy C-22 and Ti Gr-12, two candidate alloys for the inner-container of the multi-barrier nuclear waste package, was evaluated by using the slow-strain-rate (SSR) test technique in a deaerated acidic brine (pH {approx} 2.70) at 90 C. The strain rate used was 3.3 x 10{sup {minus}6} sec{sup {minus}1}. Prior to being tested in the acidic brine, specimens of each alloy were pulled inside the test chamber in the dry condition at room temperature (RT). Then specimens were exposed to the test solution while being strained under different controlled electrochemical potentials. The magnitude of the controlled potential was selected based on the corrosion potential measured in the test solution prior to straining of the specimen. Results indicate that, for Ti Gr-12, the times to failure were significantly shorter compared to those for alloy C-22. Furthermore, Ti Gr-12 showed reduced ductility in terms of percent reduction in area and true fracture stress, as the controlled potential became more cathodic. Results also indicate that the time-to-failure and percent elongation reached the minimum values when Ti Gr-12 was tested under impressed potential of {minus}1162 mV. Finally, metallographic examination was performed to evaluate the primary fracture, and the …
Date: October 22, 1998
Creator: Estill, J. C.; Gordon, S. R.; Logeteta, L. F. & Roy, A. K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy of plutonium solid species. (open access)

X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy of plutonium solid species.

We present XANES at the L{sub III} edge for four plutonium solid phases: Pu(III)F{sub 3}, Pu(IV)O{sub 2}, NaPu(V)O{sub 2}CO{sub 3}, and Ba{sub 3}Pu(VI)O{sub 6}. These correspond to the four important oxidation states in the process chemistry and environmental chemistry of plutonium. By a fitting method that uses an arc tangent function and gaussian curves, it was possible to reproducibly determine the edge energy and distinguish among the four oxidation states. These data demonstrate a 1.85 {+-} 0.20 eV shift per oxidation state.
Date: October 22, 1998
Creator: Kropf, A. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Innovative regulatory approach for synthetic-based muds. (open access)

Innovative regulatory approach for synthetic-based muds.

The oil and gas industry has historically used water-based muds (WBMs) and oil-based muds (OBMs) in offshore drilling operations. WBMs are less expensive and are widely used. Both the WBMs and the associated drill cuttings maybe discharged from the platform to the sea provided that U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) discharge limitations are met. In some wells, however, difficult drilling conditions may force a switch from a WBM to an OBM. Neither the OBM nor the associated drill cuttings may be discharged. The OBM is hauled to shore, where it is processed for reuse, while the associated cuttings are injected in a disposal well at the platform or hauled to shore to a disposal facility. Both of these options are expensive. Synthetic-based muds (SBMs) are drilling fluids that use synthetic organic chemicals as base fluids. SBMs were developed to replace OBMs in difficult drilling situations. SBMs are more expensive than OBMs; however, they have superior environmental properties that may permit the cuttings to be discharged on-site. Like OBMs, SBMs are hauled ashore for processing and reuse after the well is drilled. The existing national effluent limitations guidelines (ELGs) for the offshore industry do not include requirements for SBM-cuttings since SBMs …
Date: October 22, 1998
Creator: Veil, J. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extending Molecular Theory to Steady-State Diffusing Systems (open access)

Extending Molecular Theory to Steady-State Diffusing Systems

Predicting the properties of nonequilibrium systems from molecular simulations is a growing area of interest. One important class of problems involves steady state diffusion. To study these cases, a grand canonical molecular dynamics approach has been developed by Heffelfinger and van Swol [J. Chem. Phys., 101, 5274 (1994)]. With this method, the flux of particles, the chemical potential gradients, and density gradients can all be measured in the simulation. In this paper, we present a complementary approach that couples a nonlocal density functional theory (DFT) with a transport equation describing steady-state flux of the particles. We compare transport-DFT predictions to GCMD results for a variety of ideal (color diffusion), and nonideal (uphill diffusion and convective transport) systems. In all cases excellent agreement between transport-DFT and GCMD calculations is obtained with diffusion coefficients that are invariant with respect to density and external fields.
Date: October 22, 1999
Creator: FRINK,LAURA J. D.; SALINGER,ANDREW G. & THOMPSON,AIDAN P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acoustic array methods for instrumentation of in situ coal gasification (open access)

Acoustic array methods for instrumentation of in situ coal gasification

None
Date: October 22, 1974
Creator: Sherman, J.W. & Woods, J.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Summary of SRE Sodium Systems Exposure History (open access)

A Summary of SRE Sodium Systems Exposure History

None
Date: October 22, 1964
Creator: Dunbar, F. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat Exchanger Design Study for the ISHR (open access)

Heat Exchanger Design Study for the ISHR

The results of a study to determine reliable heat transfer data for the design of a suitable heat exchanger for the Intermediate Scale Homogeneous Reactor are presented. Design studies of a vertical submerged-tube evaporator with nucleate boiling from the outer tube surfaces and of a vertical tube, forced-circulation evaporator are presented in detail. (M.P.G.)
Date: October 22, 1952
Creator: Segaser, C L
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron Diffraction Studies (open access)

Neutron Diffraction Studies

None
Date: October 22, 1948
Creator: Shull, C. G.; Wollan, E. O. & Marney, M. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Model LC-13 laser calorimeters using commercial thermoelectric modules (open access)

Model LC-13 laser calorimeters using commercial thermoelectric modules

None
Date: October 22, 1974
Creator: Gunn, S.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
REACTOR PHYSICS OF TEAPOT. PART V. PROPOSED STABILITY EXPERIMENT (open access)

REACTOR PHYSICS OF TEAPOT. PART V. PROPOSED STABILITY EXPERIMENT

None
Date: October 22, 1952
Creator: Kasten, P R
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fusion reactor first-wall cooling for very high energy fluxes (open access)

Fusion reactor first-wall cooling for very high energy fluxes

None
Date: October 22, 1974
Creator: Hoffman, M. A.; Werner, R. W.; Roose, T. R. & Carlson, G. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metallography of AISI 347 sheet (.016'') creep tested in GH$sub 2$ at Battelle (open access)

Metallography of AISI 347 sheet (.016'') creep tested in GH$sub 2$ at Battelle

None
Date: October 22, 1970
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
HRP-CP: An evaluation of the design features of blanket processing loop P - 1 (open access)

HRP-CP: An evaluation of the design features of blanket processing loop P - 1

The design features and the performance of UO/sub 2/SO/sub 4/ blanket processing Loop P-1 are evaluated from an engineering viewpoint. This unique experiment development loop was operated with pump heating to study the behavior of plutonium in 1.4 M UO/sub 2/SO/sub 4/at 250 deg C and was designed for mixed O/ sub 2/-H/sub 2/ gas pressurization The canned loop and the feed and sampling systems in glove boxes completely contained the plutonium throughout the experimental program. (auth)
Date: October 22, 1958
Creator: Snider, J. W. & Clinton, S. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
PREVENTION OF FISSION PRODUCT DIFFUSION (open access)

PREVENTION OF FISSION PRODUCT DIFFUSION

The favorible attention being given graphite as a fuel rod material calls attention to the need for preventing diffusion of fission products from the fuel rods. The methods of prevention include painting the surface of the rod with an impermeable organic synthetic composition, enclosing the rods in metal cans, electroplating the rods with a suitable metal, or covering the surface with some type of inorganic ceranmic glaze. Each of these methods is evaluated as to feasibility. (M.H.R.)
Date: October 22, 1946
Creator: Wilson, J.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library