90-Ton Triple Cylinder Jack Design (open access)

90-Ton Triple Cylinder Jack Design

The three D-Zero cryostats (2 EC and 1 CC) will rest on three carriages which in turn ride on a set of hardened ways in the center beam. A pair of Tychoway rollers will be fitted to each of the four corners of the three carriages to provide the rolling support. In the final design, the two EC cryostats will be able to roll out and away from the CC cryostat in order to provide access to the space between each cryostat for maintenance and repairs. The cryostat will be frequently accessed, about once a month. during a collider run. The heaviest cryostat weighs about 360 tons. The large roller weight in one position for such a long period of time, created a concern about the rollers dimpling the hardened ways or even suffering permanent deformations themselves. There is also the possibility that the vertical position of the cryostat will need to be adjusted to align it with the beam line or that the carriage and cryostat will have to be lifted to remove and service the rollers. A device or system was needed to (1) relieve the weight of the cryostats from the rollers and the hardened ways, and …
Date: September 26, 1988
Creator: Jaques, Al
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
283-E and 283-W hazards assessment (open access)

283-E and 283-W hazards assessment

This report documents the hazards assessment for the 200 area water treatment plants 283-E and 283-W located on the US DOE Hanford Site. Operation of the water treatment plants is the responsibility of ICF Kaiser Hanford Company (ICF KH). This hazards assessment was conducted to provide emergency planning technical basis for the water treatment plants. This document represents an acceptable interpretation of the implementing guidance document for DOE ORDER 5500.3A which requires an emergency planning hazards assessment for each facility that has the potential to reach or exceed the lowest level emergency classification.
Date: September 26, 1994
Creator: Sutton, L. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
L-325 Sagebrush Habitat Mitigation Project: Final Compensation Area Monitoring Report (open access)

L-325 Sagebrush Habitat Mitigation Project: Final Compensation Area Monitoring Report

This document provides a review and status of activities conducted in support of the Fluor Daniel Hanford Company (Fluor), now Mission Support Alliance (MSA), Mitigation Action Plan (MAP) for Project L-325, Electrical Utility Upgrades (2007). Three plantings have been installed on a 4.5-hectare mitigation area to date. This review provides a description and chronology of events, monitoring results, and mitigative actions through fiscal year (FY) 2012. Also provided is a review of the monitoring methods, transect layout, and FY 2012 monitoring activities and results for all planting years. Planting densities and performance criteria stipulated in the MAP were aimed at a desired future condition (DFC) of 10 percent mature sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata ssp wyomingensis) cover. Current recommendations for yielding this DFC are based upon a conceptual model planting of 1000 plants/ha (400/ac) exhibiting a 60-percent survival rate after 5 monitoring years (DOE 2003). Accordingly, a DFC after 5 monitoring years would not be less than 600 plants/ha (240/ac). To date, about 8700 sagebrush plants have been grown and transplanted onto the mitigation site. Harsh site conditions and low seedling survival have resulted in an estimated 489 transplants/ha on the mitigation site, which is 111 plants/ha short of the target DFC. …
Date: September 26, 2013
Creator: Durham, Robin E. & Becker, James M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The 2005 National Conference of Black Physics Students (open access)

The 2005 National Conference of Black Physics Students

This proposal funded the 19th Annual National Conference of Black Physics Students. This conference provided physics students with the opportunity to interact with world-class researchers and the facilities at which they work. The conference supports the well established need for the US to foster a larger and stronger scientific workforce through the recruitment and retention of science and engineering students.
Date: September 26, 2006
Creator: Reid, David D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2013 LLNL Nuclear Forensics Summer Program (open access)

2013 LLNL Nuclear Forensics Summer Program

None
Date: September 26, 2013
Creator: Kersting, A. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
21nm X-Ray Laser Thomson Scattering of Laser-Heated Exploding Foil Plasmas (open access)

21nm X-Ray Laser Thomson Scattering of Laser-Heated Exploding Foil Plasmas

Recent experiments were carried out on the Prague Asterix Laser System (PALS) towards the demonstration of a soft x-ray laser Thomson scattering diagnostic for a laser-produced exploding foil. The Thomson probe utilized the Ne-like zinc x-ray laser which was double-passed to deliver {approx}1 mJ of focused energy at 21.2 nm wavelength and lasting {approx}100 ps. The plasma under study was heated single-sided using a Gaussian 300-ps pulse of 438-nm light (3{omega} of the PALS iodine laser) at laser irradiances of 10{sup 13}-10{sup 14} W cm{sup -2}. Electron densities of 10{sup 20}-10{sup 22} cm{sup -3} and electron temperatures from 200 to 500 eV were probed at 0.5 or 1 ns after the peak of the heating pulse during the foil plasma expansion. A flat-field 1200 line mm{sup -1} variable-spaced grating spectrometer with a cooled charge-coupled device readout viewed the plasma in the forward direction at 30{sup o} with respect to the x-ray laser probe. We show results from plasmas generated from {approx}1 {micro}m thick targets of Al and polypropylene (C{sub 3}H{sub 6}). Numerical simulations of the Thomson scattering cross-sections will be presented. These simulations show electron peaks in addition to a narrow ion feature due to collective (incoherent) Thomson scattering. The …
Date: September 26, 2007
Creator: Dunn, J.; Rus, B.; Mocek, T.; Nelson, A. J.; Foord, M. E.; Rozmus, W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
3D WAVE PROPAGATION AND SITE EFFECTS IN THE HUMBOLDT BAY AREA USING STRONG GROUND MOTION RECORDS FROM THE M6.5 2010 FERNDALE EARTHQUAKE. (open access)

3D WAVE PROPAGATION AND SITE EFFECTS IN THE HUMBOLDT BAY AREA USING STRONG GROUND MOTION RECORDS FROM THE M6.5 2010 FERNDALE EARTHQUAKE.

None
Date: September 26, 2012
Creator: Pitarka, Arben; Thio, Hong Kie & Somerville, Paul G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
3H(d,n)4He S-factor from Ab Initio Overlap Functions (open access)

3H(d,n)4He S-factor from Ab Initio Overlap Functions

None
Date: September 26, 2007
Creator: Navratil, P; Thompson, I & Ormand, E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Abstraction of Seepage into Drifts (open access)

Abstraction of Seepage into Drifts

A total-system performance assessment (TSPA) for a potential nuclear-waste repository requires an estimate of the amount of water that might contact waste. This paper describes the model used for part of that estimation in a recent TSPA for the Yucca Mountain site. The discussion is limited to estimation of how much water might enter emplacement drifts; additional considerations related to flow within the drifts, and how much water might actually contact waste, are not addressed here. The unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain is being considered for the potential repository, and a drift opening in unsaturated rock tends to act as a capillary barrier and divert much of the percolating water around it. For TSPA, the important questions regarding seepage are how many waste packages might be subjected to water flow and how much flow those packages might see. Because of heterogeneity of the rock and uncertainty about the future (how the climate will evolve, etc.), it is not possible to predict seepage amounts or locations with certainty. Thus, seepage is treated as a stochastic quantity in TSPA simulations, with the magnitude and spatial distribution of seepage sampled from uncertainty distributions. The distillation of the essential components of process modeling into …
Date: September 26, 2000
Creator: Wilson, M. L. & Ho, C. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adventures in Coulomb Gauge (open access)

Adventures in Coulomb Gauge

We study the phase structure of SU(2) gauge theories at zero and high temperature, with and without scalar matter fields, in terms of the symmetric/broken realization of the remnant gauge symmetry which exists after fixing to Coulomb gauge. The symmetric realization is associated with a linearly rising color Coulomb potential (which we compute numerically), and is a necessary but not sufficient condition for confinement.
Date: September 26, 2003
Creator: Greensite, J. & Olejnik, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ADVISOR Users Conference Proceedings 2000 - Final Electronic version (open access)

ADVISOR Users Conference Proceedings 2000 - Final Electronic version

This is a compilation of papers presented at the ADVISOR (ADvanced Vehicle SimulatOR) Users Conference held in Costa Mesa, California, August 24-25, 2000. Major topics of the conference included modeling and simulation; partnering with the auto industry; co-simulation: partnering with the software industry in optimization and thermal modeling and geometric and mechanical modeling; forward-looking simulations coupled with ADVISOR; new concepts from universities; validation, vehicle development and applications.
Date: September 26, 2000
Creator: National Renewable Energy Lab
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
All auto shredding: evaluation of automotive shredder residue generated by shredding only vehicles. (open access)

All auto shredding: evaluation of automotive shredder residue generated by shredding only vehicles.

A well developed infrastructure exists for the reuse and recycling of automotive parts and materials. At the end of a vehicle's useful life many parts are removed and sold for reuse and fluids are recovered for recycling or proper disposal. What remains is shredded, along with other metal bearing scrap such as home appliances, demolition debris and process equipment, and the metals are separated out and recycled. The remainder of the vehicle materials is call shredder residue which ends up in the landfill. As energy and natural resources becomes more treasured, increased effort has been afforded to find ways to reduce energy consumption and minimize the use of our limited resources. Many of the materials found in shredder residue could be recovered and help offset the use of energy and material consumption. For example, the energy content of the plastics and rubbers currently landfilled with the shredder residue is equivalent to 16 million barrels of oil per year. However, in the United States, the recovered materials, primarily polymers, cannot be recycled due to current regulatory barriers which preclude the re-introduction into commerce of certain materials because of residual contamination with substances of concern (SOCs) such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The …
Date: September 26, 2011
Creator: Duranceau, C. M. & Spangenberger, J. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alpha-particle Measurements Needed for Burning Plasma Experiments (open access)

Alpha-particle Measurements Needed for Burning Plasma Experiments

The next major step in magnetic fusion studies will be the construction of a burning plasma (BP) experiment where the goals will be to achieve and understand the plasma behavior with the internal heating provided by fusion-generated alpha particles. Two devices with these physics goals have been proposed: the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) and the Fusion Ignition Research Experiment (FIRE). Extensive conceptual design work for the instrumentation to try to meet the physics demands has been done for these devices, especially ITER. This article provides a new look at the measurements specifically important for understanding the physics aspects of the alpha particles taking into account two significant events. The first is the completion of physics experiments on the Joint European Torus (JET) and the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR) with deuterium-tritium fueling with the first chances to study alpha physics and the second is the realization that relatively compact plasmas, making use of advanced tokamak plasma concepts, are the most probable route to burning plasmas and ultimately a fusion reactor.
Date: September 26, 2001
Creator: Young, Kenneth M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Alternative Treatment of Trace Chemical Constituents in Calculated Chemical Source Terms for Hanford Tank Farms Safety Analsyes (open access)

An Alternative Treatment of Trace Chemical Constituents in Calculated Chemical Source Terms for Hanford Tank Farms Safety Analsyes

Hanford Site high-level radioactive waste tank accident analyses require chemical waste toxicity source terms to assess potential accident consequences. Recent reviews of the current methodology used to generate source terms and the need to periodically update the sources terms has brought scrutiny to the manner in which trace waste constituents are included in the source terms. This report examines the importance of trace constituents to the chemical waste source terms, which are calculated as sums of fractions (SOFs), and recommends three changes to the manner in which trace constituents are included in the calculation SOFs.
Date: September 26, 2006
Creator: Huckaby, James L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
AMMONIA CONCENTRATION IN SALTSTONE HEADSPACE SUMMARY REPORT (open access)

AMMONIA CONCENTRATION IN SALTSTONE HEADSPACE SUMMARY REPORT

The Saltstone Facility Documented Safety Analysis (DSA) is under revision to accommodate changes in the Composite Lower Flammability Limit (CLFL) from the introduction of Isopar into Tank 50. Saltstone samples were prepared with an 'MCU' type salt solution spiked with ammonia. The ammonia released from the saltstone was captured and analyzed. The ammonia concentration found in the headspace of samples maintained at 95 C and 1 atm was, to 95% confidence, less than or equal to 3.9 mg/L. Tank 50 is fed by several influent streams. The salt solution from Tank 50 is pumped to the salt feed tank (SFT) in the Saltstone Production Facility (SPF). The premix materials cement, slag and fly ash are blended together prior to transfer to the grout mixer. The premix is fed to the grout mixer in the SPF and the salt solution is incorporated into the premix in the grout mixer, yielding saltstone slurry. The saltstone slurry drops into a hopper and then is pumped to the vault. The Saltstone Facility Documented Safety Analysis (DSA) is under revision to accommodate changes in the Composite Lower Flammability Limit (CLFL) from the introduction of Isopar{reg_sign} L into Tank 50. Waste Solidification-Engineering requested that the Savannah …
Date: September 26, 2008
Creator: Zamecnik, J & Alex Cozzi, A
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of gamma ray burst spectra with cyclotron lines (open access)

Analysis of gamma ray burst spectra with cyclotron lines

Motivated by the recent developments in the cyclotron resonance upscattering of soft photons or CUSP model of Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) continuum spectra, we revisit a select database of GRBs with credible cyclotron absorption features. We measure the break energy of the continuum, the slope below the break and deduce the soft photon energy or the electron beam Lorentz factor cutoff. We study the correlation (or lack of) between various parameters in the context of the CUSP model. One surprise result is that there appears to be marginal correlation between the break energy and the spectral index below the break. 20 refs., 8 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: September 26, 1990
Creator: Kargatis, V. (Rice Univ., Houston, TX (USA). Dept. of Space Physics and Astronomy) & Liang, E.P. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of organics in 643-G groundwaters by GC/MS (open access)

Analysis of organics in 643-G groundwaters by GC/MS

Twenty-three of the 63 monitoring wells in the 643-G burial ground consistently contain measurable (> 1 ppm) amounts of total organic carbon, TOC. Of these 23 wells, 10 that contain elevated (2--400 ppm) TOC were chosen for in-depth analysis of semivolatile organics by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, GC/MS. A well located near the site of previous decontamination operations was also chosen for analysis. About 40% of the organic compounds detected in these well waters have been identified. Many of these compounds are indicative of liquid scintillation wastes, spent solvent wastes, and solvent degradation products. Four priority pollutants were present at low levels. Some of the organics identified are probably degradation products from humic substances. Organic compounds of unknown origin are also present. No strong chelators capable of increasing radionuclide mobility have been identified. Preliminary dialysis work indicates that up to 30--40% of the TOC may be present as nonvolatile humic substances that cannot be analyzed by GC/MS.
Date: September 26, 1985
Creator: Hoeffner, S. L.; Denham, E. L. & Oblath, S. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Solution to the Riemann Problem of Three-Phase Flow in Porous Media (open access)

Analytical Solution to the Riemann Problem of Three-Phase Flow in Porous Media

In this paper we study one-dimensional three-phase flow through porous media of immiscible, incompressible fluids. The model uses the common multiphase flow extension of Darcy's equation, and does not include gravity and capillarity effects. Under these conditions, the mathematical problem reduces to a 2 x 2 system of conservation laws whose essential features are: (1) the system is strictly hyperbolic; (2) both characteristic fields are nongenuinely nonlinear, with single, connected inflection loci. These properties, which are natural extensions of the two-phase flow model, ensure that the solution is physically sensible. We present the complete analytical solution to the Riemann problem (constant initial and injected states) in detail, and describe the characteristic waves that may arise, concluding that only nine combinations of rarefactions, shocks and rarefaction-shocks are possible. We demonstrate that assuming the saturation paths of the solution are straightlines may result in inaccurate predictions for some realistic systems. Efficient algorithms for computing the exact solution are also given, making the analytical developments presented here readily applicable to interpretation of lab displacement experiments, and implementation of streamline simulators.
Date: September 26, 2002
Creator: Juanes, Ruben & Patzek, Tadeusz W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report: Idaho National Laboratory, 2010 (open access)

Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report: Idaho National Laboratory, 2010

The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) commitment to assuring the health and safety of its workers includes the conduct of illness and injury surveillance activities that provide an early warning system to detect health problems among workers. The Illness and Injury Surveillance Program monitors illnesses and health conditions that result in an absence, occupational injuries and illnesses, and disabilities and deaths among current workers.
Date: September 26, 2011
Creator: United States. Department of Energy. Office of Health, Safety, and Security.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
APPLICATION OF THE EMBEDDED FIBER OPTIC PROBE IN HIGH EXPLOSIVE DETONATION STUDIES: PBX-9502 AND LX-17 (open access)

APPLICATION OF THE EMBEDDED FIBER OPTIC PROBE IN HIGH EXPLOSIVE DETONATION STUDIES: PBX-9502 AND LX-17

The Embedded Fiber Optic probe directly measures detonation speed continuously in time, without the need to numerically differentiate data, and is a new tool for measuring time-dependent as well as steady detonation speed to high accuracy. It consists of a custom-design optical fiber probe embedded in high explosive. The explosive is detonated and a refractive index discontinuity is produced in the probe at the location of the detonation front by the compression of the detonation. Because this index-jump tracks the detonation front a measurement of the Doppler shift of laser light reflected from the jump makes it possible to continuously measure detonation velocity with high spatial and temporal resolution. We have employed this probe with a Fabry-Perot-type laser Doppler velocimetry system additionally equipped with a special filter for reducing the level of non-Doppler shifted light relative to the signal. This is necessary because the index-jump signal is relatively weak compared to the return expected from a well-prepared surface in the more traditional and familiar example of material interface velocimetry. Our observations were carried out on a number of explosives but this work is focused on our results on PBX-9502 (95% TATB, 5% Kel-F) and LX-17 (92.5% TATB, 7.5% Kel-F) at …
Date: September 26, 2006
Creator: Hare, D; Goosman, D; Lorenz, K & Lee, E
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applying graph partitioning methods in measurement-based dynamic load balancing (open access)

Applying graph partitioning methods in measurement-based dynamic load balancing

None
Date: September 26, 2011
Creator: Bhatele, A; Fourestier, S; Menon, H; Kale, L V & Pellegrini, F
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessing field-scale migration of mobile radionuclides at the Nevada Test Site (open access)

Assessing field-scale migration of mobile radionuclides at the Nevada Test Site

Numerous long-lived radionuclides, including {sup 99}Tc (technetium) and {sup 129}I (iodine), are present in groundwater at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) as a result of 828 underground nuclear weapons tests conducted between 1951 and 1992. We synthesize a body of groundwater data collected on the distribution of a number of radionuclides ({sup 3}H, {sup 14}C, {sup 36}Cl, {sup 99}Tc and {sup 129}I), which are presumably mobile in the subsurface and potentially toxic to down-gradient receptors, to assess their migration at NTS, at field scales over distances of hundreds of meters and for durations of more than thirty years. Qualitative evaluation of field-scale migration of these radionuclides in the saturated zone provides an independent approach to validating their presumably conservative transport in the performance assessment of the proposed geological repository at Yucca Mountain, which is located on the western edge of NTS. The analyses show that the interaction of {sup 3}H with a solid surface via an isotopic exchange with clay lattice hydroxyls may cause a slight delay in the transport of {sup 3}H. The transport of {sup 14}C could be retarded by its isotopic exchange with carbonate minerals, and the exchange may be more pronounced in the alluvial aquifer. In …
Date: September 26, 2006
Creator: Hu, Q.; Rose, T. P.; Smith, D. K.; Moran, J. E. & Zavarin, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of Geothermal Resources for Electric Generation in the Pacific Northwest, Draft Issue Paper for the Northwest Power Planning Council (open access)

Assessment of Geothermal Resources for Electric Generation in the Pacific Northwest, Draft Issue Paper for the Northwest Power Planning Council

This document reviews the geothermal history, technology, costs, and Pacific Northwest potentials. The report discusses geothermal generation, geothermal resources in the Pacific Northwest, cost and operating characteristics of geothermal power plants, environmental effects of geothermal generation, and prospects for development in the Pacific Northwest. This report was prepared expressly for use by the Northwest Power Planning Council. The report contains numerous references at the end of the document. [DJE-2005]
Date: September 26, 1989
Creator: Geyer, John D.; Kellerman, L. M. & Bloomquist, R. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of impact damage in Kevlar{reg_sign}-epoxy, filament-wound spherical test specimens by acoustic emission techniques (open access)

Assessment of impact damage in Kevlar{reg_sign}-epoxy, filament-wound spherical test specimens by acoustic emission techniques

The results of a study of the acoustic emission (AE) behavior of impact-damaged, spherical, composite test specimens subjected to thermal cycling and biaxial mechanical loading are presented. Seven Kevlar{reg_sign}-epoxy, filament-wound, spherical composite test specimens were subjected to different levels of impact damage. The seven specimens were a subset of a group of 77 specimens made with simulated fabrication-induced flaws. The specimens were subjected to two or three cycles of elevated temperature and then hydraulically pressurized to failure. The pressurization regime consisted of two cycles to different intermediate levels with a hold at each peak pressure level; a final pressurization to failure followed. The thermal and pressurization cycles were carefully designed to stimulate AE production under defined conditions. Both impacted and nonimpacted specimens produced thermo-AE (the term given to emission stimulated by thermal loading), but impacted specimens produced significantly more. Thermo-AE was produced primarily by damaged composite material. Damaged material produced emission as a function of both rising and falling temperature, but the effect was not repeatable. More seriously damaged specimens produced very large quantities of emission. Emission recorded during the static portion of the hydraulic loading cycles varied with load, time, and degree of damage. Static load AE behavior was …
Date: September 26, 1996
Creator: Whittaker, J. W.; Brosey, W. D. & Hamstad, M. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library