105-KE Isolation Barrier Leak Rate Acceptance Test Report (open access)

105-KE Isolation Barrier Leak Rate Acceptance Test Report

This Acceptance Test Report (ATR) contains the completed and signed Acceptance Procedure (ATP) for the 105-KE Isolations Barrier Leak Rate Test. The Test Engineer`s log, the completed sections of the ATP in the Appendix for Repeat Testing (Appendix K), the approved WHC J-7s (Appendix H), the data logger files (Appendices T and U), and the post test calibration checks (Appendix V) are included.
Date: June 14, 1995
Creator: McCracken, K. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test report for the ultra high pressure bore head for use in the self-installing liquid observation well (open access)

Acceptance test report for the ultra high pressure bore head for use in the self-installing liquid observation well

In order to monitor and characterize waste stored in single-shell tanks, liquid observation wells (LOWs) have been installed to permit periodic insertion of instrumentation probes to evaluate the waste`s cross-sections characteristics.
Date: June 14, 1995
Creator: Hertelendy, N.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addendum 6 to CSAR 79-038 out-of-hood plutonium storage (burial box) (open access)

Addendum 6 to CSAR 79-038 out-of-hood plutonium storage (burial box)

The Addendum considered an increase in the limit of fissile material in a stacked container array to 500 grams. In other words, the sum of fissile material in an array of containers is limited to 500 grams, regardless of whether the containers are stacked or not. The results of this evaluation indicates that with the modification of the fissile limits described, the system of a container array will stay sub-critical.
Date: June 14, 1995
Creator: Chiao, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Carnol process system for CO2 mitigation and methanol production (open access)

The Carnol process system for CO2 mitigation and methanol production

The feasibility of an alternative CO{sub 2} mitigation system and a methanol production process is investigated. The Carnol system has three components: (1) a coal fired power plant supplying flue gas CO{sub 2} to, (2) the Carnol process which converts the CO{sub 2} with hydrogen from natural gas to methanol which is used, (3) as a fuel component in the automotive sector. For the methanol production process alone, up to 100% CO{sub 2} emission reduction can be achieved while for the entire system up to 65% CO{sub 2} emission reduction can be obtained. The Carnol system is technically feasible and economically competitive with alternative CO{sub 2} disposal systems for coal fired power plants. The Carnol process is estimated to be economically attractive compared to the current market price of methanol, especially if credit can be taken for the carbon as a marketable coproduct.
Date: August 14, 1995
Creator: Steinberg, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catalysts and electrocatalysts for the selective oxidation of propylene. Annual report (open access)

Catalysts and electrocatalysts for the selective oxidation of propylene. Annual report

This paper presents a summary of the status of the work on three topics: synthesis and characterization of the Mn doped bismuth vanadates; electrode studies; and oxygen permeation. The authors have made a detailed study of manganese doped bismuth vanadates with the general composition Bi{sub 2}V{sub 1{minus}x}Mn{sub x}O{sub 5.5{minus}{delta}}. The phase diagram of Bi{sub 2}V{sub 1{minus}x}Mn{sub x}O{sub 5.5{minus}{delta}} has been investigated by diffraction and thermal analysis and they have found that the tetragonal phase can be stabilized in the composition range 0.1 {le} x {le} 0.25. The have used ac impedance techniques to study the properties of some electrocatalysts. The objective was to investigate the utility of the technique for obtaining mechanistic information relevant to an electrocatalytic reactor. Initial studies were of oxygen activation on silver electrodes. Finally, they have constructed an apparatus for high temperature permeation measurements and studied one system, the defect perovskite oxide SrCo{sub 0.8}Fe{sub 0.2}O{sub 3{minus}{delta}} (SCFO), in detail. Important conclusions of the work are to confirm the high permeation rates at high temperature (a flux of 10{sup {minus}6} mol/sec cm{sup 2} is equivalent to 1 cm{sup 3}/min cm{sup 2}) and to demonstrate that the surface exchange kinetics were rate limiting for this material.
Date: February 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cathodic protection -- Addition of 6 anodes to existing rectifier 31 (open access)

Cathodic protection -- Addition of 6 anodes to existing rectifier 31

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) has been prepared to demonstrate that the cathodic protection system additions are installed, connected, and function as required by project criteria. The cathodic protection system is for the tank farms on the Hanford Reservation. The tank farms store radioactive wastes.
Date: June 14, 1995
Creator: Lane, W.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cathodic protection -- Rectifier 46 (open access)

Cathodic protection -- Rectifier 46

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) has been prepared to demonstrate that the cathodic protection system functions as required by project criteria. The cathodic protection system is for the tank farms on the Hanford Reservation. The tank farms store radioactive waste.
Date: June 14, 1995
Creator: Lane, W.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cathodic protection -- Rectifier 47 (open access)

Cathodic protection -- Rectifier 47

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) has been prepared to demonstrate that the cathodic protection system functions as required by project criteria. The cathodic protection system is for the tank farms at the Hanford Reservation. The tank farms store radioactive waste.
Date: June 14, 1995
Creator: Lane, W.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clean energy from municipal solid waste. ERIP technical progress report No. 1. (open access)

Clean energy from municipal solid waste. ERIP technical progress report No. 1.

Just prior to this award and reporting period but as part of this program, EnerTech initiated preliminary pilot scale slurry carbonization experiments with Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) and preliminary pilot scale combustion experiments with the carbonized RDF slurry fuel. For this award and the time period April 1995--July 1995, several modifications to the pilot plant facilities were completed to improve operational reliability, system performance, and characteristics of the carbonized slurry fuel, based upon the previous plant experiments.
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: Klosky, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Closed out tank 241-SY-101 DACS System Change Request No. 301-400 (open access)

Closed out tank 241-SY-101 DACS System Change Request No. 301-400

This document provides a record closed out System Change Request No. 301-400 used during the development of the 241-SY-101 Hydrogen Mitigation Project Data Acquisition Control System.
Date: March 14, 1995
Creator: Gauck, G. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 1, Design concept. Part 2, Project management (open access)

Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 1, Design concept. Part 2, Project management

The Nuclear Materials Storage Facility (NMSF) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was a Fiscal Year (FY) 1984 line-item project completed in 1987 that has never been operated because of major design and construction deficiencies. This renovation project, which will correct those deficiencies and allow operation of the facility, is proposed as an FY 97 line item. The mission of the project is to provide centralized intermediate and long-term storage of special nuclear materials (SNM) associated with defined LANL programmatic missions and to establish a centralized SNM shipping and receiving location for Technical Area (TA)-55 at LANL. Based on current projections, existing storage space for SNM at other locations at LANL will be loaded to capacity by approximately 2002. This will adversely affect LANUs ability to meet its mission requirements in the future. The affected missions include LANL`s weapons research, development, and testing (WRD&T) program; special materials recovery; stockpile survelliance/evaluation; advanced fuels and heat sources development and production; and safe, secure storage of existing nuclear materials inventories. The problem is further exacerbated by LANL`s inability to ship any materials offsite because of the lack of receiver sites for mate rial and regulatory issues. Correction of the current deficiencies and …
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 3, Supplemental information (open access)

Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 3, Supplemental information

The Nuclear Materials Storage Facility (NMSF) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was a Fiscal Year (FY) 1984 line-item project completed in 1987 that has never been operated because of major design and construction deficiencies. This renovation project, which will correct those deficiencies and allow operation of the facility, is proposed as an FY 97 line item. The mission of the project is to provide centralized intermediate and long-term storage of special nuclear materials (SNM) associated with defined LANL programmatic missions and to establish a centralized SNM shipping and receiving location for Technical Area (TA)-55 at LANL. Based on current projections, existing storage space for SNM at other locations at LANL will be loaded to capacity by approximately 2002. This will adversely affect LANUs ability to meet its mission requirements in the future. The affected missions include LANL`s weapons research, development, and testing (WRD&T) program; special materials recovery; stockpile survelliance/evaluation; advanced fuels and heat sources development and production; and safe, secure storage of existing nuclear materials inventories. The problem is further exacerbated by LANL`s inability to ship any materials offsite because of the lack of receiver sites for mate rial and regulatory issues. Correction of the current deficiencies and …
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 5, Structural/seismic investigation. Section A report, existing conditions calculations/supporting information (open access)

Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 5, Structural/seismic investigation. Section A report, existing conditions calculations/supporting information

The Nuclear Materials Storage Facility (NMSF) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was a Fiscal Year (FY) 1984 line-item project completed in 1987 that has never been operated because of major design and construction deficiencies. This renovation project, which will correct those deficiencies and allow operation of the facility, is proposed as an FY 97 line item. The mission of the project is to provide centralized intermediate and long-term storage of special nuclear materials (SNM) associated with defined LANL programmatic missions and to establish a centralized SNM shipping and receiving location for Technical Area (TA)-55 at LANL. Based on current projections, existing storage space for SNM at other locations at LANL will be loaded to capacity by approximately 2002. This will adversely affect LANUs ability to meet its mission requirements in the future. The affected missions include LANL`s weapons research, development, and testing (WRD&T) program; special materials recovery; stockpile survelliance/evaluation; advanced fuels and heat sources development and production; and safe, secure storage of existing nuclear materials inventories. The problem is further exacerbated by LANL`s inability to ship any materials offsite because of the lack of receiver sites for mate rial and regulatory issues. Correction of the current deficiencies and …
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 5, Structural/seismic investigation. Section B, Renovation calculations/supporting data (open access)

Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 5, Structural/seismic investigation. Section B, Renovation calculations/supporting data

The Nuclear Materials Storage Facility (NMSF) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was a Fiscal Year (FY) 1984 line-item project completed in 1987 that has never been operated because of major design and construction deficiencies. This renovation project, which will correct those deficiencies and allow operation of the facility, is proposed as an FY 97 line item. The mission of the project is to provide centralized intermediate and long-term storage of special nuclear materials (SNM) associated with defined LANL programmatic missions and to establish a centralized SNM shipping and receiving location for Technical Area (TA)-55 at LANL. Based on current projections, existing storage space for SNM at other locations at LANL will be loaded to capacity by approximately 2002. This will adversely affect LANUs ability to meet its mission requirements in the future. The affected missions include LANL`s weapons research, development, and testing (WRD&T) program; special materials recovery; stockpile survelliance/evaluation; advanced fuels and heat sources development and production; and safe, secure storage of existing nuclear materials inventories. The problem is further exacerbated by LANL`s inability to ship any materials offsite because of the lack of receiver sites for mate rial and regulatory issues. Correction of the current deficiencies and …
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 6, Alternatives study (open access)

Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 6, Alternatives study

The Nuclear Materials Storage Facility (NMSF) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was a Fiscal Year (FY) 1984 line-item project completed in 1987 that has never been operated because of major design and construction deficiencies. This renovation project, which will correct those deficiencies and allow operation of the facility, is proposed as an FY 97 line item. The mission of the project is to provide centralized intermediate and long-term storage of special nuclear materials (SNM) associated with defined LANL programmatic missions and to establish a centralized SNM shipping and receiving location for Technical Area (TA)-55 at LANL. Based on current projections, existing storage space for SNM at other locations at LANL will be loaded to capacity by approximately 2002. This will adversely affect LANUs ability to meet its mission requirements in the future. The affected missions include LANL`s weapons research, development, and testing (WRD&T) program; special materials recovery; stockpile survelliance/evaluation; advanced fuels and heat sources development and production; and safe, secure storage of existing nuclear materials inventories. The problem is further exacerbated by LANL`s inability to ship any materials offsite because of the lack of receiver sites for material and regulatory issues. Correction of the current deficiencies and enhancement …
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 7, Estimate data (open access)

Conceptual design report: Nuclear materials storage facility renovation. Part 7, Estimate data

The Nuclear Materials Storage Facility (NMSF) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was a Fiscal Year (FY) 1984 line-item project completed in 1987 that has never been operated because of major design and construction deficiencies. This renovation project, which will correct those deficiencies and allow operation of the facility, is proposed as an FY 97 line item. The mission of the project is to provide centralized intermediate and long-term storage of special nuclear materials (SNM) associated with defined LANL programmatic missions and to establish a centralized SNM shipping and receiving location for Technical Area (TA)-55 at LANL. Based on current projections, existing storage space for SNM at other locations at LANL will be loaded to capacity by approximately 2002. This will adversely affect LANUs ability to meet its mission requirements in the future. The affected missions include LANL`s weapons research, development, and testing (WRD&T) program; special materials recovery; stockpile survelliance/evaluation; advanced fuels and heat sources development and production; and safe, secure storage of existing nuclear materials inventories. The problem is further exacerbated by LANL`s inability to ship any materials offsite because of the lack of receiver sites for mate rial and regulatory issues. Correction of the current deficiencies and …
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report, Sodium Storage Facility, Fast Flux Test Facility, Project F-031 (open access)

Conceptual design report, Sodium Storage Facility, Fast Flux Test Facility, Project F-031

The Sodium Storage Facility Conceptual Design Report provides conceptual design for construction of a new facility for storage of the 260,000 gallons of sodium presently in the FFTF plant. The facility will accept the molten sodium transferred from the FFTF sodium systems, and store the sodium in a solid state under an inert cover gas until such time as a Sodium Reaction Facility is available for final disposal of the sodium.
Date: February 14, 1995
Creator: Shank, D. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cost and quality of fuels for electric utility plants, 1994 (open access)

Cost and quality of fuels for electric utility plants, 1994

This document presents an annual summary of statistics at the national, Census division, State, electric utility, and plant levels regarding the quantity, quality, and cost of fossil fuels used to produce electricity. Purpose of this publication is to provide energy decision-makers with accurate, timely information that may be used in forming various perspectives on issues regarding electric power.
Date: July 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
D0 Silicon Upgrade: Liquid & Gas Nitrogen Line Sizing for D-Zero Upgrade (open access)

D0 Silicon Upgrade: Liquid & Gas Nitrogen Line Sizing for D-Zero Upgrade

This engineering note documents the calculations done to properly size the liquid/gas nitrogen piping system for the D-Zero refrigerator, solenoid, and VLPC upgrade. See the line sketch of the system on the next page. The sketch shows the chosen line sizes, estimated lengths of piping runs, estimated steady state flow rates and pressure drops for each pipe section. The raw calculations are attached as an appendix. The estimated steady state flow rates were developed in D-Zero EN-421, 'Helium and LN2 Storage Requirements for the D-Zero Upgrade'. The pressure drop calculations take into account the two phase property of the fluid on the inlet piping. The outlet piping is sized for saturated vapor. These calculations supplement sizing that was done in D-Zero EN-416, rev. 6/26/95, 'Pipe Sizing for Solenoid/VLPC Cryogenic Systems', EN-416 only looked at the Solenoid and VLPC sections of the system. In a previous EN-430, 'LN2 control valve sizing', a calculation was done to address the cool down flow rate necessary. The minimum cooldown flow rate needed for a simultaneous, serial cooldown of the refrigerator, solenoid and VLPC system was 6.4 g/s. This warm flow would get choked by an opening less than 0.175-inch in diameter. All the piping/tubing …
Date: September 14, 1995
Creator: Rucinski, Russ
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The development of coal-based technologies for Department of Defense facilities. Semiannual technical progress report, March 28, 1994--September 27, 1994 (open access)

The development of coal-based technologies for Department of Defense facilities. Semiannual technical progress report, March 28, 1994--September 27, 1994

The US Department of Defense (DOD), through an Interagency Agreement with the US Department of Energy (DOE), has initiated a three-phase program with the Consortium for Coal Water Slurry Fuel Technology, with the aim of decreasing DOD`s reliance on imported oil by increasing its use of coal. The program is being conducted as a cooperative agreement between the Consortium and DOE and the first two phases of the program are underway. Activities this reporting period included performing coal beneficiation/preparation studies, conducting combustion performance evaluations, preparing retrofit engineering designs, determining retrofit economics, and installing a micronized coal-water mixture (MCWM) circuit.
Date: April 14, 1995
Creator: Miller, B. G.; Bartley, D. A. & Morrison, J. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of vanadium-phosphate catalysts for methanol production by selective oxidation of methane. Quarterly technical progress report No. 9, April 1995--June 1995 (open access)

Development of vanadium-phosphate catalysts for methanol production by selective oxidation of methane. Quarterly technical progress report No. 9, April 1995--June 1995

This document is the ninth quarterly technical progress report under Contract No. DE-AC22-92PC92110 {open_quotes}Development of Vanadium-Phosphate Catalysts for Methanol Production by Selective Oxidation of Methane{close_quotes}. Activities were focused on fine tuning of the microreactor system by elimination of transport effects and improvements in the analytical system. Process variable studies were conducted on vanadyl pyrophosphate and screening studies were conducted on several modified catalyst. One additional catalyst was prepared and characterization studies continued. These results are reported.
Date: September 14, 1995
Creator: McCormick, R.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development, testing, and demonstration of an optimal fine coal cleaning circuit. Task 5: Evaluation of bench-scale test results and equipment selection for in-plant pilot tests (open access)

Development, testing, and demonstration of an optimal fine coal cleaning circuit. Task 5: Evaluation of bench-scale test results and equipment selection for in-plant pilot tests

The overall objective of this research effort is to improve the efficiency of fine coal flotation in preparation plants above that of currently used conventional cells. In addition to evaluating single-stage operation of four selected advanced flotation devices, the project will also evaluate them in two-stage configurations. The project is being implemented in two phases. Phase 1 comprises bench-scale testing of the flotation units, and Phase 2 comprises in-plant, proof-of-concept (POC), pilot-scale testing of selected configurations at the Cyprus Emerald preparation plant. The Task 5 report presents the findings of the Phase 1 bench-scale test results and provides the basis for equipment selection for Phase 2. Four advanced flotation technologies selected for bench-scale testing are: Jameson cell; Outokumpu HG tank cell; packed column; and open column. In addition to testing all four of the cells in single-stage operation, the Jameson and Outokumpu cells were tested as candidate first-stage cells because of their propensity for rapid attachment of coal particles with air bubbles and low capital and operating costs. The column cells were selected as candidate second-stage cells because of their high-efficiency separation of low-ash products from high-ash feed coals. 32 figs., 72 tabs.
Date: December 14, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dissemination and support of ARGUS for accelerator applications. Final report, April 24, 1991--April 14, 1995 (open access)

Dissemination and support of ARGUS for accelerator applications. Final report, April 24, 1991--April 14, 1995

The effort has two broad goals, which have been prioritized by DOE, as follows: to enhance the ARGUS code for use in practical accelerator design simulations; to release ARGUS to the accelerator community through the Los Alamos Accelerator Code Group (LAACG). During the contract period, ARGUS versions 24 and 25 have been released. An upgraded version 25 (ARGUS v.25c) will be released in July, 1995, and will include all of the features that are tested and working at the conclusion of the DOE-funded effort. The effort that consolidated version 24 established a set of core capabilities that all ARGUS modules could access. Version 25 incorporated several major improvements: (1) a new frequency-domain module was incorporated into ARGUS that can handle degenerate modes, lossy materials, and periodic boundary conditions with sub-phase specification, and that can utilize the ARGUS data handling machinery for multiblock operation; (2) HDF output was implemented to allow ARGUS to send data to visualization tools; (3) a plasma chemistry capability was included in the steady-state PIC module to allow ionization, stripping, electron attachment, charge exchange, and other ion rate processes to occur within the PIC calculation; (4) new structure input options for figures of translation (extrusion) and figures …
Date: April 14, 1995
Creator: Kostas, C.; Krueger, W. A.; Mankofsky, A.; Mondelli, A. A. & Petillo, J. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Double-shell tank waste system assessment status and schedule (open access)

Double-shell tank waste system assessment status and schedule

The integrated program for completing the integrity assessments of the dangerous waste tank systems managed by the Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) Division of Westinghouse Hanford Company is presented in the Tank Waste Remediation System Tank System Integrity Assessments Program Plan, WHC-SD-AP017, Rev. 1. The program plan identified the assessment requirements and the general scope to which these requirements applied. Some of these assessment requirements have been met and others are either in process of completion or scheduled to be worked. To define the boundary of the double-shell tank (DST) system and the boundaries of the DST system components (or system parts) for the purpose of performing integrity assessment activities; To identify the planned activities to meet the assessment requirements for each component; Provide the status of the assessment activities; and Project a five year assessment activity schedule.
Date: June 14, 1995
Creator: Walter, E.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library