291-T Emergency Exhaust Air Scrubbers (open access)

291-T Emergency Exhaust Air Scrubbers

None
Date: July 16, 1948
Creator: Stainken, F. A. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2007 Hanford Site Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report (open access)

2007 Hanford Site Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report

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: July 16, 2009
Creator: United States. Department of Energy. Office of Health, Safety, and Security.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2007 Hanford Site Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report (open access)

2007 Hanford Site Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report

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: July 16, 2009
Creator: U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Health, Safety, and Security
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE ON MITOCHONDRIA & CHLOROPLASTS, LUCCA, ITALY, JULY 11-16, 2010 (open access)

2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE ON MITOCHONDRIA & CHLOROPLASTS, LUCCA, ITALY, JULY 11-16, 2010

The 2010 GRC on Mitochondria & Chloroplasts will assemble an international group of molecular, structural and cellular biologists, biochemists and geneticists investigating a broad spectrum of fundamental problems related to the biology of these organelles in animal, plant and fungal cells. This field has witnessed an extraordinary expansion in recent years, fueled by the discovery of the role of mitochondria in human disease and ageing, and of the synergy of chloroplasts and mitochondria in energetic output, the identification of novel factors involved in organelle division, movement, signaling and acclimation to changing environmental conditions, and by the powerful tools of organelle proteomics. The 2010 GRC will highlight advances in the elucidation of molecular mechanisms of organelle biogenesis including regulation of genome structure, evolution and expression, organellar protein import, assembly and turnover of respiratory and photosynthetic complexes, bidirectional signaling between organelles and nucleus, organelle morphology and dynamics, and the integration of cellular metabolism. We will also explore progress in mechanisms of disease and ageing/ senescence in animals and plants. The organellar field has forged new fronts toward a global and comprehensive understanding of mitochondrial and chloroplast biology at the molecular level. Many of the molecules under study in model organisms are responsible …
Date: July 16, 2010
Creator: Barkan, Alice
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance/status of construction at suspension of the Hanford cone penetrometer multi-sensor and multi-sample soil sampler probe systems (open access)

Acceptance/status of construction at suspension of the Hanford cone penetrometer multi-sensor and multi-sample soil sampler probe systems

This document describes the condition of the multi-sensor cone penetrometer probe system at project termination.
Date: July 16, 1999
Creator: Troyer, G. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test report for waste tank sample vessel H-2-826-1 assembly (open access)

Acceptance test report for waste tank sample vessel H-2-826-1 assembly

This document summarizes the acceptance criteria for the waste tanks sample vessel H-2-826-1 Assembly.
Date: July 16, 1996
Creator: Linschooten, C.G., Westinghouse Hanford
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Activities of Human Gene Nomenclature Committee (open access)

Activities of Human Gene Nomenclature Committee

The objective of this project, shared between NIH and DOE, has been and remains to enable the medical genetics communities to use common names for genes that are discovered by different gene hunting groups, in different species. This effort provides consistent gene nomenclature and approved gene symbols to the community at large. This contributes to a uniform and consistent understanding of genomes, particularly the human as well as functional genomics based on comparisons between homologous genes in related species (human and mice).
Date: July 16, 2002
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Activity plan: Directional drilling and environmental measurements while drilling (open access)

Activity plan: Directional drilling and environmental measurements while drilling

This activity plan describes the testing of directional drilling combined with environmental measurements while drilling at two Hanford Site locations. A cold test is to be conducted at the 105A Mock Tank Leak Facility in the 200 East Area. A hot test is proposed to be run at the 216-B-8 tile field north of the 241-B Tank Farm in 200 East Area. Criteria to judge the success, partial success or failure of various aspects of the test are included. The TWRS program is assessing the potential for use of directional drilling because of an identified need to interrogate the vadose zone beneath the single-shell tanks. Because every precaution must be taken to assure that investigation activities do not violate the integrity of the tanks, control of the drill bit and ability to follow a predetermined drill path are of utmost importance and are being tested.
Date: July 16, 1998
Creator: Myers, D.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adsorption of Pu(IV) Polymer onto 304L Stainless Steel (open access)

Adsorption of Pu(IV) Polymer onto 304L Stainless Steel

'The report, Technical Basis for Safe Operations with Pu-239 Polymer in NMS S Operating Facilities (F H Areas), (WSRC-TR-99-00008) was issued in an effort to upgrade the Authorization Basis (AB) for H Area facilities relative to nuclear criticality. At the time, insufficient data were found in the literature to quantify the adsorption of Pu polymer onto the surfaces of stainless steel tanks. Additional experimental or literature information on the adsorption of Pu(IV) polymer and its removal was deemed necessary to support the H Area AB. The results obtained are also applicable to processing in F Area facilities.Additional literature sources suggest that adsorption on the tank walls should not be a safety concern. The sources show that the amount of Pu polymer that adsorbs from a solution comes to a limiting amount in 5 to 7 days after which no additional Pu is adsorbed. Adsorption increases with Pu concentration and decreases with acid concentration. The adsorbed amounts are small varying from 0.5 mg/cm2 for a 0.5 g/l Pu / 0.5M HNO3 solution to 11 mg/cm2 for a 1-3 g/l Pu / 0.1M HNO3 solution. Additionally, acid concentrations greater than 0.1M will remove a percentage of adsorbed Pu.The experimental results have generally …
Date: July 16, 1999
Creator: Bronikowski, M.G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ADVANCED WAVEFORM SIMULATION FOR SEISMIC MONITORING EVENTS (open access)

ADVANCED WAVEFORM SIMULATION FOR SEISMIC MONITORING EVENTS

Comprehensive test ban monitoring in terms of location and discrimination has progressed significantly in recent years. However, the characterization of sources and the estimation of low yields remains a particular challenge. As the recent Korean shot demonstrated, we can probably expect to have a small set of teleseismic, far-regional and high-frequency regional data to analyze in estimating the yield of an event. Since stacking helps to bring signals out of the noise, it becomes useful to conduct comparable analyses on neighboring events, earthquakes in this case. If these auxiliary events have accurate moments and source descriptions, we have a means of directly comparing effective source strengths. Although we will rely on modeling codes, 1D, 2D, and 3D, we will also apply a broadband calibration procedure to use longer periods (P>5s) waveform data to calibrate short-period (P between .5 to 2 Hz) and high-frequency (P between 2 to 10 Hz) as path specify station corrections from well-known regional sources. We have expanded our basic Cut-and-Paste (CAP) methodology to include not only timing shifts but also amplitude (f) corrections at recording sites. The name of this method was derived from source inversions that allow timing shifts between 'waveform segments' (or cutting the …
Date: July 16, 2007
Creator: Helmberger, D; Tromp, J & Rodgers, A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerial Radiation Measurements from the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant Accident (open access)

Aerial Radiation Measurements from the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant Accident

This document is a slide show type presentation concerning DOE and Aerial Measuring System (AMS) activities and results with respect to assessing the consequences of the releases from the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant. These include ground monitoring and aerial monitoring.
Date: July 16, 2012
Creator: Guss, P. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alfven Eigenmode Stability with Beams in ITER-like Plasma (open access)

Alfven Eigenmode Stability with Beams in ITER-like Plasma

Toroidicity Alfven Eigenmodes (TAE) in ITER can be driven unstable by two groups of energetic particles, the 3.5 MeV {alpha}-particle fusion products and the tangentially injected 1MeV beam ions. Stability conditions are established using the perturbative NOVA/NOVA-K codes. A quasi-linear diffusion model is then used to assess the induced redistribution of energetic particles.
Date: July 16, 2004
Creator: Gorelenkov, N. N.; Berk, H. L. & Budny, R. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical test results for archived core composite samples from tanks 241-TY-101 and 241-TY-103 (open access)

Analytical test results for archived core composite samples from tanks 241-TY-101 and 241-TY-103

This report describes the analytical tests performed on archived core composite samples form a 1.085 sampling of the 241-TY-101 (101-TY) and 241-TY-103 (103-TY) single shell waste tanks. Both tanks are suspected of containing quantities of ferrocyanide compounds, as a result of process activities in the late 1950`s. Although limited quantities of the composite samples remained, attempts were made to obtain as much analytical information as possible, especially regarding the chemical and thermal properties of the material.
Date: July 16, 1993
Creator: Beck, M. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Antiplane shear flows in visco-plastic solids exhibiting isotropic and kinematic hardening (open access)

Antiplane shear flows in visco-plastic solids exhibiting isotropic and kinematic hardening

The authors consider antiplane shearing motions of an incompressible visco-plastic solid. The particular constitutive equation employed assumes that the stress tensor has an ''elastic'' component and a component which can exhibit hysteresis. The model exhibits both ''kinematic'' and ''isotropic'' hardening. Our results consist of a set of energy type estimates for the resulting system, L{sub 2} contractivity estimates for the solution operator, and finally an analysis of the approach of our system to a ''rate independent'' model as a distinguished parameter describing our flow rule approaches zero. We also include some computational results for simple piecewise constant data.
Date: July 16, 2003
Creator: Greenberg, J. M. & Owen, D. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of Bomb Radiocarbon Chronologies to Shortfin Mako (Isurus oxyrinchus) (open access)

Application of Bomb Radiocarbon Chronologies to Shortfin Mako (Isurus oxyrinchus)

There is an ongoing disagreement regarding the aging of the shortfin mako due to a difference of interpretation in the periodic deposition of vertebral growth band pairs, especially for the larger size classes. Using analysis of length-month information, tagging data, and length-frequency analysis, concluded that two band pairs were formed in the vertebral centrum every year (biannual band-pair interpretation). Cailliet et al. (1983), however, presented growth parameters based on the common assumption that one band pair forms annually (annual band-pair interpretation). Therefore, growth rates obtained by Pratt & Casey (1983) were twice that of Cailliet et al. (1983) and could lead to age discrepancies of about 15 years for maximum estimated ages on the order of 30 from the annual band-pair interpretation. Serious consequences in the population dynamics could occur for this species if inputs are based on an invalid age interpretation. The latest Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for Highly Migratory Species (HMS), for example, adopted the biannual band pair deposition hypothesis because it apparently fit the observed growth patterns best (Pacific Fishery Management Council 2003). However, the ongoing uncertainty about the aging of the shortfin mako was acknowledged and it was recommended that an endeavor to resolve this issue …
Date: July 16, 2007
Creator: Ardizzone, D; Cailliet, G M; Natanson, L J; Andrews, A H; Kerr, L A & Brown, T A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of Electron Backscatter Diffraction to Phase Identification (open access)

Application of Electron Backscatter Diffraction to Phase Identification

The identification of crystalline phases in solids requires knowledge of two microstructural properties: crystallographic structure and chemical composition. Traditionally, this has been accomplished using X-ray diffraction techniques where the measured crystallographic information, in combination with separate chemical composition measurements for specimens of unknown pedigrees, is used to deduce the unknown phases. With the latest microstructural analysis tools for scanning electron microscopes, both the crystallography and composition can be determined in a single analysis utilizing electron backscatter diffraction and energy dispersive spectroscopy, respectively. In this chapter, we discuss the approach required to perform these experiments, elucidate the benefits and limitations of this technique, and detail via case studies how composition, crystallography, and diffraction contrast can be used as phase discriminators.
Date: July 16, 2008
Creator: El-Dasher, B S & Deal, A
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assembly and maintenance of full scale NIF amplifiers in the amplifier module prototype laboratory (AMPLAB) (open access)

Assembly and maintenance of full scale NIF amplifiers in the amplifier module prototype laboratory (AMPLAB)

Mechanical assembly and maintenance of the prototype National Ignition Facility amplifiers in the Amplifier Module Prototype Laboratory (AMPLAB) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory requires specialized equipment designed to manipulate large and delicate amplifier components in a safe and clean manner. Observations made during the operation of this assembly and maintenance equipment in AMPLAB provide design guidance for similar tools being built for the National Ignition Facility. Fixtures used for amplifier frame installation, laser slab and flashlamp cassette assembly, transport, and installation, and in-situ blastshield exchange are presented. Examples include a vacuum slab gripper, slab handling clean crane, slab cassette assembly fixture, sealed transport vehicle for slab cassette movement between the cleanroom and amplifier, slab cassette transfer fixture between the cleanroom and transport vehicle, and equipment needed for frame assembly unit, blastshield, an d flashlamp cassette installation and removal. The use of these tools for amplifier assembly, system reconfiguration, reflector replacement, and recovery from an abnormal occurrence such as a flashlamp explosion is described. Observations are made on the design and operation of these tools and their contribution to the final design.
Date: July 16, 1998
Creator: Horvath, J. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of the 3410 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack Sampling Probe Location (open access)

Assessment of the 3410 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack Sampling Probe Location

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory performed several tests in the exhaust air discharge from the new 3410 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack to determine whether the air sampling probe for emissions monitoring for radionuclides is acceptable. The method followed involved adopting the results of a previously performed test series from a system with a similar configuration, followed by several tests on the actual system to verify the applicability of the previously performed tests. The qualification criteria for these types of stacks include metrics concerning 1) uniformity of air velocity, 2) sufficiently small flow angle with respect to the axis of the duct, 3) uniformity of tracer gas concentration, and 4) uniformity tracer particle concentration.
Date: July 16, 2010
Creator: Glissmeyer, John A. & Flaherty, Julia E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of the 3420 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack Sampling Probe Location (open access)

Assessment of the 3420 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack Sampling Probe Location

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory performed several tests in the exhaust air discharge from the new 3420 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack to determine whether the air sampling probe for emissions monitoring for radionuclides is acceptable. The method followed involved adopting the results of a previously performed test series from a system with a similar configuration, followed by several tests on the actual system to verify the applicability of the previously performed tests. The qualification criteria for these types of stacks include metrics concerning 1) uniformity of air velocity, 2) sufficiently small flow angle with respect to the axis of the duct, 3) uniformity of tracer gas concentration, and 4) uniformity tracer particle concentration.
Date: July 16, 2010
Creator: Glissmeyer, John A. & Flaherty, Julia E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of the 3430 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack Sampling Probe Location (open access)

Assessment of the 3430 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack Sampling Probe Location

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory performed a demonstration to determine the acceptable location in which to place an air sampling probe for emissions monitoring for radionuclides in the exhaust air discharge from the new 3430 Building Filtered Exhaust Stack. The method was to adopt the results of a previously performed test series for a system of similar configuration, followed by a partial test on the actual system to verify the applicability of previously performed tests. The qualification criteria included 1) a uniform air velocity, 2) an average flow angle that does not deviate from the axis of the duct by more than 20°, 3) a uniform concentration of tracer gases, and 4) a uniform concentration of tracer particles. Section 1 provides background information for the demonstration, and Section 2 describes the test strategy, including the criteria for the applicability of model results and the test matrix. Section 3 describes the flow -angle test and the velocity uniformity test, Section 4 provides the test results, and Section 5 provides the conclusions. Appendix A includes the test data sheets, and Appendix B gives applicable qualification results from the previously tested model stack. The data from the previously tested and similarly designed stack was …
Date: July 16, 2010
Creator: Glissmeyer, John A. & Flaherty, Julia E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of transuranics stabilization in PWRs (open access)

Assessment of transuranics stabilization in PWRs

The stabilization of transuranics (TRU) in a PWR fuel cycle was evaluated for the CORAIL assembly. Alternative assembly designs (a highly moderated and modified CORAIL-TRU assembly and a homogeneous Thorium-TRU assembly) were also investigated to assess the potential of obtaining a near-zero TRU mass balance (i.e., the net TRU production per assembly) and low power peaking factor. The radiotoxicity of the nuclear waste sent to the repository environment and the impact of TRU stabilization on the future TRU stockpile were also evaluated. Assembly level mass flow analyses have shown that TRU mass balances in the range of 0.2 to 1.4 kg/assembly are achievable within 7 recycles of the TRU, compared with 6.5 kg/assembly for a reference UO{sub 2} assembly. The study also revealed that the radiotoxicity of the repository waste generated by these TRU-containing assemblies at 10 years after disposal is roughly half that of a reference UO{sub 2} assembly; furthermore, the radiotoxicity falls below that of natural uranium ore after about 500 years because only a small fraction of the TRU (0.1%) is passed to the waste repository. Finally, the future TRU stockpile could be reduced by implementation of TRU multi-recycling in the CORAIL or alternative assemblies in a …
Date: July 16, 2002
Creator: Kim, T. K.; Stillman, J. A.; Taiwo, T. A. & Hill, R. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Baryon inhomogeneity from the cosmic quark-hadron phase transition (open access)

Baryon inhomogeneity from the cosmic quark-hadron phase transition

We discuss the generation of inhomogeneity in the baryon-number density during the cosmic quark-hadron phase transition. We use a simple model with thin-wall phase boundaries and ideal-gas equations of state. The nucleation of the phase transition introduces a new distance scale into the universe which will be the scale of the generated inhomogeneity. We review the estimate of this scale. During the transition baryon number is likely to collect onto a layer at the phase boundary. These layers may in the end be deposited as small regions of very high baryon density. 21 refs., 1 fig.
Date: July 16, 1991
Creator: Kurki-Suonio, H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Baseball II-T multiple beam project 50 kV, 80 amp, power supply system for sustaining neutral beam sources (open access)

Baseball II-T multiple beam project 50 kV, 80 amp, power supply system for sustaining neutral beam sources

This document describes a high power, high voltage power supply system required to operate sustaining neutral beam (NB) sources as would be used in the Baseball II-T Multiple Beam Project. Two such systems would be needed. Appended are site plan installation drawings.
Date: July 16, 1976
Creator: Waugh, A. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam and Truss Finite Element Verification for DYNA3D (open access)

Beam and Truss Finite Element Verification for DYNA3D

The explicit finite element (FE) software program DYNA3D has been developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) to simulate the dynamic behavior of structures, systems, and components. This report focuses on verification of beam and truss element formulations in DYNA3D. An efficient protocol has been developed to verify the accuracy of these structural elements by generating a set of representative problems for which closed-form quasi-static steady-state analytical reference solutions exist. To provide as complete coverage as practically achievable, problem sets are developed for each beam and truss element formulation (and their variants) in all modes of loading and physical orientation. Analyses with loading in the elastic and elastic-plastic regimes are performed. For elastic loading, the FE results are within 1% of the reference solutions for all cases. For beam element bending and torsion loading in the plastic regime, the response is heavily dependent on the numerical integration rule chosen, with higher refinement yielding greater accuracy (agreement to within 1%). Axial loading in the plastic regime produces accurate results (agreement to within 0.01%) for all integration rules and element formulations. Truss elements are also verified to provide accurate results (within 0.01%) for elastic and elastic-plastic loading. A sample problem to verify …
Date: July 16, 2007
Creator: Rathbun, H J
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library