14 MeV neutron work at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (open access)

14 MeV neutron work at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

The 14 MeV neutron work at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) covers two main areas of interest to this Symposium: (1) measurements and calculations of differential cross sections; and (2) integral measurements of the neutron and gamma emission spectra. In both areas a large number of materials have been studied, spanning a wide mass range (6 < A < 239), of interest to fusion and hybrid reactors. In this presentation a brief description of the experimental techniques and calculational analysis is given for each of the above areas and the measured and calculated cross sections are discussed. 28 refs., 7 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Hansen, L. F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator physics experiments at Aladdin (open access)

Accelerator physics experiments at Aladdin

The Aladdin accelerator is a 1 GeV synchrotron light source located at the University of Wisconsin. The results of experimental studies of the Aladdin accelerator are described. The primary purpose of the experiments reported was to investigate reported anomalies in the behavior of the linear lattice, particularly in the vertical plane. A second goal was to estimate the ring broadband impedance. Experimental observations and interpretation of the linear properties of the Aladdin ring are described, including the beta function and dispersion measurements. Two experiments are described to measure the ring impedance, the first a measurement of the parasitic mode loss, and the second a measurement of the beam transfer function. Measurements of the longitudinal and transverse emittance at 100 and 200 MeV are described and compared with predictions. 10 refs., 24 figs., 2 tabs. (LEW)
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Chattopadhyay, S.; Cornacchia, M.; Jackson, A. & Zisman, M. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adsorption of energy in photocatalytic reactors (open access)

Adsorption of energy in photocatalytic reactors

The dissociation of water to hydrogen and oxygen requires energy ..delta..G/sub 298/ = 228 kJ/mole. By irradiating a semiconductor with light of energy greater than this amount, one may produce electrons in the excited state and electron vacancies at the surface that can perform the photochemical reduction (2H/sup +/ + 2e/sup -/ ..-->.. 2H ..-->.. H/sub 2/) and oxidation (20H/sup -/ + 2/sup +/ ..-->.. H/sub 2/O/sub 2/ ..-->.. H/sub 2/O + (1/2)O/sub 2/). There are several semiconductors, SrTiO/sub 3/, TiO/sub 2/, CdS, and Fe/sub 2/O/sub 3/ among them, that can photodissociate water. Some possess sites for both reduction and oxidation, while others carry out the two processes at different surfaces. A reversible solid state reaction that involves changes in the transition metal and ion oxidation state must accompany the splitting of water. Platinum, rhodium, and ruthenium oxide, when deposited on the semiconductor, serve as catalysts that accelerate the water photodissociation. These additives accelerate the recombination of hydrogen and oxygen atoms, shift the semiconductor Fermi level to a more favorable position that improves the thermodynamic feasibility for the process, accelerate electron transport, and inhibit side reactions like the photoreduction of oxygen. Many of the elementary reaction steps leading to photoproduction …
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Somorjai, G.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ambient Pressure Effects on the Sputter Particle Distribution of Insulating Materials (open access)

Ambient Pressure Effects on the Sputter Particle Distribution of Insulating Materials

The effect of ion bombardment on several grades of alumina was investigated. Changes in the electrical resistance of the substrate as a function of incoming ion energy were of particular interest. Attention was also paid to the sputter particle distribution as a function of ambient pressure. This distribution was found to be dependent on the ion to substrate mass ratio. In general, the distribution follows a curve of growth; approximating a cosine distribution at the lower pressures and mass ratio, becoming isotropic at higher pressures. Pressures in the range of 10/sup -2/ to 10/sup -4/ Pascals have been used along with mass ratios in the range of 0.40 to 1.3. Samples of up to 80 cm/sup 2/ were subjected to a 10 cm diameter ion beam at energies of up to 6.25 keV. Average ion current densities of 1ma/cm/sup 2/ were used. Substrate temperatures while subjected to the ion beam were also monitored.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Glaser, J. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of near-surface dissolution at and near the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP), southeastern New Mexico (open access)

Assessment of near-surface dissolution at and near the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP), southeastern New Mexico

The area at and near the WIPP site was examined for evidence of karst development on the geomorphic surface encompassing the site. Certain surficial depressions of initial concern were identified as blowouts in sand dune fields (shallow features unrelated to karstification). An ancient stream system active more than 500,000 yr ago contained more water than any system since. During that time (Gatuna, Middle Pleistocene), many karst features such as Clayton Basin and Nash Draw began to form in the region. Halite was probably dissolved from parts of the Rustler Formation at that time. Dissolution of halite and gypsum from intervals encountered in Borehole WIPP-33 west of the WIPP site occurred during later Pleistocene time (i.e., <450,000 yr ago). However, there is no evidence of active near-surface dissolution within a belt to the east of WIPP-33 in the vicinity of the WIPP shaft. 26 refs., 11 figs., 1 tab.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Bachman, G.O.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bioenergetics of Juvenile Salmon During the Spring Outmigration, 1983 Annual Report. (open access)

Bioenergetics of Juvenile Salmon During the Spring Outmigration, 1983 Annual Report.

Main stem reservoirs in the Columbia River Basin may have increased the energy demands of smolts during outmigration by prolonging migration and exposing smolts to seasonally rising water temperatures. A bioenergetic model for spring chinook salmon smolts (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) is being developed to test these hypotheses. Results have thus far indicated that the seaward migration can be separated into two distinct phases. Phase I can be described as a period of intense smolt development in which there was a post hatchery release surge in gill Na/sup +/-K/sup +/ ATPase activity, depletion of energy available in body lipids, and a concurrent decline in caloric density. Phase II was characterized by maintenence of smolt status in apparent anticipation of reaching the estuary. Phase II is the period most affected by impoundments and annual changes in water flow; the latter period will therefore be modeled in bioenergetic simulations. Laboratory and field observations provided input parameters for the model and empirical data to verify model simmulations. Total calories, caloric density, proximate body composition, ration, and caloric intake were determined in smolts as seaward migration progressed. The effect of swimming and starvation on energy reserves and seawater survival were determined in the laboratory. Fatty acid …
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Rondorf, Dennis W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biological trace element measurements using synchrotron radiation (open access)

Biological trace element measurements using synchrotron radiation

The feasibility of performing x-ray fluorescence trace element determinations at concentrations substantially below the ppM level for biological materials is demonstrated. Conditions for achieving optimum sensitivity were ascertained. Results achieved for five standard reference materials were, in most cases, in excellent agreement with listed values. Minimum detectable limits of 20 ppM were measured for most elements.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Giauque, R. D.; Jaklevic, J. M. & Thompson, A. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Birdcage neutron coincidence counter manual (open access)

Birdcage neutron coincidence counter manual

A thermal neutron coincidence counter has been constructed for the assay of fast critical assembly fuel plates stored in birdcages. Standard coincidence counting electronics are used. This manual describes the birdcage, the measurement system, and its performance characteristics. 3 refs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Krick, M. S.; Menlove, H. O. & Ramalho, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck code for stellarator transport (open access)

Bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck code for stellarator transport

A computer code for solving the bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck equation appropriate to stellarator transport has been developed, and its first applications made. The code is much faster than the bounce-averaged Monte-Carlo codes, which up to now have provided the most efficient numerical means for studying stellarator transport. Moreover, because the connection to analytic kinetic theory of the Fokker-Planck approach is more direct than for the Monte-Carlo approach, a comparison of theory and numerical experiment is now possible at a considerably more detailed level than previously.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Mynick, H.E. & Hitchon, W.N.G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Brightness, coherence, and propagation characteristics of synchrotron radiation (open access)

Brightness, coherence, and propagation characteristics of synchrotron radiation

A formalism is presented by means of which the propagation and imaging characteristics of synchrotron radiation can be studied, taking into account the effects of diffraction, electron beam emittance, and the transverse and longitudinal extent of the source. An important quantity in this approach is the Wigner distribution of the electric fields, which can be interpreted as a phase-space distribution of photon flux, and thus can be identified with the brightness. When integrated over the angular variables, the brightness becomes the intensity distribution in the spatial variables and when integrated over the spatial variables, it becomes the intensity distribution in angular variables. The brightness so defined transforms through a general optical medium in exactly the same way as in the case of a collection of geometric rays. Finally, the brightness of different electrons adds in a simple way. Optical characteristics of various synchrotron radiation sources - bending magnets, wigglers and undulators, are analyzed using this formalism.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Kim, K. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of cell suspensions from solid tumors (open access)

Characterization of cell suspensions from solid tumors

The desirable features of cells in suspension will necessarily be dependent upon the use for which the cells were prepared. Adequate cell yield or recovery is defined by the measurement to be performed. Retention of cellular morphology is important for microscopic identification of cell types in a heterogenous cell suspension, and may be used to determine whether the cells in suspension are representative of those in the tumor in situ. Different dispersal protocols may yield cells with different degrees of clonogenicity, as well as altered biochemical features, such as loss of cellular proteins, surface antigens, nucleotide pools, etc. The quality of the cell suspension can be judged by the degree of cell clumping and level of cellular debris, both of which impact on flow cytometric measurements and studies in which the number of cells be known accurately. Finally, if the data measured on the cells in suspension are to be extrapolated to phenomena occurring in the tumor in situ, it is desirable that the cells in suspension are representative of those in the solid tumor in vivo. This report compares characteristics of tumor cell suspensions obtained by different types of selected disaggregation methods. 33 refs., 2 figs., 4 tabs.
Date: July 10, 1985
Creator: Pallavicini, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical kinetics modeling of the influence of molecular structure on shock tube ignition delay (open access)

Chemical kinetics modeling of the influence of molecular structure on shock tube ignition delay

The current capabilities of kinetic modeling of hydrocarbon oxidation in shock waves are discussed. The influence of molecular size and structure on ignition delay times are stressed. The n-paraffin fuels from CH/sub 4/ to n-C/sub 5/H/sub 12/ are examined under shock tube conditions, as well as the branched chain fuel isobutane, and the computed results are compared with available experimental data. The modeling results show that it is important in the reaction mechanism to distinguish between abstraction of primary, secondary and tertiary H atom sites from the fuel molecule. This is due to the fact that both the rates and the product distributions of the subsequent alkyl radical decomposition reactions depend on which H atoms were abstracted. Applications of the reaction mechanisms to shock tube problems and to other practical problems such as engine knock are discussed.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Westbrook, C.K. & Pitz, W.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clearance of Tc-99m DTPA Aerosol from Coal Miners' Lungs (open access)

Clearance of Tc-99m DTPA Aerosol from Coal Miners' Lungs

Alterations in regional epithelial permeability were assessed in 22 retired West Virginia coal miners' lungs by measuring the clearance of inhaled 0.5-..mu..m Tc-99m DTPA aerosol. Activity was measured in both lungs and in regions of interest placed over the lung periphery in the apical, middle, and basal portions of each lung. Clearance rates (T/sub 1/2/) for 5 nonsmokers, 8 ex-smokers, and 9 smokers were significantly faster than for comparable subjects measured elsewhere, who were not coal miners. Regional apex-to-base distributions of DTPA were measured as a function of clearance time and compared with regional ventilation and perfusion. Regional, as well as overall lung clearance curves of 8 smokers and 4 ex-smokers had two components, with overall T/sub 1/2/ of <7 min for the faster one. No correlations were found between T/sub 1/2/ and DLCO or with P(A-a)O/sub 2/. The results of our study suggest that measurement of DTPA clearance is a potentially useful noninvasive technique to assess lung injury in miners exposed to coal dust. 14 refs., 6 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Susskind, H.; Brill, A. B. & Harold, W. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Collection and analysis of geothermal gases (open access)

Collection and analysis of geothermal gases

Rapid, reliable procedures are described for the collection and analysis of geothermal gases at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Gases covered are H/sub 2/, He, Ar, O/sub 2/, N/sub 2/, CH/sub 4/, C/sub 2/H/sub 6/, CO/sub 2/, and H/sub 2/S. The methods outlined are suitable for geothermal exploration. 8 refs., 5 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Shevenell, L.; Goff, F.; Gritzo, L. & Trujillo, P. E., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commercial LFCM vitrification technology. Quarterly progress report, October-December 1984 (open access)

Commercial LFCM vitrification technology. Quarterly progress report, October-December 1984

This report is the first in a series of quarterly reports compiled by the Nuclear Waste Treatment Program Office at Pacific Northwest Laboratory to document progress on commercial liquid-fed ceramic melter (LFCM) vitrification technology. Progress in the following technical subject areas during the first quarter of FY 1985 is discussed: pretreatment systems, melting process chemistry, glass development and characterization, feed preparation and transfer systems, melter systems, canister filling and handling systems, off-gas systems, process/product modeling and control, and supporting studies. 33 figs., 12 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Burkholder, H. C. & Jarrett, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commercial Nuclear Waste Research and Development Program. Quarterly report, April-June 1985 (open access)

Commercial Nuclear Waste Research and Development Program. Quarterly report, April-June 1985

Support was provided to DOE/NV during preparation of a proposal, requested by the DOE San Francisco office, for performance of SP-100 Ground Engineering Systems tests at the E-MAD facility. The site selection committee visited the Nevada Test Site in May for a tour and briefings on all aspects of the proposal. The fuel assembly used in the two-year metal cask simulation test was removed from the test stand and characterized to document its post-test condition. Fuel assembly integrity monitoring for the second half of FY 1985 was completed of six of the fuel assemblies being stored in unwelded canisters. Post-storage characterization was completed on three fuel assemblies which were stored in welded canisters. All test procedures have been completed and delivered for the Canister Assembly Launch Test Program being conducted at another Area 25 facility. The "Safety Assessment Document for Spent Fuel Handling, Packaging, and Storage Demonstrations at the E-MAD Facility on the Nevada Test Site," DOE/NV10250-20, was revised to be consistent with new and revised DOE Orders and Directives, and delivered to DOE/NV.
Date: July 1985
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compilation of carbon-14 data (open access)

Compilation of carbon-14 data

A review and critical analysis was made of the original sources of carbon-14 in the graphite moderator and reflector zones of the eight Hanford production reactors, the present physical and chemical state of the carbon-14, pathways (other than direct combustion) by which the carbon-14 could be released to the biosphere, and the maximum rate at which it might be released under circumstances which idealistically favor the release. Areas of uncertainty are noted and recommendations are made for obtaining additional data in three areas: (1) release rate of carbon-14 from irradiated graphite saturated with aerated water; (2) characterization of carbon-14 deposited outside the moderator and reflector zones; and (3) corrosion/release rate of carbon-14 from irradiated steel and aluminum alloys.
Date: July 8, 1985
Creator: Paasch, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer simulation of nonequilibrium processes (open access)

Computer simulation of nonequilibrium processes

The underlying concepts of nonequilibrium statistical mechanics, and of irreversible thermodynamics, will be described. The question at hand is then, how are these concepts to be realize in computer simulations of many-particle systems. The answer will be given for dissipative deformation processes in solids, on three hierarchical levels: heterogeneous plastic flow, dislocation dynamics, an molecular dynamics. Aplication to the shock process will be discussed.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Wallace, D.C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Condensed Matter at High Shock Pressures (open access)

Condensed Matter at High Shock Pressures

Experimental techniques are described for shock waves in liquids: Hugoniot equation-of-state, shock temperature and emission spectroscopy, electrical conductivity, and Raman spectroscopy. Experimental data are reviewed and presented in terms of phenomena that occur at high densities and temperatures in shocked He, Ar, N/sub 2/, CO, SiO/sub 2/-aerogel, H/sub 2/O, and C/sub 6/H/sub 6/. The superconducting properties of Nb metal shocked to 100 GPa (1 Mbar) and recovered intact are discussed in terms of prospects for synthesizing novel, metastable materials. Ultrahigh pressure data for Cu is reviewed in the range 0.3 to 6TPa (3 to 60 Mbar). 56 refs., 9 figs., 1 tab.
Date: July 12, 1985
Creator: Nellis, W. J.; Holmes, N. C.; Mitchell, A. C.; Radousky, H. B. & Hamilton, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coupled electron-nuclear magnetism and neutron diffraction. [PrSn/sub 3/; HoVO/sub 4/; PrCu/sub 2/] (open access)

Coupled electron-nuclear magnetism and neutron diffraction. [PrSn/sub 3/; HoVO/sub 4/; PrCu/sub 2/]

It often occurs that, in a rare-earth compound having a singlet electronic ground state, a long-range magnetically ordered state is formed by coupling of the nuclear spins with the electrons through the hyperfine interaction, at millikelvin temperatures. Neutron scattering has been used to measure the details of the magnetization processes of both the electrons and the nuclear spins in the coupled state in PrSn/sub 3/, HoVO/sub 4/, and PrCu/sub 2/. The polarized nuclear spins could be observed through spin dependent nuclear scattering by /sup 141/Pr and /sup 165/Ho. The experimental results for PrSn/sub 3/ and HoVO/sub 4/ can be explained very well based on mean field considerations. For PrCu/sub 2/, a recent experiment indicates that a sinusoidal screw structure is realized simultaneously both in the electronic and nuclear spin systems of this material.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Kawarazaki, S. & Arthur, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coupling between plastic scintillators and light fibers for remote detection of x-rays (open access)

Coupling between plastic scintillators and light fibers for remote detection of x-rays

Plastic scintillators can be coupled to light fibers to make small, simple, and inexpensive x-ray detectors. These detectors have been developed for use at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) for the remote detection of x-rays. Light produced in the scintillator can be transmitted by the fiber for several hundred meters to a photodetector, which is usually a streak camera or a photomultiplier tube. The use of a streak camera allows many channels to be recorded simultaneously. A parameter study has been done to measure the sensitivity of these detectors as a function of scintillator geometry, type of scintillator, coupling geometry, and x-ray energy. The results can be qualitatively explained by simple geometric theory. A recent use of these detectors at NTS was the measurement of an x-ray spectrum. System performance for this measurement will be reviewed. 7 refs., 5 figs., 1 tab.
Date: July 18, 1985
Creator: Perry, T.S. & Molitoris, J.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cumulative Effects of Micro-Hydro Development on the Fisheries of the Swan River Drainage, Montana: Volume 2, Technical Information, 1983-1984 Final Report. (open access)

Cumulative Effects of Micro-Hydro Development on the Fisheries of the Swan River Drainage, Montana: Volume 2, Technical Information, 1983-1984 Final Report.

This report summarizes a study to determine the potential cumulative effects of proposed small hydro development on the fisheries of the Swan River drainage. This report contains technical information and is a support document for the main report (Leathe and Enk, 1985). Consequently, discussion of results was minimized. The sections on fish population monitoring, streambed monitoring, habitat survey comparisons, and water temperature are the only portions that were not discussed in the main report. 5 refs., 55 figs., 44 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Leathe, Stephen A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Current practice and developmental efforts for leak detection in US reactor primary systems (open access)

Current practice and developmental efforts for leak detection in US reactor primary systems

Current leak detection practices in 74 operating nuclear reactors have been reviewed. Existing leak detection systems are adequate to ensure a leak-before-break scenario in most situations, but no currently available, single method combines optimal leakage detection sensitivity, leak-locating ability, and leakage measurement accuracy. Simply tightening current leakage limits may produce an unacceptably large number of unnecessary shutdowns. The use of commercially available acoustic monitoring systems or moisture-sensitive tape may improve leak detection capability at specific sites. However, neither of these methods currently provides source discrimination (e.g., to distinguish between leaks from pipe cracks and valves) or leak-rate information (a small leak may saturate the system). A field-implementable acoustic leak detection system is being developed to address these limitations. 5 refs., 3 figs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Kupperman, D.S. & Claytor, T.N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Damage-rate gradient effects on radiation-induced segregation and phase stability in irradiated alloys (open access)

Damage-rate gradient effects on radiation-induced segregation and phase stability in irradiated alloys

Recent studies have shown that significant compositional redistribution in irradiated alloys can be induced by the gradients in the atomic displacement rates resulting from nonuniform defect production, in addition to the commonly-observed solute segregation at defect sinks. This process gives rise to complex local phase transformations during light-ion bombardment or irradiation with focused electron beams in the high-voltage electron microscope. Results of our theoretical and experimental investigations of this phenomenon in Ni-Al and Ni-Si are discussed. The implications of the observed effect in a number of areas of materials science are assessed.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Lam, N.Q. & Okamoto, P.R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library