120 Degree Phase Advance\ Cell Lattice (open access)

120 Degree Phase Advance\ Cell Lattice

None
Date: December 6, 1983
Creator: Ruggiero, Alessandro G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
850 J, 150 ns narrow-band krypton fluoride laser (open access)

850 J, 150 ns narrow-band krypton fluoride laser

We report laser experiments on a 248 nm KrF laser with a 30x40x120 cm gain volume and an injection locked unstable resonator cavity. The volume is pumped by six 450 kV, 90 kA electron beam generators using water pulse forming lines.
Date: December 16, 1983
Creator: Goldhar, J.; Jancaitis, K. S.; Murray, J. R. & Schlitt, L. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced coal liquefaction catalyst development. Quarterly progress report No. 8 (open access)

Advanced coal liquefaction catalyst development. Quarterly progress report No. 8

Coal liquefaction results with and without Amocat catalysts at various conditions (especially with respect to variations of hydrogen pressure and organic solvent) are reported. (LTN)
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Mahoney, J. A.; Schwartz, M. M. & Wittrig, T. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
AGS Vacuum Losses For Au79+ (open access)

AGS Vacuum Losses For Au79+

None
Date: December 8, 1983
Creator: Young, G. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aluminum and polymeric coatings for protection of uranium (open access)

Aluminum and polymeric coatings for protection of uranium

Ion-plated aluminum films on uranium will not provide adequate protection for 25 years. Magnetron-plated aluminum films on uranium are much better than ion-plated ones. Kel-F 800 films on uranium can provide adequate protection for 25 years. Their use in production must be delayed until the following factors are sorted out: water permeability in Kel-F 800 must be determined between 30 and 60/sup 0/C; the effect of UF/sub 3/, at the Kel-F/metal interface, on the permeability of water must be assessed; and the effect of crystallinity on water permeability must be evaluated. Applying Kel-F films on aluminum ion-plated uranium provides a good interim solution for long term storage.
Date: December 21, 1983
Creator: Colmenares, C.; McCreary, T.; Monaco, S.; Walkup, C.; Gleeson, G.; Kervin, J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysing Spinner Measurements from Well Tests Using Computerized Interpretation Techniques (open access)

Analysing Spinner Measurements from Well Tests Using Computerized Interpretation Techniques

The development of reliable spinner tools may help avoid much of the ambiquity which often accompanies well tests in geothermal wells, due to interlayer flows through the well bore. However, the use of both pressure and flow rate changes requires new methods of well test interpretation. The Stanford Geothermal Program has been developing microcomputer-based techniques for the simultaneous analysis of pressure and flow rate measurements. There are two key steps in the procedure. Firstly, the non-linear regression is achieved by calculating the gradients of the response (with respect to the unknown reservoir parameters) in Laplace space, and inverting numerically. Secondly, the variable flow rate is represented in terms of a superposition of many step changes - this was found to work better than a spline fit to the data. One problem was encountered when attempting to analyze data in which the spinner "stalled", causing a jump to zero flow rate. The method shows great promise in that the degrees of freedom on the interpretation are greatly reduced, the well bore storage effect disappears, and inter-feed flows do not affect the results.
Date: December 15, 1983
Creator: Horne, Roland N.; Guillot, Alain & Rosa, Adalberta
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of cracked core spray injection line piping from the Quad Cities Units 1 and 2 boiling water reactors (open access)

Analysis of cracked core spray injection line piping from the Quad Cities Units 1 and 2 boiling water reactors

Elbow assemblies and adjacent piping from the loops A and B core spray injection lines of Quad Cities Units 1 and 2 Boiling Water Reactors have been examined in order to determine the nature and causes of coolant leakages and flaw indications detected during hydrostatic tests and subsequent ultrasonic inspections. The elbow assemblies were found to contain multiple intergranular cracks in the weld heat-affected zones. The cracking was predominantly axial in orientation in the forged elbow and wedge components, whereas mixed axial and circumferential cracking was seen in the wrought piping pieces. In at least two instances, axial cracks completely penetrated the circumferential weld joining adjacent components. Based upon the observations made in the present study, the failures were attributed to intergranular stress corrosion cracking caused by the weld-induced sensitized microstructure and residual stresses present; dissolved oxygen in the reactor coolant apparently served as the corrosive species. The predominantly axial orientation of the cracks present in the forged components is believed to be related to the banded microstructure present in these components. The metallographic studies reported are supplemented by x-radiography, chemical analysis and mechanical test results, determinations of the degree of sensitization present, and measurements of weld metal delta ferrite …
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Diercks, D. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of potential combustion source impacts on acid deposition using an independently derived inventory. Volume I (open access)

Analysis of potential combustion source impacts on acid deposition using an independently derived inventory. Volume I

This project had three major objectives. The first objective was to develop a fossil fuel combustion source inventory (NO/sub x/, SO/sub x/, and hydrocarbon emissions) that would be relatively easy to use and update for analyzing the impact of combustion emissions on acid deposition in the eastern United States. The second objective of the project was to use the inventory data as a basis for selection of a number of areas that, by virtue of their importance in the acid rain issue, could be further studied to assess the impact of local and intraregional combustion sources. The third objective was to conduct an analysis of wet deposition monitoring data in the areas under study, along with pertinent physical characteristics, meteorological conditions, and emission patterns of these areas, to investigate probable relationships between local and intraregional combustion sources and the deposition of acidic material. The combustion source emissions inventory has been developed for the eastern United States. It characterizes all important area sources and point sources on a county-by-county basis. Its design provides flexibility and simplicity and makes it uniquely useful in overall analysis of emission patterns in the eastern United States. Three regions with basically different emission patterns have been …
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of potential combustion source impacts on acid deposition using an independently derived inventory. Volume II, appendices (open access)

Analysis of potential combustion source impacts on acid deposition using an independently derived inventory. Volume II, appendices

This document contains 2 appendices. The first documents the methodologies used to calculate production, unit energy consumption, fuel type and emission estimates for 16 industries and 35 types of facilities utilizing direct-fired industrial combustion processes, located in 26 states (and the District of Columbia) east of the Mississippi River. As discussed in the text of this report, a U.S. total of 16 industries and 45 types of facilities utilizing direct-fired combustion processes were identified by an elimination type method that was developed based on evaluation of fuel use in industrial SIC codes 20-39 to identify pollutant sources contributing to acid rain. The final population included only plants that have direct-fired fuel consumption greater than or equal to 100 x 10/sup 9/ Btu/yr of equivalent energy consumption. The goal for this analysis was to provide at least a 1980 base year for the data. This was achieved for all of the industries and in fact, 1981 data were used for a number of the industries evaluated. The second contains an analysis of all consumption of major fossil fuels to: (1) identify all fuel usage categories, and (2) identify the kinds of combustion equipment used within each category. This analysis provides a …
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of production data from the Krafla geothermal field, Iceland (open access)

Analysis of production data from the Krafla geothermal field, Iceland

The analysis of flow rate and enthalpy data from several wells completed in the same two-phase zone of Krafla geothermal reservoir has yielded consistent relative permeability parameters. It is found that k/sub rl/ + k/sub rv/ = 1 over the entire range of two-phase flow conditions from immobile liquid to immobile vapor. The available data provide relative permeability parameters as a function of flowing enthalpy only. The relationship between flowing enthalpy and in-place vapor saturation remains unknown, so that the relative permeability information obtained is of limited value for quantitative modeling of geothermal reservoir performance. Numerical simulation of flow rate and enthalpy transients has yielded excellent matches to production data from well 12. However, there is little information about the reservoir which can be deduced in an unambiguous way, because the field data could be matched with a variety of rather different parameter choices. The only unambiguous piece of information obtained is that the water injected into the well during drilling and completion remains in the vicinity of the wellbore during several weeks of warmup.
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Pruess, K.; Bodvarsson, G. S. & Stefansson, V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Production Data from the Krafla Geothermal Field, Iceland (open access)

Analysis of Production Data from the Krafla Geothermal Field, Iceland

The Krafla geothermal field in northeastern Iceland consists of several zones, which contain fluids of different composition and thermodynamic state (Stefansson, 1981). In this paper they examine production data from wells which are completed in two-phase zones. Transient changes in flow rate and flowing enthalpy are analyzed to obtain insight into relative (liquid and gas phase) permeabilities, and other reservoir parameters. Numerous studies have shown that predictions of geothermal reservoir behavior are strongly dependent upon the choice of relative permeability functions. There is an extensive literature on gas-oil and oil-water relative permeabilities, but steam-water relative permeabilities which are needed for geothermal reservoir analysis are poorly known. Laboratory experiments by Chen et al. (1978) and Counsil and Ramey (1979) have provided some data which, however, seem to be at variance with relative permeability characteristics deduced from field data by Grant (1977) and Horne and Ramey (1978). The differences may reflect uncertainties in the analysis methods used, or they may reflect ''real'' differences in relative permeability behavior of fractured reservoirs from that of porous medium-type laboratory cores. Recent theoretical work by Menzies (1982) and Gudmundsson et al. (1983) has substantiated the relative permeability characteristics obtained by Horne and Ramey (1978) for Wairakei …
Date: December 15, 1983
Creator: Pruess, K.; Bodvarsson, G. S. & Stefansson, V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Answers to questions about updated estimates of occupational radiation doses at Three Mile Island, Unit 2 (open access)

Answers to questions about updated estimates of occupational radiation doses at Three Mile Island, Unit 2

The purpose of this question and answer report is to provide a clear, easy-to-understand explanation of revised radiation dose estimates which workers are likely to receive over the course of the cleanup at Three Mile Island, Unit 2, and of the possible health consequences to workers of these new estimates. We will focus primarily on occupational dose, although pertinent questions about public health and safety will also be answered.
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aspects of the dynamics of heavy-quark systems (open access)

Aspects of the dynamics of heavy-quark systems

The analysis of bound states composed of heavy quarks and antiquarks has provided a window into the structure of the strong interactions. These systems contain our best evidence that the quarks from which the hadrons are built are ordinary fermions which obey the Dirac equation and which couple to electromagnetism just as electrons do. However, the heavy-quark systems which have been studied to date, the systems of c- anti c and b- anti b bound states, seem to be bound by forces which bear no obvious relation to the gluons which we expect are the fundamental mediators of the strong interactions. The essential difficulty in understanding this connection arises from the fact that the c- anti c and b- anti b systems occupy an intermediate regime in the behavior of the gauge theory. At very small distances the q- anti q potential is expected to become a Coulomb potential, directly reflecting one-gluon exchange. At very large distances, the potential should be proportional to the q- anti q separation, reflecting the formation of confining strings of color flux. For a proper understanding, one would need to see precisely how the collective behavior of gluons modifies and alters single gluon effects. We …
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Peskin, M.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of the response of spent fuel transports to malevolent acts (open access)

Assessment of the response of spent fuel transports to malevolent acts

This paper describes the results of a program conducted at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) for the US Department of Energy to provide an experimental data base for more accurately assessing the radiological consequences from a hypothetical sabotage attack on a spent fuel shipping cask. The primary objectives of the program were limited to: (1) evaluating the effectiveness of selected high explosive devices (HED) in breaching full-size spent fuel casks, (2) quantifying and characterizing relevant aerosol properties of the released fuel, and (3) using the resulting experimental data to evaluate the radiological health consequences resulting from a hypothetical sabotage attack on a spent fuel shipping cask in a densely populated area. Subscale and full-scale experiments in conjunction with an analytical modeling study were performed to meet the programmatic objectives. The data from this program indicate that the Urban Studies greatly overestimated the impact of malevolent acts directed at spent fuel casks in urban environs. From that standpoint this work could be the basis of additional regulatory revisions of the NRC physical protection requirements. In a larger sense this work can also be the basis of more credible worst case analyses since it defines the actual result of an event which is …
Date: December 20, 1983
Creator: Sandoval, R.P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of thermal storage systems and thermomechanical effects for pulsed reactors (open access)

Assessment of thermal storage systems and thermomechanical effects for pulsed reactors

Pulsed operation of fusion power plants has severe impact on all major reactor components. This analysis focuses on the sensitivity of one subsystem, the breeding blanket, to pulsed operation in terms of thermal storage requirements and thermomechanical effects. For analysis, a water-cooled Li/sub 2/O breeding blanket (400 MWth, 3.45 MW/m/sup 2/ neutron wall loading) was chosen. With the operating temperature window, 800/410/sup 0/C for Li/sub 2/O, thermal analysis shows that for the coolant-in-tube design (STARFIRE) there would be 10 rows of coolant tubes in the radial direction of the blanket. Since the thermal inertia of the blanket is larger further away from the first wall, the mixed mean temperature of coolant from all regions will dictate the design requirements for the thermal storage system. Three representative blanket regions were analyzed under four burn scenarios (startup/shutdown time = 10 s, steady-state time = 3600 s, and dwell time = 0, 30, 90, and 200 s) to estimate the thermal storage requirements. The size of the thermal storage system is dictated primarily by the energy deficiency that occurs during the dwell/startup and shutdown phase, although time/temperature response of the heat transfer fluid is critical to the design. Only pressurized water/steam and hot …
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Misra, B.; Stevens, H.; Majumdar, S. & Ehst, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of tritium breeding requirements for fusion power reactors (open access)

Assessment of tritium breeding requirements for fusion power reactors

This report presents an assessment of tritium-breeding requirements for fusion power reactors. The analysis is based on an evaluation of time-dependent tritium inventories in the reactor system. The method presented can be applied to any fusion systems in operation on a steady-state mode as well as on a pulsed mode. As an example, the UWMAK-I design was analyzed and it has been found that the startup inventory requirement calculated by the present method significantly differs from those previously calculated. The effect of reactor-parameter changes on the required tritium breeding ratio is also analyzed for a variety of reactor operation scenarios.
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Jung, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Attempt to compare two arc orbit correction schemes analytically (open access)

Attempt to compare two arc orbit correction schemes analytically

Consider a transport line that consists of periodic cells. Let the beam position monitors and the orbit correctors be located with the same period as the cells and let the BPM's and the corrector distributions interlace each other. The arrangement does not always provide a stable orbit correction. The criterion for stability has been derived by Joe Murray and is reproduced. We calculate the rms orbit, the effect of BPM errors and the rms corrector strength in such correction schemes, yielding analytic formulae for these quantities. We then apply these formulae to the SLC arcs.
Date: December 15, 1983
Creator: Chao, A. & Weng, W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Attenuation mechanisms in the transport of in-vessel radiological source term fission products in an LMFBR (open access)

Attenuation mechanisms in the transport of in-vessel radiological source term fission products in an LMFBR

Quantifying the release of radiological source term fission products from an LMFBR reactor vessel (RV) is a necessary input to the containment analysis. To estimate this initial source term value, the distribution of the fission products and actinides inside the RV, prior to release, must be known. The in-vessel source term fission product distribution and transport behavior is also essential in assessing and mitigating the plant contamination and cleanup problems which occur from any significant core disruption. This paper attempts to summarize the current knowledge on the behavior of several radioisotopes in different environments created by the accident, without dealing with the modeling of the transport process itself.
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Woodley, R. E.; Nguyen, D. H. & Hunter, C. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Auburn low-temperature geothermal well. Volume 6. Final report (open access)

Auburn low-temperature geothermal well. Volume 6. Final report

The Auburn well was drilled to explore for low temperature geothermal resources in central New York State. The Auburn site was selected based on: its proximity to the Cayuga County anomaly (30/sup 0/C/km), its favorable local geological conditions and the potential to provide hot water and space heating to two educational facilities. The well was drilled to a total depth of 5250 feet and into the Pre-Cambrian Basement. The well was extensively logged, flow and stress tested, hydraulically stimulated, and pump (pressure transient analysis) tested. The low-temperature geothermal potential was assessed in terms of: geological environment; hydrological conditions; reservoir characteristics; and recoverable hydrothermal reserves. The average geothermal gradient was measured to be as high as 26.7/sup 0/C/km with a bottom-hole temperature of 126/sup 0/ +- 1/sup 0/F. The proved volumetric resources were estimated to be 3.0 x 10/sup 6/ stock tank barrels (STB) with a maximum initial deliverability of approx.11,600 STB/D and a continuous deliverability of approx.3400 STB/D. The proved hydrothermal reserves were estimated to be 21.58 x 10/sup 10/ Btu based on a volumetric component (4.13 x 10/sup 10/ Btu), and a reinjection component (17.45 x 10/sup 10/ Btu). The conclusion was made that the Auburn low-temperature reservoir could …
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Lynch, R.S. & Castor, T.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam-dump kicker magnets (open access)

Beam-dump kicker magnets

The beam-dump kicker magnets are located in the final focus region and, in conjunction with septum magnets, extract the beams after they have passed the interaction point (IP) and direct them to their respective dumps. Two schemes for these kickers have been under consideration; ferrite transmission line magnets utilizing technology common with damping rings and positron target kickers, and current loop magnets which are possible only for the dump kickers, where the rise time of the magnetic pulse can be comparatively longer; approximately 400 nanoseconds as compared with 50 nanoseconds for the others. A prototype ferrite kicker has been built and is undergoing tests. Since the current loop requires lower voltage and power plus some additional savings in cost, we decided to build and test a prototype. This note describes in detail an optimized design for the current loop magnets and their associated pulse circuitry.
Date: December 12, 1983
Creator: Bulos, F.; Odian, A. & Tomlin, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Behaviors of Crack-Like Reservoirs by Means of Fracturing at Nigorikawa and Kakkonda Geothermal Fields (open access)

Behaviors of Crack-Like Reservoirs by Means of Fracturing at Nigorikawa and Kakkonda Geothermal Fields

A basic concept of the geothermal reservoir as a set of cracks is first presented. Extensions of subsurface cracks during well stimulation treatments at Nigorikawa(Mori) and closure operations of production well-head valves at Kakkonda are analysed and their behaviors are demonstrated based on results of long-distance AE Measurements.
Date: December 15, 1983
Creator: Abe, Hiroyuki; Takahashi, Hideaki; Nakatsuka, Katsuto; Niitsuma, Hiroaki & Takanohashi, Morihiko
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bibliography of Us Patents on Augmentation of Convective Heat and Mass Transfer-Ii (open access)

Bibliography of Us Patents on Augmentation of Convective Heat and Mass Transfer-Ii

Patents are an important source of information on the potential commercialization of augmented heat transfer technology. This report presents a bibliography of US patents pertinent to that technology. The total number of patents cited is 454. They are presented in three separate lists: by patent number, alphabetically by first inventor, and by augmentation technique (with secondary arrangement according to mode of heat transfer).
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Webb, R. L.; Bergles, A. E. & Junkhan, G. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bibliography on Augmentation of Convective Heat and Mass Transfer-Ii (open access)

Bibliography on Augmentation of Convective Heat and Mass Transfer-Ii

Heat transfer augmentation has developed into a major specialty area in heat transfer research and development. This report presents and updated bibliography of world literature on augmentation. The literature is classified into passive augmentation techniques, which require no external power, and active techniques, which do require external power. The fifteen techniques are grouped in terms of their applications to the various modes of heat transfer. Mass transfer is included for completeness. Key words are included with each citation for technique/mode identification. The total number of publications cited is 3045, including 135 surveys of various techniques and 86 papers on performance evaluation of passive techniques. Patents are not included, as they are the subject of a separate bibliographic report.
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Bergles, A. E.; Nirmalan, V.; Junkhan, G. H. & Webb, R. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Booster Vacuum Requirements Due To Electron Capture And Loss (open access)

Booster Vacuum Requirements Due To Electron Capture And Loss

None
Date: December 8, 1983
Creator: Young, G. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library