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Operating experience and cesium recycling on the LASL polarized triton source (open access)

Operating experience and cesium recycling on the LASL polarized triton source

The polarized triton source has had over 3000 hours of operation. Experience gained with Lamb-shift operation that are not unique to tritium handling are discussed. (GHT)
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Hardekopf, R.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rigid muffin-tin approximation for the electron-phonon interaction in transition metals (open access)

Rigid muffin-tin approximation for the electron-phonon interaction in transition metals

Progress in calculating the electron-phonon parameters of transition metals has been based on either the rigid muffin-tin approximation (RMTA) or the fitted modified tight-binding approximation (FMTBA). The RMTA has been shown to be remarkably accurate for average electron-phonon properties, but there are indications that RMTA matrix elements may be too small at low momentum transfer. An attempt is made to demonstrate these assertions concerning the accuracy of RMTA and the numerous electron-phonon calculations are placed in a broader perspective by a demonstration of how they can be used to explain the trends in the strength of the electron-phonon coupling among the transition metals and the A-15 compounds. (GHT)
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Butler, W. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear safety guide TID-7016 Revision 2 (open access)

Nuclear safety guide TID-7016 Revision 2

The present revision of TID-7016 Nuclear Safety Guide is discussed. This Guide differs significantly from its predecessor in that the latter was intentionally conservative in its recommendations. Firmly based on experimental evidence of criticality, the original Guide and the first revision were considered to be of most value to organizations whose activities with fissionable materials were not extensive and, secondarily, that it would serve as a point of departure for members of established nuclear safety teams, experienced in the field. The reader will find a significant change in the character of information presented in this version. Nuclear Criticality Safety has matured in the past twelve years. The advance of calculational capability has permitted validated calculations to extend and substitute for experimental data. The broadened data base has enabled better interpolation, extension, and understanding of available, information, especially in areas previously addressed by undefined but adequate factors of safety. The content has been thereby enriched in qualitative guidance. The information inherently contains, and the user can recapture, the quantitative guidance characteristic of the former Guides by employing appropriate safety factors. In fact, it becomes incumbent on the Criticality Safety Specialist to necessarily impose safety factors consistent with the possible normal and …
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Thomas, J T
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of light water reactor fuel damage during a reactivity initiated accident (open access)

Assessment of light water reactor fuel damage during a reactivity initiated accident

This paper presents an assessment of LWR fuel damage during a reactivity initiated accident and comments on the adequacy of the present USNRC design requirements. Results from early SPERT tests are reviewed and compared with results from recent computer simulations and PBF tests. A progression of fuel rod and cladding damage events is presented. High strain rate deformation of relatively cool irradiated cladding early in the transient may result in fracture at a radial average peak fuel enthalpy of approximately 140 cal/g UO/sub 2/. Volume expansion of previously irradiated fuel upon melting may cause deformation and rupture of the cladding, and coolant channel blockage at higher peak enthalpies.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: MacDonald, P. E.; Seiffert, S. L.; Martinson, Z. R.; McCardell, R. K.; Owen, D. E. & Fukuda, S. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
INSPECT: a package of computer programs for planning and evaluating safeguards inspections (open access)

INSPECT: a package of computer programs for planning and evaluating safeguards inspections

As part of the US Program of Technical Assistance to IAEA Safeguards, PNL has developed a package of computer programs, called INSPECT, that can be used in planning and evaluating safeguards inspections of various types of nuclear facilities. The programs are based on the statistical methods described in Part F of the IAEA Safeguards Technical Manual and can be used to calculate the variance components of the MUF (Material Unaccounted For) statistic, the variance components of the D (difference) statistic, attribute and variables sampling plans, and a measure of the effectiveness of the inspection plan. The paper describes the programs, reviews a number of applications, and indicates areas for future work.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Mullen, M.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bag model, the hyperspherical formalism and the heavy baryons (open access)

Bag model, the hyperspherical formalism and the heavy baryons

The bag model framework is used to discuss the heavy baryons, triple flavored objects like ccc, cbb, etc. A nonrelativistic picture seems justified. It is insisted that the long-range interaction consist of a genuine three-body force. Once the potential energy of the three quarks is determined, the three-body Schroedinger equation is solved by the method of hyperspherical expansion. 1 table. (RWR)
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Richard, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent experimental results on the beam-beam effects in storage rings and an attempt of their interpretation (open access)

Recent experimental results on the beam-beam effects in storage rings and an attempt of their interpretation

The latest available experimental results on the luminosity, the space charge parameters, and the beam blowup as functions of particle energy and beam current are reviewed. The comparison with the phenomenological diffusion theory is done and useful scaling laws are derived. Some implications for anti p p storage rings are discussed.
Date: June 1, 1980
Creator: Kheifets, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relativistic effects in the atomic and nuclear few-body problems (open access)

Relativistic effects in the atomic and nuclear few-body problems

Relativistic effects in the atomic and nuclear few-body systems are classified and discussed with the emphasis on electromagnetic transitions. The size of relativistic corrections, calculational techniques and ambiguities, and comparison of theory and experiment are considered. 8 figures.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Friar, J.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
De-entrainment on vertical elements in air droplet cross flow. [PWR] (open access)

De-entrainment on vertical elements in air droplet cross flow. [PWR]

De-entrainment phenomena on vertical elements in air-water droplet cross flow are generated using a horizontal array of water spray nozzles and a draft-induced wind tunnel. These conditions are used to obtain experimental values of the de-entrainment efficiency of isolated elements (25.4-, 63.5-, and 101.6-mm-diam cylinders and a 76.2-mm-square tube), and of an array of 101.6-mm-diam cylinders. A flow model is developed that extrapolates the de-entrainment efficiency of isolated elements through the use of a correlation for the interference effect to predict the efficiency of large arrays of similar elements. This simple model is shown to provide a good prediction of the de-entrainment efficiency of arrays in terms of the efficiency of an isolated element.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Dallman, J.C. & Kirchner, W.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stark broadening of isolated lines from high-Z emitters in dense plasmas (open access)

Stark broadening of isolated lines from high-Z emitters in dense plasmas

The joint distribution of the electric microfield and its longitudinal derivative is required for the calculation of line profiles for the He-like ions in very dense plasmas. We used a molecular dynamics code to compute exact distributions in single- and multi-component plasmas, and then we investigated various analytical approximations to these results. We found that a simplified, two-nearest-neighbor scheme leads to surprisingly accurate distribution functions. Our results are illustrated by sample profiles for Ne/sup +8/ and Ar/sup +16/ resonance lines.
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Weisheit, J.C. & Pollock, E.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Surprising patterns of CMOS susceptibility to ESD and implications on long-term reliability (open access)

Surprising patterns of CMOS susceptibility to ESD and implications on long-term reliability

CMOS electrostatic discharge (ESD) failures in a product where, by design, the device input terminals are not accessible to ESD led to this study of device susceptibility and an analysis of the long-term reliability of devices in assemblies from that production line. Some surprising patterns of device susceptibility are established and it is shown that the probability of long-term failure in devices whose electrical characteristics have been degraded by electrostatic discharge is small.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Schwank, J.R.; Baker, R.P. & Armendariz, M.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Importance of the specific heat anomaly in the design of binary Rankine cycle power plants (open access)

Importance of the specific heat anomaly in the design of binary Rankine cycle power plants

The transposed critical temperature (TPCT) is shown to be an extremely important thermodynamic property in the selection of working fluids and turbine states for geothermal power plants operating on a closed organic (binary) Rankine cycle. When the optimum working fluid composition and process states are determined for specified source and sink conditions, turbine inlet states consistently lie adjacent to the working fluids' TPCT line for all resource temperatures, constraints, and cost and efficiency factors investigated.
Date: May 1, 1980
Creator: Pope, W.L.; Doyle, P.A.; Fulton, R.L. & Silvester, L.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Validation and sensitivity of a simulated photograph technique for visibility modeling (open access)

Validation and sensitivity of a simulated photograph technique for visibility modeling

The Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory (LASL) visibility model is capable of producing simulated before and after pictures that illustrate visual effects of smoke plumes. Although the model has been under development for a few years, until recently there had been very little testing of the model against field experience or testing of sensitivity of the model results to numerical approximations used in the model. Further validation and sensitivity testing of the LASL model began in late 1979. The work focused on three areas: comparison of the LASL model results with plumes encountered in the field, comparison of LASL background-atmosphere model results with measured sky intensities, and examination of the variation of model results with changes in the numerical approximations. The field study took place during August of 1979 in the vicinity of coal-fired power plants in northwestern New Mexico and northern Arizona. Telephotometer, NO/sub X/ plume measurements, and aerosol size distribution measurements were made in the plumes of three different coal-fired power plants. Photographs were taken of the plumes, and simulated photographs were prepared by the model. Light intensities calculated by the background radiative transfer model were compared to measured light intensities in a very clean atmosphere and in a …
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Williams, M.; Chan, L.Y. & Lewis, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The (t,d) reaction on the Ni isotopes with polarized tritons (open access)

The (t,d) reaction on the Ni isotopes with polarized tritons

The (t vector,d) reaction has been measured on targets of /sup 58/ /sup 60/ /sup 62/ /sup 64/Ni with 17 MeV polarized tritons. Spectroscopic factors, angular momentum and total spin transfer were obtained from the differential cross section and A/sub y/ values of levels up to 3.5 MeV in excitation energy. The present (t,d) measurement enables a better description of the 9/2/sup +/ and 5/2/sup +/ states which show significant shell crossing effects as a function of increasing neutron number.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Flynn, E. R.; Cizewski, J. A.; Brown, R. E.; Hardekopf, R. A. & Sunier, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stochastic model of radioiodine transport (open access)

Stochastic model of radioiodine transport

A research project has been underway at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory with the objective to evaluate dose assessment models and to determine the uncertainty associated with the model predictions. This has resulted in the application of methods to propagate uncertainties through models. Some techniques and results related to this problem are discussed.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Schwarz, G. & Hoffman, F.O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kaon-nucleus interactions (open access)

Kaon-nucleus interactions

The recent progress in hypernuclear physics, in particular the studies of ..lambda.. and ..sigma.. states via the strangeness-exchange (K/sup -/,..pi../sup -/) reaction, are reviewed. Prospects for future investigations with (proposed) intense kaon beams are also evaluated, for instance the production of high spin hypernuclei via the (..pi../sup +/,K/sup +/) reaction, and the formation of strangeness S = -2 hypernuclei (..lambda lambda.. or Xi/sup -/) by means of the (K/sup -/,K/sup +/) process. A very brief resume of elastic, inelastic and charge exchange reactions induced by the interaction of K/sup +/ mesons with nuclei is given.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Dover, C B
System: The UNT Digital Library
Testing program for determining the mechanical properties of concrete to temperatures of 621/sup 0/C (open access)

Testing program for determining the mechanical properties of concrete to temperatures of 621/sup 0/C

Concrete temperatures in a Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor (LMFBR) in excess of normal code limits can result from postulated large sodium spills in equipment cells. Elevated temperature concrete property data which may have application for providing a basis for the design and evaluation of such postulated accident conditions is limited. Data thus needed to be developed commensurate with LMFBR plant applications for critical physical and mechanical concrete properties under prototypic thermal accident conditions. A test program was conducted to define the variations in physical and mechanical properties of a limestone aggregate concrete and a lightweight insulating concrete exposed to elevated temperatures. Five test series were conducted: unconfined compression, shear, rebar bond, sustained loading (creep), and thermal properties. Testing procedures for determining the mechanical properties of concrete from ambient to 621/sup 0/C (1150/sup 0/F) are described. Ther thermal properties tests are discussed in a separate paper which is also being presented at this conference.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Oland, C.B.; Naus, D.J. & Robinson, G.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron environment in d + Li facilities (open access)

Neutron environment in d + Li facilities

A microscopic d + Li neutron yield model has been developed based upon classical models and experimental data. Using equations suggested by the Serber and evaporation models, a generalized least squares adjustment procedure generated angular yields for E/sub d/ to 40 MeV using the available experimental data. The HEDL-UCD experiment at E/sub d/ = 35 was used to adjust parameters describing the neutron spectra. The model is used to predict yields, spectra, and damage responses in the FMIT Test Cell.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Mann, F. M.; Schmittroth, F. & Carter, L. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of ISABELLE full cell ultra high vacuum system (open access)

Evaluation of ISABELLE full cell ultra high vacuum system

The ISABELLE Full Cell Vacuum System consisting of a 40 m long, by 8.8 cm diameter stainless steel tube pumped by seven pumping stations was assembled and processed for 10/sup -12/ Torr operation. Evaluation and testing of the system and its sub-assemblies has been completed. Detail design of system components and the determination of the conditioning process was completed. The best procedure to rough pump, leak test, vacuum bake the system, condition pumps, degas gauges, turn on ion pumps and flash sublimation pumps was established. Pressures below 2 x 10/sup -11/ Torr are now routinely achieved in normal operation of the Full Cell. This includes pump down after replacement of various components and pump down after back fill with moist unfiltered air. The techniques developed for the Full Cell will be used to build the ISABELLE Ultra High Vacuum System.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Foerster, C L; Briggs, J; Chou, T S & Stattel, P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quark-diagram classification of charm decays (open access)

Quark-diagram classification of charm decays

The decays of charm mesons are described in terms of quark-diagram amplitudes. Experimental implications of these amplitudes are also discussed.
Date: May 1, 1980
Creator: Rizzo, T. G. & Wang, L. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conductor qualification tests for the 30-MJ Bonneville Power Administration SMES coil (open access)

Conductor qualification tests for the 30-MJ Bonneville Power Administration SMES coil

The 30-MJ energy storage coil for the Bonneville Power Administration requires a low-loss, cryostable conductor that is able to carry 4.9 kA in a field of 2.8 T and will maintain its properties over 10/sup 8/ partial discharge cycles. The multi-level cable which satisfies these requirements has been extensively tested at various stages in its development and in its final form. Tests have been performed to determine the effect of manufacturing options on ac losses, low temperature electrical resistivity, stability, and fatigue resistance of the insulated conductor. This paper will concentrate on the stability and fatigue tests which have not previously been reported.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Schermer, R. I.; Boenig, H. J.; Henke, M.; Turner, R. D. & Schramm, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data analysis and management for the Uranium Resource Evaluation Project (open access)

Data analysis and management for the Uranium Resource Evaluation Project

The Department of Energy has funded a large data collection effort with the purpose of determining the US uranium resources. This Uranium Resource Evaluation (URE) Project required a large data management effort which involved collection, retrieval, processing, display, and analysis of large volumes of data. Many of the characteristics of this data processing system are relevant to other applications, particularly where routine processing involves analyses for input into numerous technical reports. The URE Project computing system has a modular program structure which has enabled a straightforward interface with both special and general graphics and analysis packages such as SAS, BMDP, and SURFACE II. Other topics include cost-effective computing, data quality, report quality computer output, and test versus production program development.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Kane, V.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some recent developments in nuclear charged particle detectors (open access)

Some recent developments in nuclear charged particle detectors

The latest developments of large-area, position sensitive gas-filled ionization chambers are described. Multi-wire-proportional chambers as position-sensing and parallel-plate-avalanche counters as time-sensing detectors at low pressure (5 torr) have proven to be useful and reliable instruments in heavy ion physics. Gas (proportional) scintillation counters, used mainly for x-ray spectroscopy, have recently been applied as particle detectors. Finally, a brief description of a large plastic scintillator spectrometer, the Plastic Ball, is given and some of the first test and calibration data are shown.
Date: August 1, 1980
Creator: Stelzer, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure losses in fracture-dominated reservoirs: the wellbore constriction effect (open access)

Pressure losses in fracture-dominated reservoirs: the wellbore constriction effect

Improved energy production from many types of energy reservoirs such as hot dry rock geothermal as well as hydraulically fractured oil, gas, and other geothermal reservoirs requires a better understanding of the fluid mechanics in the vicinity of the fracture-wellbore intersection. Typically, the aperture (smallest dimension) of a hydraulic fracture is only of the order of 1 mm (0.04 in.) so that reasonable energy production rates from geothermal systems require fairly large flow velocities within the fractures, particularly so as the wellbore-fracture intersection is approached. The high velocities and accelerations result in non-Darcian, often turbulent, flow and increased pressure losses. These flow phenomena were investigated experimentally for the simple case where the fracture plane and the wellbore drilling axis are orthogonal and the implication of these experimental results are examined by investigating the pressure losses in a hot dry rock reservoir.
Date: January 1, 1980
Creator: Murphy, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library