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Consolidation and shear failure leading to subsidence and settlement. Final report (open access)

Consolidation and shear failure leading to subsidence and settlement. Final report

Subsidence and settlement are phenomena that are much more destructive than generally thought. In shallow land burials they may lead to cracking of the overburden and eventual exposure and escape of waste material. The primary causes are consolidation and cave-ins. Laboratory studies performed at Los Alamos permit us to predict settlement caused by consolidation or natural compaction of the crushed tuff overburden. We have also investigated the shear failure characteristics of crushed tuff that may lead to subsidence. Examples of expected settlement and subsidence are calculated based on the known geotechnical characteristics of crushed tuff. The same thing is done for bentonite/tuff mixes because some field experiments were performed using this additive (bentonite) to reduce the hydraulic conductivity of the crushed tuff. Remedial actions, i.e., means to limit the amount of settlement, are discussed. We finally discuss our field experiment, which studies the influence of subsidence on layered systems in general and on biobarriers in particular. The share of the produced cavities is compared with cavities produced by idealized voids in an idealized environment. Study of root penetration at subsidence sites gives us an indication of the remaining degree of integrity. 30 refs., 24 figs., 19 tabs.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Abeele, W.; Nyhan, J. W.; Hakonson, T. E.; Drennon, B. J.; Lopez, E. A.; Herrera, W. J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-level integrated system test (open access)

Low-level integrated system test

An unusually wet season permitted us to test the integrity of our biobarrier installed in the improved or modified plots in our integrated system. Although the modified plots had a reduced water-holding capacity, they delivered leachate only at the drain installed above the biobarrier, demonstrating once more that the biobarrier is behaving successfully as a capillary barrier in rerouting the subsurface flow around the tuff beneath the biobarrier. As a result of vertical water flow impedance, more water was made available to plot vegetation, enhancing its growth dramatically. The capillary barrier theory was backed up by the tensiometer results showing saturation at the upper biobarrier interface. 11 refs., 19 figs
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Abeele, Willy; Nyhan, John; Hakonson, Tom; Drennon, Barry J.; Lopez, Edward A.; Herrera, Wilfred J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prototype results of a high resolution vertex drift chamber for the Mark II SLC Upgrade detector (open access)

Prototype results of a high resolution vertex drift chamber for the Mark II SLC Upgrade detector

Test results from a full-length prototype of the drift chamber vertex detector for the Mark II SLC Upgrade detector are presented. The 22 cell jet chamber employs planes of grid wires above and below the sense wire plane to increase the electrostatic stability of the sense wires and to narrow the electron arrival time distribution. Two different grid designs have been investigated. The spatial resolution and pulse widths have been measured at a variety of operating points and for different timing schemes in a mixture of 92% CO/sub 2/ and 8% isobutane. Typical results at 3 atmospheres pressure give an average resolution over a 2 cm drift distance of 30 ..mu..m for both designs. Efficient double track detection is achieved for tracks separated by 500 ..mu..m for one design and by 1000 ..mu..m for the other.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Alexander, J.; Hayes, K.; Hoard, C.; Hutchinson, D.; Jaros, J.; Odaka, S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Results for the Chromatic Correction of the Antisymmetric RHIC Lattice (open access)

Some Results for the Chromatic Correction of the Antisymmetric RHIC Lattice

None
Date: February 24, 1986
Creator: Antillon, Armando
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron spectroscopy studies in heavy fermions (open access)

Electron spectroscopy studies in heavy fermions

Photoemission experiments (whereby an electron absorbs a packet of light energy and is able to escape from the host material due to its increased energy) can measure directly the energy distribution of electrons in various materials. Our measurements on a recently-discovered class of metallic materials called ''heavy fermions'' show that the electrons that actually carry the electric current in these metals exist only within an extremely narrow range of energies. This range, which we will call the bandwidth, is narrower than that found in ordinary metals like copper by at least a factor of 10. Indeed it is surprising that they can carry electric current at all since such narrow energy ranges (or band widths) are characteristic of electrons confined to their host atoms, as in a non-metal, rather than of electrons that are free to wander through a metal. 8 refs.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Arko, A. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Role of the DAPIA in the manufactured housing process (open access)

Role of the DAPIA in the manufactured housing process

This paper describes the function of Design Approval Primary Inspection Agencies (DAPIAs) and provides some insights into the design approval process for manufacturing housing units. DAPIAs play a key role in assuring that the designs for manufactured housing units are in compliance with HUD's Manufactured Housing Constructing and Safety Standards. There are five DAPIAs performing plan checks and design reviews for the manufacturing operating in the Pacific Northwest region. The costs to a manufacturer for DAPIA services ranges from $100 to $250 to approve modifications to existing designs and $700 to $1200 to approve a totally new design. Each DAPIA indicated that they would be willing to work with BPA in some way to assist manufacturers produce units which can achieve MCS levels. They would be available for energy design consultation on an informal basis. In addition they would be willing to consider formal certifications of MCS designs if BPA develops evaluation criteria which they can apply.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Balistocky, S.; Lee, A. D. & Onisko, S. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-temperature gas-cooled reactor safety studies for the Division of Accident Evaluation. Quarterly progress report, April 1-June 30, 1985 (open access)

High-temperature gas-cooled reactor safety studies for the Division of Accident Evaluation. Quarterly progress report, April 1-June 30, 1985

Modeling, code development, and analyses of the modular High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (HTGR) continued with work on the side-by-side design. Fission-product release and transport experiments were completed. Sections of an HTGR safety handbook were written.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Ball, S. J.; Cleveland, J. C.; Harrington, R. M. & Wilson, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The 1985 Geothermal Gradient Drilling Project for the State of Washington (open access)

The 1985 Geothermal Gradient Drilling Project for the State of Washington

This report describes seven geothermal gradient test holes in the southern Washington Cascade Mountains. The objectives of the drilling program were to: (1) more accurately define the general extent of potential geothermal resources in the southern Washington Cascades, and (2) evaluate specific targets that are geologically and structurally favorable for the occurrence of geothermal resources. (ACR)
Date: February 1986
Creator: Barnett, Brent
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reaction of glass during gamma irradiation in a saturated tuff environment. Part 1. SRL 165 glass (open access)

Reaction of glass during gamma irradiation in a saturated tuff environment. Part 1. SRL 165 glass

The influence of gamma irradiation on the reaction of actinide-doped borosilicate glass (SRL 165) in a saturated tuff environment has been studied in a series of tests lasting up to 56 days. The following conclusions were reached. The reaction of, and subsequent actinide release from, the glass depends on the dynamic interaction between radiolysis effects, which cause the solution pH to become more acidic; glass reaction, which drives the pH more basic; and test component interactions that may extract glass components from solution. The use of large gamma irradiation dose rates to accelerate reactions that may occur in an actual repository radiation field may affect this dynamic balance by unduly influencing the mechanism of the glass-water reaction. Comparisons between the present results and data obtained by reacting similar glasses using MCC-1 and NNWSI rock cup procedures indicate that the irradiation conditions used in the present experiments do not dramatically influence the reaction rate of the glass. 8 figs., 9 tabs.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Bates, J. K.; Fischer, D. F. & Gerding, T. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Reaction of Glass During Gamma Irradiation in a Saturated Tuff Environment: Part 1, SRL 165 Glass (open access)

The Reaction of Glass During Gamma Irradiation in a Saturated Tuff Environment: Part 1, SRL 165 Glass

The influence of gamma irradiation on the reaction of actinide-doped borosilicate glass (SRL 165) in a saturated tuff environment has been studied in a series of tests lasting up to 56 days. The following conclusions were reached. The reaction of, and subsequent actinide release from, the glass depends on the dynamic interaction between radiolysis effects, which cause the solution pH to become more acidic; glass reaction, which drives the pH more basic; and test component interactions that may extract glass components from solution. The use of large gamma irradiation dose rates to accelerate reactions that may occur in an actual repository radiation field may affect this dynamic balance by unduly influencing the mechanism of the glass-water reaction. Comparisons between the present results and data obtained by reacting similar glasses using MCC-1 and NNWSI rock cup procedures indicate that the irradiation conditions used in the present experiments do not dramatically influence the reaction rate of the glass.
Date: February 1986
Creator: Bates, John K.; Fischer, Donald F. & Gerding, Thomas J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron capture cross sections for /sup 86,87/Sr at Stellar temperatures (open access)

Neutron capture cross sections for /sup 86,87/Sr at Stellar temperatures

Cross sections have been measured from 100 eV to 1 MeV by the neutron-time-of-flight technique. The capture events were recorded by detecting the prompt gamma-ray cascade with two C/sub 6/D/sub 6/ scintillators, and were normalized to standard gold cross sections. The background was determined experimentally by utilizing the ''black resonance'' technique. A /sup 6/Li-glass scintillator was used to monitor the neutron flux. A Maxwellian-averaged capture cross section at kT = 30 keV of 74 +- 3 mb for /sup 86/Sr, and 102 +- 4 mb for /sup 87/Sr. (LEW)
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Bauer, R. W.; Mathews, G. J.; Becker, J. A. & Howe, R. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
NMR studies of selective population inversion and spin clustering (open access)

NMR studies of selective population inversion and spin clustering

This work describes the development and application of selective excitation techniques in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance. Composite pulses and multiple-quantum methods are used to accomplish various goals, such as broadband and narrowband excitation in liquids, and collective excitation of groups of spins in solids. These methods are applied to a variety of problems, including non-invasive spatial localization, spin cluster size characterization in disordered solids and solid state NMR imaging.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Baum, J.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety analysis -- 200 Area Savannah River Plant, F-Canyon Operations. Supplement 4 (open access)

Safety analysis -- 200 Area Savannah River Plant, F-Canyon Operations. Supplement 4

The F-Canyon facility is located in the 200 Separations Area and uses the Purex process to recover plutonium from reactor-irradiated uranium. The irradiated uranium is normally in the form of solid or hollow cylinders called slugs. These slugs are encased in aluminum cladding and are sent to the F-Canyon from the Savannah River Plant (SRP) reactor areas or from the Receiving Basin for Offsite Fuels (RBOF). This Safety Analysis Report (SAR) documents an analysis of the F-Canyon operations and is an update to a section of a previous SAR. The previous SAR documented an analysis of the entire 200 Separations Area operations. This SAR documents an analysis of the F-Canyon and is one of a series of documents for the Separations Area as specified in the Savannah River Implementation Plans. A substantial amount of the information supporting the conclusions of this SAR is found in the Systems Analysis. Some F-Canyon equipment has been updated during the time between the Systems Analysis and this SAR and a complete description of this equipment is included in this report. The primary purpose of the analysis was to demonstrate that the F-Canyon can be operated without undue risk to onsite or offsite populations and …
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Beary, M. M.; Collier, C. D.; Fairobent, L. A.; Graham, R. F.; Mason, C. L.; McDuffee, W. T. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Profiles of Microalgae with Emphasis on Lipids: Final Report (open access)

Chemical Profiles of Microalgae with Emphasis on Lipids: Final Report

This final report details progress during the third year of this subcontract. The overall objective of this subcontract was two fold: to provide the analytical capability required for selecting microalgae strains with high energy contents and to develop fundamental knowledge required for optimizing the energy yield from microalgae cultures. The progress made towards these objectives during this year is detailed in this report.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Benemann, J. R.; Tillett, D. M.; Suen, Y.; Hubbard, J. & Tornabene, T. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deep inelastic lepton scattering from nucleons and nuclei (open access)

Deep inelastic lepton scattering from nucleons and nuclei

A pedagogical review is presented of results obtained from inclusive deep inelastic scattering of leptons from nucleons and nuclei, with particular emphasis on open questions to be explored in future experiments.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Berger, E. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hard Scattering And A Diffractive Trigger (open access)

Hard Scattering And A Diffractive Trigger

Conclusions concerning the properties of hard scattering in diffractively produced systems are summarized. One motivation for studying diffractive hard scattering is to investigate the interface between Regge theory and perturbative QCD. Another is to see whether diffractive triggering can result in an improvement in the signal-to-background ratio of measurements of production of very heavy quarks. 5 refs. (LEW)
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Berger, Edmond L.; Collins, John C.; Soper, Davison E. & Sterman, George
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theory of energetic trapped particle-induced resistive interchange-ballooning modes (open access)

Theory of energetic trapped particle-induced resistive interchange-ballooning modes

A theory describing the influence of energetic trapped particles on resistive interchange-ballooning modes in tokamaks is presented. It is shown that a population of hot particles trapped in the region of adverse curvature can resonantly interact with and destabilize the resistive interchange mode, which is stable in their absence because of favorable average curvature. The mode is different from the usual resistive interchange mode not only in its destabilization mechanism, but also in that it has a real component to its frequency comparable to the precessional drift frequency of the rapidly circulating energetic species. Corresponding growth rate and threshold conditions for this trapped-particle-driven instability are derived and finite banana width effects are shown to have a stabilizing effect on the mode. Finally, the ballooning/tearing dispersion relation is generalized to include hot particles, so that both the ideal and the resistive modes are derivable in the appropriate limits. 23 refs., 7 figs.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Biglari, H. & Chen, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Collapse of Defect Cascades to Dislocation Loops in Cu3Au (open access)

Collapse of Defect Cascades to Dislocation Loops in Cu3Au

TEM and ordered Cu/sub 3/Au were employed to measure the probability of dislocation loop formation as functions of irradiating ion mass (Ar/sup +/, Cu/sup +/ and Kr/sup +/), energy (50 and 100 keV), and irradiation temperature (30 and 300/sup 0/K). Disordered zones were produced at every defect cascade site and imaged in dark-field superlattice reflections. Dislocation loops were imaged in fundamental reflections in the same sample areas to produce an accurate measurement of the probability of the collapse of each cascade to a dislocation loop, within a large set (approx.200) of defect cascades for each irradiation condition. The size distributions of dislocation loops and disordered zones were also measured. Defect cascades collapse to dislocation loops with significant probability (approx.0.5) even at 30/sup 0/K. Other observations include an increasing collapse probability with increasing cascade energy density (increasing ion mass) and with increasing sample irradiation temperature. However, no additional collapse was observed upon annealing from 30 to 300/sup 0/K, and no increase in collapse probability was observed upon increasing the bombarding ion energy from 50 to 100 keV. Disordered zone sizes also increased with increasing ion mass and with increasing sample irradiation temperature (30 to 300/sup 0/K).
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Black, T. J.; Jenkins, M. L.; English, C. A. & Kirk, M. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bowing of solid breeder fuel pins and multiplier rods in a pin-type fusion blanket (open access)

Bowing of solid breeder fuel pins and multiplier rods in a pin-type fusion blanket

The most important outcome of this bowing analysis is the determination of the number of internal breeder rod supports required for good thermal performance. Although many effects were considered, the swelling deformations were the most restrictive in terms of the peak deflections. It appears that three internal supports should be sufficient to keep the rod bowing below acceptable levels without significantly raising the structure-to-breeder ratio. The most severe interaction problem involved the last multiplier row and the first breeder row. Because the Be rods deflect very little, this problem can be alleviated by leaving enough space between these two zones. The spacing can be tighter elsewhere. A more detailed analysis of the multiplier rod bowing caused by the damage gradient must be analyzed before this can be verified.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Blanchard, J. P. & Ghoniem, N. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermomechanical analysis of solid breeders in sphere-pac, plate, and pellet configurations (open access)

Thermomechanical analysis of solid breeders in sphere-pac, plate, and pellet configurations

The first configuration studied is called sphere-pac. It features small breeder spheres of three different diameters, thus allowing efficient packing and minimal void fraction. The concept originated as an attempt to minimize thermal stresses in the breeder and improve the predictability of the breeder-structure interface heat conduction. In general the breeder is made as thin as possible, to maximize the breeding ratio, so the cladding's integrity will likely be the life-limiting issue of this concept. The third breeder configuration is in the form of pellets cladded by steel tubes. The major thermomechanical issue of the pin-type designs is cracking, which would impair the thermal performance of the blanket. Fortunately, the pins can be sized to prevent cracking under normal operation. In this report we have treated each blanket generically, dealing with basic issues rather than design specifics. Our basic philosophy is to avoid cracking of the breeder if at all possible. It can be argued that cracking could be allowed, but this would sacrifice predictability of the blanket thermal performance and tritium release characteristics. Proper design can and should minimize breeder cracking.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Blanchard, J. P. & Ghoniem, N. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Long-term Changes in the Sensitivity of Quadrupole Mass Spectrometers (open access)

Long-term Changes in the Sensitivity of Quadrupole Mass Spectrometers

We routinely use quadrupole mass spectrometers (QMS) to monitor vacuum conditions, gas purity, and plasma-wall interactions in the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR) at Princeton. Two QMS systems have been operating on TFTR continuously for a two-year period. Both QMS systems are absolutely calibrated at weekly intervals using a six-part standard gas mixture. The calibration procedure is based on the use of transfer standards (ion gauge and capacitance manometer) that are calibrated against a primary standard (spinning rotor gauge) on an external vacuum system. We have identified variations in the efficiency of the QMS ionizer and drifts in the sensitivity of the electron multiplier ion detector to be the major reasons for the observed changes in overall OMS sensitivity. Weekly variations in sensitivity greater than 100% have been observed following system bakeout at 150/sup 0/C and with the use of rhenium filaments which were initially in the QMS ionizer. Operation of the QMS systems with tungsten filaments and at constant temperature has yielded more stable operation with weekly sensitivity changes generally being less than 10%. 7 refs., 7 figs.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Blanchard, W.R.; McCarthy, P.J.; Dylla, H.F.; LaMarche, P.H. & Simpkins, J.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tritium in the aquatic environment (open access)

Tritium in the aquatic environment

Tritium is of environmental importance because it is released from nuclear facilities in relatively large quantities and because it has a half life of 12.26 y. Most of the tritium released into the atmosphere eventually reaches the aqueous environment, where it is rapidly taken up by aquatic organisms. This paper reviews the current literature on tritium in the aquatic environment. Conclusions from the review, which covered studies of algae, aquatic macrophytes, invertebrates, fish, and the food chain, were that aquatic organisms incorporate tritium into their tissue-free water very rapidly and reach concentrations near those of the external medium. The rate at which tritium from tritiated water is incorporated into the organic matter of cells is slower than the rate of its incorporation into the tissue-free water. If organisms consume tritiated food, incorporation of tritium into the organic matter is faster, and a higher tritium concentration is reached than when the organisms are exposed to only tritiated water alone. Incorporation of tritium bound to molecules into the organic matter depends on the chemical form of the ''carrier'' molecule. No evidence was found that biomagnification of tritium occurs at higher trophic levels. Radiation doses from tritium releases to large populations of humans …
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Blaylock, B.G.; Hoffman, F.O. & Frank, M.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of non-condensible gases on fluid recovery in fractured geothermal reservoirs (open access)

Effects of non-condensible gases on fluid recovery in fractured geothermal reservoirs

Numerical simulations are performed in order to investigate the effects of noncondensible gases (CO/sub 2/) on fluid recovery and matrix depletion in fractured geothermal reservoirs. The model used is that of a well producing at a constant bottomhole pressure from a two-phase fractured reservoir. The results obtained have received a complex fracture-matrix interaction due to the thermodynamics of H/sub 2/O-CO/sub 2/ mixtures. Although the matrix initially contributes fluids (liquid and gas) to the fractures, later on, the flow directions reverse and the fractures backflow fluids into the matrix. The amount of backflow depends primarily upon the flowing gas saturation in the fractures; the lower the flowing gas saturation in the fractures the more backflow. It is shown that the recoverable fluid reserves depend strongly on the amount of CO/sub 2/ present in the reservoir system.
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Bodvarsson, G.S. & Gaulke, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the nineteenth LAMPF Users Group meeting (open access)

Proceedings of the nineteenth LAMPF Users Group meeting

Separate abstracts were prepared for eight invited talks on various aspects of nuclear and particle physics as well as status reports on LAMPF and discussions of upgrade options. Also included in these proceedings are the minutes of the working groups for: energetic pion channel and spectrometer; high resolution spectrometer; high energy pion channel; neutron facilities; low-energy pion work; nucleon physics laboratory; stopped muon physics; solid state physics and material science; nuclear chemistry; and computing facilities. Recent LAMPF proposals are also briefly summarized. (LEW)
Date: February 1, 1986
Creator: Bradbury, J.N. (comp.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library