Chemistry of glass-ceramic to metal bonding for header applications. I. Effect of treatments on Inconel 718 and Hastelloy C-276 metallic surfaces (open access)

Chemistry of glass-ceramic to metal bonding for header applications. I. Effect of treatments on Inconel 718 and Hastelloy C-276 metallic surfaces

Auger electron spectroscopy and depth Auger profiling were used to study the surfaces of Inconel 718 and Hastelloy C-276. The metal surfaces were processed in the same manner as is presently being used in the manufacturing of glass-ceramic headers. At each step in the process, samples were studied with Auger spectroscopy to determine their resultant elemental surface composition and film thickness. In addition, the effect of a final plasma cleaning operation on the metal surface was examined. The results show that the type and concentration of surface species and the thickness of the surface oxides are dependent on the processing technique.
Date: February 2, 1984
Creator: Kramer, D P; Craven, S M; Schneider, R E; Moddeman, W E & Brohard, D W
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Current research in parallel microprocessing systems at Los Alamos (open access)

Current research in parallel microprocessing systems at Los Alamos

The Computing and Communications Division at the Los Alamos National Laboratory has designed and is building a parallel microprocessor system (PuPS) to serve as a research tool for evaluating parallel processing of large-scale scientific codes. PuPS is an experimental architecture consisting of an orthogonal array of 20 processing elements by 32 memory elements, establishing a tightly coupled, shared-memory (16-Mbyte) machine. The hardware incorporates VLSI components, such as 16-bit microprocessors, floating-point co-processors, and dynamic random access memories. The design replaces conventional MSI/SSI circuitry with programmable array logic, logic sequencers, and logic arrays. This experimental system, which is only 1 element of the parallel processing research being done by the Laboratory's Computing and Communications Division, will enable direct comparisons of speedups of algorithms for a variety of multiprocessor architectures.
Date: May 2, 1984
Creator: Ethridge, C. D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discussion On RHIC Lattice (open access)

Discussion On RHIC Lattice

None
Date: April 2, 1984
Creator: Claus, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploratory Energy Research Program of the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Quarterly progress report (open access)

Exploratory Energy Research Program of the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Quarterly progress report

Project objectives and research progress are briefly summarized for solar energy, biomass, hydrogen, and geothermal energy research projects.
Date: January 2, 1984
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extragalactic origin of gamma-ray bursts. Revision 1 (open access)

Extragalactic origin of gamma-ray bursts. Revision 1

Detectors of gamma-rays carried by satellites and later by high-flying balloons showed the existence of events lasting from fifteen milliseconds to about a hundred seconds, arriving from all directions in space. A few hundred events have been observed in a little more than a decade. The energy of gamma-rays range from a few kilovolts to millions of volts. Recent evidence indicates that considerable energy may be carried at least in some cases even above 10 MeV. But the bulk of the energy appeared to be emitted between 100 and 200 keV. The observed intensities range between 10/sup -3/ and 10/sup -7/ ergs/cm/sup 2/. The simple facts about intensity distribution are compatible with two extreme assumptions but exclude intermediate hypotheses. Either the events occur in our own galaxy in a region smaller than the thickness of the galaxy or they are of extragalactic origin and come from distant galaxies. Practically all attempted explanations have made the former explanation which requires that a mass of approximately 10/sup 20/ grams impinges on a neutron star (assuming a near to 100% conversion of gravitational energy available on the surface of the neutron star or 10/sup 20/ ergs/gram into gamma-rays which, of course, is unrealistic). …
Date: November 2, 1984
Creator: Johnson, M. & Teller, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fire protection research for DOE facilities: FY 83 year-end report (open access)

Fire protection research for DOE facilities: FY 83 year-end report

We summarize our research in FY 83 for the DOE-sponsored project, Fire Protection Research for DOE Facilities. This research program was initiated in 1977 to advance fire-protection strategies of energy technology facilities in order to keep abreast of the unique fire problems that develop along with energy technology research. Since 1977, the program has broadened its original scope, as reflected in previous year-end reports. We are developing an analytical methodology through detailed study of fusion energy experiments at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). Using these experiments as models for methodology development, we are currently advancing three major task areas: (1) the identification of fire hazards unique to fusion energy facilities, (2) the evaluation of accepted fire-management measures to meet the negate hazards, and (3) the performance of unique research into problem areas we have identified to provide input into analytical fire-growth and damage-assessment models.
Date: August 2, 1984
Creator: Hasegawa, H. K.; Alvares, N. J.; Lipska-Quinn, A. E.; Beason, D. G.; Foote, K. L.; Priante, S. J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
HOTSPUR progress report: neutron source spectrum characterization, and /sup 6/Li(n,x. cap alpha. ) and /sup 7/Li(n,x. cap alpha. ) cross section determination (open access)

HOTSPUR progress report: neutron source spectrum characterization, and /sup 6/Li(n,x. cap alpha. ) and /sup 7/Li(n,x. cap alpha. ) cross section determination

As a prerequisite to high accuracy measurements involving the bulk configuration of /sup 6/LiD we must have a good grasp of the details of the RTNS-I neutron source energy spectrum. Experiments to this end involving neutron yield vs deuteron energy, ratios of foil activation of selected elements, and pulse height distributions of a Si surface barrier detector are described. With this knowledge, the /sup 4/He-production cross sections for /sup 6/Li and /sup 7/Li are found experimentally to be 0.512b and 0.336b, respectively, at anti E/sub N/ = 15.0 MeV in free-field geometry. 14 references.
Date: April 2, 1984
Creator: Goldberg, E. & Haight, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Incorporation of a circular boundary condition into the program POISSON (open access)

Incorporation of a circular boundary condition into the program POISSON

Two-dimensional problems in electrostatics or magnetostatics frequently are solved numerically by means of relaxation techniques. In many such problems the ''sources'' (charges or currents, and regions of permeable material) lie exclusively within a finite closed boundary curve and the relaxation process in principle then could be confined to the region interior to such a boundary - provided a suitable boundary condition is imposed onto the solution at that boundary. The present notes discuss and illustrate the use of a boundary condition of such a nature as to imply the absence of external sources, in order thereby to avoid the inaccuracies and more extensive meshes present when alternatively a simple Dirichlet or Neumann boundary condition is specified on a somewhat more remote outer boundary.
Date: March 2, 1984
Creator: Caspi, S.; Helm, M. & Laslett, L.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kinetics of Red Blood Cell Aggregation: An Example of Geometric Polymerization (open access)

Kinetics of Red Blood Cell Aggregation: An Example of Geometric Polymerization

The kinetics of the process by which red blood cells aggregate into long cylindrical, and sometimes branched, structures called rouleaux is studied within the framework of both reversible and irreversible addition and condensation polymerization reactions. However, unlike usual polymer kinetics, here we take into account the geometry of the subunits and the geometry of the growing structure. Geometric factors such as the amount of reactive wall area influence the probability of branching and hence the final shape of the aggregate. The inclusion of loop formation reactions is shown to be crucial in obtaining physically realistic equilibrium solutions of the kinetic equations. 11 references, 3 figures.
Date: April 2, 1984
Creator: Perelson, A.S. & Samsel, R.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Milliwatt generator heat source. Progress report, July-December 1983 (open access)

Milliwatt generator heat source. Progress report, July-December 1983

All LANL hardware requirements were met during the reporting period as scheduled. Lot 12 of T-111 alloy sheet and Lot 8 of yttrium platelets were procured to meet future WR production needs. The GEND IP schedule requirements for 49 fueled MC2893 heat sources were met. Pressure burst surveillance activities continued to be conducted in accordance with SNLA document BB328965. Final results of evaluations of two pressure-burst capsules were normal, suggesting that the corresponding heat sources should be in good condition. The hardware production period ended with an overall hardware process yield of 98.4%.
Date: March 2, 1984
Creator: Mershad, E.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
MORSE Monte Carlo radiation transport code system. [Sample problems] (open access)

MORSE Monte Carlo radiation transport code system. [Sample problems]

For a number of years the MORSE user community has requested additional help in setting up problems using various options. The sample problems distributed with MORSE did not fully demonstrate the capability of the code. At Oak Ridge National Laboratory the code originators had a complete set of sample problems, but funds for documenting and distributing them were never available. Recently the number of requests for listings of input data and results for running some particular option the user was trying to implement has increased to the point where it is not feasible to handle them on an individual basis. Consequently it was decided to package a set of sample problems which illustrates more adequately how to run MORSE. This write-up may be added to Part III of the MORSE report. These sample problems include a combined neutron-gamma case, a neutron only case, a gamma only case, an adjoint case, a fission case, a time-dependent fission case, the collision density case, an XCHEKR run and a PICTUR run.
Date: July 2, 1984
Creator: Emmett, M.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron spectra as a function of angle at two meters from the Little Boy assembly (open access)

Neutron spectra as a function of angle at two meters from the Little Boy assembly

Measurements of neutron spectra produced by the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Little Boy replica assembly (Comet) were made with a combined multisphere and liquid scintillator system, that has been widely used at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The combined system was used for measurements at the side (90/sup 0/) and nose (0/sup 0/) of the assembly; additional measurements were made at 45/sup 0/ using only the liquid scintillator. Data were obtained at two meters from the center of the reactive region of the assembly, with good agreement between the multisphere and scintillator results. Comparison with liquid scintillator measurements performed by experimenters from the Canadian Defence Research Establishment, Ottawa (DREO) and calculations from LANL depended on the specific angle, obtaining the best agreement at 90/sup 0/. 32 references, 11 figures, 4 tables.
Date: July 2, 1984
Creator: Griffith, R.V.; Huntzinger, C.J. & Thorngate, J.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the extragalactic origin of gamma-ray bursts (open access)

On the extragalactic origin of gamma-ray bursts

A theory to explain the origin of extragalactic gamma ray bursts is presented. Collisions of black dwarf and neutron stars with a subsequent fragmentation of the dwarf producing relativistic particle accelerations toward the neutron star and a resulting turbulent flow of material at the neutron star surface is postulated. (DWL)
Date: November 2, 1984
Creator: Johnson, M. & Teller, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiological Safety at Argonne National Laboratory's Heavy Ion Research Facility (open access)

Radiological Safety at Argonne National Laboratory's Heavy Ion Research Facility

This paper discusses the radiological safety system to be employed at the Argonne Tandem-LINAC Accelerator System (ATLAS). The design parameters of ATLAS that affect safety have remained unchanged since ATLAS construction began in 1982. The specialized radiological safety considerations of ATLAS were discussed in 1982. This paper will present the details of the hardware, the administrative controls, and the radiation monitoring that will be in effect when beam is produced in April 1985.
Date: November 2, 1984
Creator: Cooke, R. H. & Wynveen, R. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent results of studies of acceleration of compact toroids (open access)

Recent results of studies of acceleration of compact toroids

The observed gross stability and self-contained structure of compact toroids (CT's) give rise to the possibility, unique among magnetically confined plasmas, of translating CT's from their point of origin over distances many times their own length. This feature has led us to consider magnetic acceleration of CT's to directed kinetic energies much greater than their stored magnetic and thermal energies. A CT accelerator falls in the very broad gap between traditional particle accelerators at one extreme, which are limited in the number of particles per bunch by electrostatic repulsive forces, and mass accelerators such as rail guns at the other extreme, which accelerate many particles but are forced by the stress limitations of solids to far smaller accelerations. A typical CT has about a Coulomb of particles, weighs 10 micrograms and can be accelerated by magnetic forces of several tons, leading to an acceleration on the order of 10/sup 11/ gravities.
Date: March 2, 1984
Creator: Hammer, J. H.; Hartman, C. W. & Eddleman, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recovery and reuse of asphalt roofing waste. Final report (open access)

Recovery and reuse of asphalt roofing waste. Final report

Burning of asphalt roofing waste as a fuel and incorporating asphalt roofing waste in bituminous paving were identified as the two outstanding resource recovery concepts out of ten studied. Four additional concepts might be worth considering under different market or technical circumstances. Another four concepts were rated as worth no further consideration at this time. This study of the recovery of the resource represented in asphalt roofing waste has identified the sources and quantities of roofing waste. About six million cubic yards of scrap roofing are generated annually in the United States, about 94% from removal of old roofing at the job site and the remainder from roofing material production at factories. Waste disposal is a growing problem for manufacturers and contractors. Nearly all roofing waste is hauled to landfills at a considerable expense to roofing contractors and manufacturers. Recovery of the roofing waste resource should require only a modest economic incentive. The asphalt contained in roofing waste represents an energy resource of more than 7 x 10/sup 13/ Btu/year. Another 1 x 10/sup 13/ Btu/year may be contained in field-applied asphalt on commercial building roofs. The two concepts recommended by this study appear to offer the broadest applicability, the …
Date: February 2, 1984
Creator: Desai, S.; Graziano, G. & Shepherd, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study Of Luminosity Parameters (open access)

A Study Of Luminosity Parameters

None
Date: February 2, 1984
Creator: E., Roberts L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Survey of vibration amplitudes throughout the linac (open access)

Survey of vibration amplitudes throughout the linac

The magnitude of vibrations of the Linac structure due to on site disturbances, such as cooling towers, pumps, generators, Highway 280 overpass traffic, is of interest. CN-263, for example, discusses tolerances of random (i.e., uncorrelated) quad jitter and suggests that amplitudes should not exceed 0.7 microns rms. This note describes the results of a series of measurements carried out in the summer of 1983. In general, the tolerance is not exceeded, but there appears not to be a good safety factor at low frequencies.
Date: May 2, 1984
Creator: Werner, K.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tectonic stability and expected ground motion at Yucca Mountain (open access)

Tectonic stability and expected ground motion at Yucca Mountain

A workshop was convened on August 7-8, 1984 at the direction of DOE to discuss effects of natural and artificial earthquakes and associated ground motion as related to siting of a high-level radioactive waste (HLW) repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. A panel of experts in seismology and tectonics was assembled to review available data and analyses and to assess conflicting opinions on geological and seismologic data. The objective of the meeting was to advise the Nevada Nuclear Waste Storage Investigations (NNWSI) Project about how to present a technically balanced and scientifically credible evaluation of Yucca Mountain for the NNWSI Project EA. The group considered two central issues: the magnitude of ground motion at Yucca Mountain due to the largest expected earthquake, and the overall tectonic stability of the site given the current geologic and seismologic data base. 44 refs.
Date: October 2, 1984
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Water cooling considerations for the SSC (open access)

Water cooling considerations for the SSC

The purpose of this note is to specify parameters for hypothetical SSC water cooling systems, in order that the comparative advantages of these system can be studied. The various methods of heat rejection considered include: cooling towers, cooling ponds, ground water recharge system, water-to-air (dry) cooling towers, use of tunnel sump water, or some combination.
Date: November 2, 1984
Creator: O'Meara, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library