Resource Type

Measurement of wakefields generated in accelerator test structures using the SLC (open access)

Measurement of wakefields generated in accelerator test structures using the SLC

Research is underway at SLAC to develop accelerator structures for the next generation linear collider. An important feature of the design is a detuning of the dipole modes of the cells to suppress the long-range transverse wakefield by two orders of magnitude. This paper describes a facility, called ASSET, that will be incorporated into the SLAC Linear Collider (SLC) to test the long-range wakefield suppression and also to measure the other components of the wakefields generated in accelerator test structures.
Date: October 1, 1992
Creator: Adolphsen, C.; Bane, K.; Loew, G.; Ruth, R.; Thompson, K. & Wang, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bubbles and their implications for laser-fusion (open access)

Bubbles and their implications for laser-fusion

Bubbles are concentrations of electromagnetic energy in the region of the critical density that force out the plasma to form a void. Since the critical density surface is cratered, absorption may be greater than a smooth surface since a larger area will be available for absorption and the reflected light will have a large probability of restriking the critical density. The distance between bubbles is several wavelengths and consequently they may encourage Rayleigh--Taylor instabilities. The threshold, magnetic field generation, and possible experimental evidence for bubbles are discussed. Also, the competition between sidescatter and self focusing in an entirely underdense plasma is studied and it is found that sidescatter dominates for polarization out of the simulation plane.
Date: October 28, 1975
Creator: Estabrook, K. G. & Valeo, E. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a geothermal thesaurus (open access)

Development of a geothermal thesaurus

An attempt was made to develop a thesaurus of terminology associated with geothermal energy for use in the information storage and retrieval system of LBL's Geothermal Information Group. The development of the thesaurus is discussed, beginning with an outline of its subject scope, sources, and methods used in compiling the list of terms. The tendency was to include, rather than exclude, terms of unknown usefulness, and to provide paths through the thesaurus to make these terms accessible. The thesaurus structure and links to other vocabularies are described. The thesaurus processing software developed at LBL is briefly mentioned.
Date: October 1, 1975
Creator: Herr, J. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Issues in radioactive-waste management for fusion power (open access)

Issues in radioactive-waste management for fusion power

Analysis of recent conceptual designs reveals that commercial fusion power systems will raise issues of occupational and public health and safety. This paper focuses on radioactive wastes from fusion reactor materials activated by neutrons. The analysis shows that different selections of materials and neutronic designs can make differences in orders-of-magnitude of the kinds and amounts of radioactivity to be expected. By careful and early evaluation of the impacts of the selections on waste management, designers can produce fusion power systems with radiation from waste well below today's limits for occupational and public health and safety.
Date: October 12, 1982
Creator: Maninger, R. C. & Dorn, D. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Argus Laser Fusion Facility (open access)

Argus Laser Fusion Facility

ARGUS is a two-beam Nd: glass laser system built for laser fusion irradiation experiments. It is the first glass laser system planned and built with the understanding that small-scale beam break-up is the dominant performance limiting factor in obtaining high output power. Accordingly, five vacuum spatial filters are located at strategic intervals along each chain to eliminate the accumulated small-scale filamentation. This strategy permits cascading of amplifiers to obtain a focusable output of more than one terawatt per arm in a spatially clean beam of 20 centimeter diameter. Beam diagnostics which characterize each shot include the time-integrated spatial profile and the time resolved intensity/power at the target. Demonstrated performance to date includes: (1) Peak power in excess of 2 TW at the target is achieved with regularity. (2) Maximum system brightness is in excess of 10/sup 17/ watts/cm/sup 2/ ster. (3) Shot-to-shot pointing stability within 50 ..mu.. radians is achieved over periods of days. (4) Successful target experiments have been performed with pulses of from 30 to 500 ps duration.
Date: October 28, 1976
Creator: Speck, D. R. & Simmons, W. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implementation of vertically asymmetric toroidal-field ripple for beam heating of tokamak reactor plasmas (open access)

Implementation of vertically asymmetric toroidal-field ripple for beam heating of tokamak reactor plasmas

The neutral-beam energy required for adequate penetration of tokamak plasmas of high opacity can be reduced by a large factor if the beam is injected vertically into a region of large TF (toroidal-field) ripple. Energetic ions are trapped in local magnetic wells and drift vertically toward the midplane (z = 0). If the ripple is made very small on the opposite side of the midplane, drifting ions are detrapped and thermalized in the central plasma region. This paper discusses design considerations for establishing the required vertically asymmetric ripple. Examples are given of special TF-coil configurations, and of the use of auxiliary coil windings to create the prescribed ripple profiles.
Date: October 1, 1976
Creator: Jassby, D. L.; Sheffield, G. V.; Towner, H. H. & Weissenburger, D. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive beam production at the Bevalac (open access)

Radioactive beam production at the Bevalac

At the Bevalac radioactive beams are routinely produced by the fragmentation process. The effectiveness of this process with respect to the secondary beam's emittance, intensity and energy spread depends critically on the nuclear reaction kinematics and the magnitude of the incident beam energy. When this beam energy significantly exceeds the energies of the nuclear reaction process, many of the qualities of the incident beam can be passed on to the secondary beam. Factors affecting secondary beam quality are discussed along with techniques for isolating and purifying a specific reaction product. The on-going radioactive beam program at the Bevalac is used as an example with applications, present performance and plans for the future. 6 refs., 6 figs., 1 tab.
Date: October 1, 1989
Creator: Alonso, J. R.; Feinberg, B.; Kalnins, J. G.; Krebs, G. F.; McMahan, M. A. & Tanihata, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gamma scanning the primary circuit of the Peach Bottom HTGR (open access)

Gamma scanning the primary circuit of the Peach Bottom HTGR

The plateout distribution of gamma-emitting nuclides in the primary circuit of the Peach Bottom HTGR at end-of-life has been determined by in situ gamma scanning. The specific activity was mapped by scanning the accessible ducting at 12 locations with a Ge(Li) detector and by axially traversing 79 steam generator tubes with travelling CdTe detectors from the water side. Following destructive removal of trepan samples, a travelling intrinsic germanium detector was inserted sequentially into two vertical ducts and the plateout mapped along 6-m runs of ducting. Calibration measurements on mockups allowed reduction of the spectra to specific activity. The measured plateout profiles were in excellent agreement with those predicted with the PAD code. The dominant gamma emitters were Cs-137 and Cs-134; their relative distributions were similar. Little local structure to the plateout in the ducts was observed, only a gradual decrease in specific activity in the direction of coolant flow. In the steam generator, a significant entrance effect was observed in the superheater section; the activity was highest where the inlet jet impinged and lowest at the ends of the bundle despite the presence of a flow baffle. The effect damped out with penetration into the bundle, and the axial profile …
Date: October 31, 1976
Creator: Hanson, D. L.; Baldwin, N. L. & Selph, W. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Automated explosive pellet manufacturing using a PDP-14 programmable controller (open access)

Automated explosive pellet manufacturing using a PDP-14 programmable controller

A Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-14 Industrial Programmable Controller was employed to provide automatic, closed-loop control for an explosive pellet manufacturing system at Mound Laboratory. Programmable controllers allow the application of sophisticated and flexible control, through programming. Advantages of the PDP-14 controller are ease of installation and maintenance, capability for modular expansion, and immunity to electrical noise. Safety requirements were met by using new techniques for adapting electrical equipment to a hazardous environment and by locating the PDP-14 remotely outside the explosive area. Another advantage of the new explosion proofing (EP) methods/equipment was that they produced a minimum of clutter on the controlled explosive pellet manufacturing system.
Date: October 29, 1976
Creator: Page, D. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Programmable controllers replace relays in MFTF-B personnel-safety interlocks (open access)

Programmable controllers replace relays in MFTF-B personnel-safety interlocks

This paper describes a new approach for implementing personnel safety interlocks logic using industrial-type programmable controllers. The logic for all personnel safety interlocks except those totally internal to a subsystem is implemented in two non-redundant controllers. A high degree of fail-safe reliability is achieved by augmenting the protective features intrinsic to each controller with those provided by a small amount of external support hardware. The controllers are interfaced to the host computer system via fiber optic data links to enable display of interlock and overall system status on the control room graphic displays. When fully implemented, the controllers will perform the equivalent of over 2000 discreet relay functions.
Date: October 20, 1981
Creator: Branum, J. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-frequency oscillations in radiative-convective models (open access)

Low-frequency oscillations in radiative-convective models

Although eastward propagation is usually regarded as an essential feature of the low-frequency Madden-Julian oscillation'' observed in the tropical atmosphere, many observations indicate that there is an important stationary or quasi-stationary component of the oscillation. Yasunari (1979), for example, investigated the stationary 30--60 day variation in upper tropospheric cloudiness in the Asian summer monsoon region. In a case study of the 30--60 day oscillation. Hsu et al. (1990) found a strong stationary oscillation of the divergence, outgoing longwave mdiadon and other fields. A recent observational study by Weickmann and Khalsa (1990) offers further evidence that the Madden-Julian oscillation has an important stationary component. In this paper, we present evidence that intraseasonal oscillations can be produced by local radiative and convective processes. This suggests that the observed propagating Madden-Julian wave is produced by interactions between these local processes and the large scale motion field, and is not essential for the existence of the observed oscillation.
Date: October 1991
Creator: Hu, Qi & Randall, David A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Objective function for the environmental assessment of waste (open access)

Objective function for the environmental assessment of waste

Various waste management systems were examined in order to determine what the environmental impacts might be and to rank the relative importance of those impacts. This examination determined that radiation dose to man was the most significant, and probably overriding, impact. This report describes methods of providing an objective function for dose to man. The search for an objective function began with a reading of Federal Regulations and the output of various standard setting councils and committees. Ample guidance was found on maximum allowable doses to individuals but no guidance on dose to large populations or criteria by which systems could be compared or optimized. Several other ways were postulated by which waste management systems could be evaluated besides maximum allowable dose to individuals. 0.1 man-rem per MW(e)-year was selected as the measure of system performance. This unit compares a rational estimate of population dose commitment with the concurrent benefit.
Date: October 5, 1976
Creator: Toy, A. J.; Boegel, J. & Cohen, J. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Megachannel. gamma. --. gamma. coincidence system using a PDP-8/E computer and moving-head disks (open access)

Megachannel. gamma. --. gamma. coincidence system using a PDP-8/E computer and moving-head disks

A megachannel pulse-height analysis system using a PDP-8/E computer and two moving-head disk memories has been developed. The system has a storage capacity of 220 memory locations, is capable of processing 1100 events/s, and provides on-line sorting and disk storage. An X- or Y-pulse-height spectrum in coincidence with one or several arbitrary pulse-height windows can be assembled in core for scope display and spectral analysis within 2 to 20 seconds. Reconstruction of a complete X- or Y-pulse-height spectrum requires about 3 minutes.
Date: October 19, 1976
Creator: Ruhter, W. D.; Camp, D. C.; Mann, L. G.; Niday, J. B. & Siemens, P. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploding pusher experiments utilizing a 4. pi. illumination system (open access)

Exploding pusher experiments utilizing a 4. pi. illumination system

A focusing system which utilizes two f/0.47 doublets in conjunction with ellipsoidal mirrors produces two focusing cones with half angles of 81.5/sup 0/. This system has been used with the LLL Janus laser system to irradiate and implode DT filled glass microshells approximately 80 ..mu..m diameter. The purpose of the system was to provide more uniform heating of the pusher and compression of the fuel than had been obtained with Janus irradiated targets using f/1 lenses. Neutron yields of approximately 10/sup 7/ per event have been obtained and x-ray micrographs indicate tha the heating of the pusher was more uniform. Also the implosions are definitely more spherical than those obtained with the f/1 lenses. Data is also presented which add further confirmation to the importance of absorption by plasma wave resonance for non normal incidence of the laser light with the target.
Date: October 4, 1976
Creator: Storm, E. K.; Ahlstrom, H. G.; Monjes, J. A.; Swain, J. E.; Rupert, V. C. & Phillion, D. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Distribution of burst pressure for tubes (open access)

Distribution of burst pressure for tubes

In a nuclear reactor, tubes are pressurized from interior by coolant, while externally no pressure is applied on them. The pressure that causes any of the tubes to burst is random and has certain distribution. By using the presently available data from stress-strain experiment, mathematical procedure for finding the distribution form of the ultimate stress is made and is justified theoretically and empirically. The distribution function obtained is important in analyzing the problem of loss of coolant in the reactor.
Date: October 1, 1976
Creator: Kao, C S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of intermediate states produced by radiative decays of psi. [Chi 3415, 3500, 3550] (open access)

Study of intermediate states produced by radiative decays of psi. [Chi 3415, 3500, 3550]

Recent experimental results on narrow states, intermediate between psi and psi', produced by radioactive decays of psi' are discussed. These chi states are examined using the following processes: (1) inclusive photon spectra to search for monoenergetic photon lines, (2) cascade processes, psi' ..-->.. ..gamma../sub 1/chi ..-->.. ..gamma../sub 2/psi ..-->.. e/sup +/e/sup -/ or ..mu../sup +/..mu../sup -/, and (3) hadronic decays of chi states, psi' ..-->.. ..gamma..chi ..-->.. hadrons. Clearly identified states have been produced at masses 3415, 3500, and 3550 MeV with preferred spin-parity assignments of 0/sup +/, 1/sup +/, and 2/sup +/, respectively. (SDF)
Date: October 1, 1976
Creator: Trilling, G. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computation and control with neural nets (open access)

Computation and control with neural nets

As energies have increased exponentially with time so have the size and complexity of accelerators and control systems. NN may offer the kinds of improvements in computation and control that are needed to maintain acceptable functionality. For control their associative characteristics could provide signal conversion or data translation. Because they can do any computation such as least squares, they can close feedback loops autonomously to provide intelligent control at the point of action rather than at a central location that requires transfers, conversions, hand-shaking and other costly repetitions like input protection. Both computation and control can be integrated on a single chip, printed circuit or an optical equivalent that is also inherently faster through full parallel operation. For such reasons one expects lower costs and better results. Such systems could be optimized by integrating sensor and signal processing functions. Distributed nets of such hardware could communicate and provide global monitoring and multiprocessing in various ways e.g. via token, slotted or parallel rings (or Steiner trees) for compatibility with existing systems. Problems and advantages of this approach such as an optimal, real-time Turing machine are discussed. Simple examples are simulated and hardware implemented using discrete elements that demonstrate some basic characteristics …
Date: October 4, 1989
Creator: Corneliusen, A.; Terdal, P.; Knight, T. & Spencer, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety and environmental aspects of fusion reactors (open access)

Safety and environmental aspects of fusion reactors

Fusion is examined against the yardstick of fission technology with respect to inventories of radioactivity (and associated Biological Hazard Potentials), routine emissions, accident pathways and consequences, radioactive-waste management, and misuse of nuclear materials. Based on conceptual designs of Tokamak fusion reactors with stainless steel structure and tritium inventories of 10 kg per thermal gigawatt, the apparent advantage of fusion is 1 to 2 orders of magnitude in most indices of radiological hazards. Fusion's advantage is 2 to 5 orders of magnitude in comparing damage potential of intentional airborne dispersal of tritium and plutonium, and nonexistent in comparing medium-term radwaste hazard potential (1000 to 100,000 years) and intentional waterborne dispersal of tritium and plutonium. Fusion appears to have some qualitative advantages with respect to accident pathways and safeguards considerations. Fusion has the theoretical potential for improvements of 1 to 2 additional orders of magnitude in short-term BHPs and 3 orders of magnitude and more in radwaste BHPs after 10 years if vanadium-titanium alloy can be used in place of stainless steel in the reactor structure. Other important unresolved questions are how much the inventory of tritium can be reduced by ingenious design, and what fraction of a fusion reactor's activation products …
Date: October 15, 1976
Creator: Holdren, J. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Micromachining of laser fusion target parts (open access)

Micromachining of laser fusion target parts

A 5W argon ion laser that operates CW is used. A broad band rear mirror is tuned to maximum power output. The beam is directed vertically by an adjustable turning prism, through a beam splitter, and then focused with an ordinary microscope objective lens onto the material to be cut. The beam splitter allows a telescope and television camera arranged to view the cutting through the same lens that is focusing the laser. The object to be cut is mounted on a micromanipulator which can move the object in two dimensions in the focal plane of the laser. (MOW)
Date: October 20, 1976
Creator: Weir, J. T.; Hendricks, C. D.; Weinstein, B. W. & Willenborg, D. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reactivity of coal chars with CO/sub 2/ at 1100-1600/sup 0/C. [8 refs] (open access)

Reactivity of coal chars with CO/sub 2/ at 1100-1600/sup 0/C. [8 refs]

The chemical reactivity of chars from various ranks of coal with CO/sub 2/ has been studied using the diffusion cell technique which has been previously developed at BNL. Chars from the following coals were used: Montana lignite, Illinois No. 6 bituminous, and Pennsylvania anthracite. The reactivity peaks at a certain temperature and the peaking temperature can be correlated to the ash-melting temperature; this temperature varies widely from the range of 1100 to 1200/sup 0/C to 1500 to 1600/sup 0/C for the three coals. Results on the leached lignite and on the surface area measurements were also obtained and are used to discuss the effect of ash on the reactivity of char.
Date: October 1, 1976
Creator: Yang, R T & Steinberg, M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of high-creep-strength molybdenum and tungsten alloys by the internal nitriding process (open access)

Development of high-creep-strength molybdenum and tungsten alloys by the internal nitriding process

Substantial increases in the high-temperature creep strength of Mo-Hf alloys can be obtained by internal nitriding. The creep resistance of internally nitrided Mo-1.86 wt % Hf is more than 100 times greater than that of other commercially available molybdenum-base alloys. The HfN precipitates appear to be stable over long times at temperatures near 1600 K. Internally nitrided Mo-Hf alloys appear to be good candidates for fabrication of components of space power systems where the ratio of high-temperature strength to weight is important. They are particularly good candidates for components that can be fabricated from the lower-strength unnitrided alloy and subsequently nitrided to provide high-temperature strength.
Date: October 2, 1986
Creator: Mitchell, J. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser fusion experiments at 2 TW. [Argus system; implosion of D-T filled glass microspheres] (open access)

Laser fusion experiments at 2 TW. [Argus system; implosion of D-T filled glass microspheres]

The Lawrence Livermore Laboratory Solid State Laser System, Arqus, has successfully performed laser implosion experiments at power levels exceeding 2 TW. D-T filled glass microspheres have been imploded to yield thermonuclear reaction products in excess of 5 x 10/sup 8/ per event. Neutron and ..cap alpha.. time-of-flight measurements indicate that D-T ion temperatures of approximately 5-6 keV and a density confinement time product (n tau) of approximately 1 x 10/sup 12/ were obtained in these experiments. Typically two 40J, 40 psec pulses of 1.06 ..mu..m light were focused on targets using 20 cm aperture f/1 lenses, producing intensities at the target in excess of 10/sup 16/ W/cm/sup 2/. An extensive array of diagnostics routinely monitored the laser performance and the laser target interaction process. Measurements of absorption and asymmetry in both the scattered light distribution and the ion blow off is evidence for non-classical absorption mechanisms and density scale heights of the order of 2 ..mu..m or less. The symmetry of the thermonuclear burn region is investigated by monitoring the ..cap alpha..-particle flux in several directions, and an experiment to image the thermonuclear burn region is in process. These experiments significantly extend our data base and our understanding of laser …
Date: October 1, 1976
Creator: Storm, E. K.; Ahlstrom, H. G. & Boyle, M. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization of fusion-driven fissioning systems (open access)

Optimization of fusion-driven fissioning systems

Potential advantages of hybrid or fusion/fission systems can be exploited in different ways. With selection of the /sup 238/U--/sup 239/Pu fuel cycle, we show that the system has greatest value as a power producer. Numerical examples of relative revenue from power production vs. /sup 239/Pu production are discussed, and possible plant characteristics described. The analysis tends to show that the hybrid may be more economically attractive than pure fusion systems.
Date: October 1, 1976
Creator: Chapin, D. L. & Mills, R. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aging degradation of cast stainless steel (open access)

Aging degradation of cast stainless steel

A program is being conducted to investigate the significance of in-service embrittlement of cast duplex stainless steels under light-water reactor operating conditions. Microstructures of cast materials subjected to long-term aging either in reactor service or in the laboratory have been characterized by TEM, SANS, and APFIM techniques. Two precipitate phases, i.e., the Cr-rich ..cap alpha..' and Ni- and Si-rich G phase, have been identified in the ferrite matrix of the aged steels. The results indicate that the low-temperature embrittlement is primarily caused by ..cap alpha..' precipitates which form by spinodal decomposition. The relative contribution of G phase to loss of toughness is now known. Microstructural data also indicate that weakening of ferrite/austenite phase boundary by carbide precipitates has a significant effect on the onset and extent of embrittlement of the high-carbon CF-8 and CF-8M grades of stainless steels, particularly after aging at 400 or 450/sup 0/C. Data from Charpy-impact, tensile, and J-R curve tests for several heats of cast stainless steel aged up to 10,000 h at 350, 400, and 450/sup 0/C are presented and correlated with the microstructural results. Thermal aging of the steels results in an increase in tensile strength and a decrease in impact energy, J/sub IC/, …
Date: October 1, 1986
Creator: Chopra, O. K. & Chung, H. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library