216-Day report for Tank 241-C-111, cores 58 and 59 (open access)

216-Day report for Tank 241-C-111, cores 58 and 59

Three core samples from tank C-111, and a field blank, were received by the 222-S laboratories. Cores 58, 59, and the field blank were analyzed in accordance with plans. A hot cell blank was analyzed at the direction of the hot cell chemist. No sample results exceeded the notification limits. Core 60 was not analyzed.
Date: December 5, 1994
Creator: Rice, A.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addendum 3 to CSAR 80-027, Use of calorimeter 109B for fissile material measurement (open access)

Addendum 3 to CSAR 80-027, Use of calorimeter 109B for fissile material measurement

This modification to the Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP) calorimeter system involves removing current calorimeter No. 3 from the water bath and replacing it with a calorimeter that can accommodate larger diameter items (an oversize can). The inside diameters of both the sample and the reference cells will be increased to 5.835 inches at the top opening and to 5.22 inches at the bottom, the 8 inch high measurement zone. This Addendum 3 to Criticality Safety Analysis Report 80-027 examines criticality safety during the use of the modified calorimeter (Calorimeter 109B) with enlarged cell tube diameters to assure that an adequate margin of subcriticality is maintained for all normal and contingency conditions.
Date: December 5, 1994
Creator: Chiao, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
AGS Machine Studies (open access)

AGS Machine Studies

This report talks about the AGS Machine Studies
Date: October 5, 1994
Creator: Wei, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ASPEN computer simulations of the mixed waste treatment project baseline flowsheet (open access)

ASPEN computer simulations of the mixed waste treatment project baseline flowsheet

The treatment and disposal of mixed waste (i.e., waste containing both hazardous and radioactive components) is a challenging waste- management problem of particular concern to Department of Energy (DOE) sites throughout the United States. Traditional technologies used for destroying hazardous wastes must be re- evaluated for their ability to handle mixed wastes, and, in some cases, new technologies must be developed. The Mixed Waste Treatment Project (MWTP), a collaborative effort between Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL), was established by the DOE`s Waste Operations Program (EM-30) to develop and analyze alternative mixed waste treatment approaches. One of the MWTP`s initiatives, and the objective of this study, was to develop flowsheets for prototype, integrated, mixed-waste treatment facilities that can serve as models for sites developing their own treatment strategies. Evaluation of these flowsheets is being facilitated through the use of computer modeling. The objectives of the flowsheet simulations are to compare process effectiveness and costs of alternative flowsheets and to determine if commercial process-simulation software could be used on the large, complex process of an integrated mixed waste processing facility. Flowsheet modeling is needed to evaluate many aspects of proposed flowsheet designs. A …
Date: July 5, 1994
Creator: Dietsche, L. J.; Upadhye, R. S.; Camp, D. W.; Pendergrass, J. A.; Borduin, L. C. & Thompson, T. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bolting sequence for attaching the container to the strong-back for 241SY101 (open access)

Bolting sequence for attaching the container to the strong-back for 241SY101

None
Date: October 5, 1994
Creator: Mackey, T. C. & Egger, J. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Borehole completion data package for well 199-N-81 (open access)

Borehole completion data package for well 199-N-81

Well 199-N-81 was drilled in 1993 as a RCRA groundwater monitoring for the 1324-N network. The well is completed at the top of the uppermost aquifer, in the Ringold Formation. This data package includes information on drilling, construction, development, and aquifer testing. Copies of forms, notes, and diagrams completed in the field comprise the bulk of this document. Few interpretations are included. Lithologic contacts were picked by the site geologist. An attempt was made to interpret aquifer test data.
Date: May 5, 1994
Creator: Hartman, M. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration of the radionuclide logging system germanium detector (open access)

Calibration of the radionuclide logging system germanium detector

High resolution passive gamma-ray logging, high resolution gamma-ray-emitting nuclides in areas surrounding underground waste disposal facilities on the US Department of Energy`s Hanford Site. Gamma-ray source concentrations are derived from log data by calculations that employ the calibration factors and correction functions described in this report. Calibration data were collected with a Radionuclide Logging System. Analyses of the calibration data established: (1) calibration factors for potassium, uranium, and thorium, and (2) a calibration function that permits assessments of cesium-137, cobalt-60, and other artificial nuclides not represented in the calibration models.
Date: December 5, 1994
Creator: Randall, R. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A charge distribution analysis instrument for catalysis and material science applications. Third quarterly technical progress report, April 1, 1994--June 30, 1994 (open access)

A charge distribution analysis instrument for catalysis and material science applications. Third quarterly technical progress report, April 1, 1994--June 30, 1994

Key component in the CDA instrument is the differential capacitive force sensor. The CDA instrument has four basic components: OEM analytical balance, flexure point and capacitor plates, gas confinement tower and high-voltage bias electrodes, and the furnace. Phyton is in position to purchase an OEM analytical balance; negotations are underway for obtaining the feedback control circuitry for the differential capacitive force sensor. Progress with the differential capacitive force sensor is reviewed.
Date: August 5, 1994
Creator: Freund, F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrosion fatigue of iron-chromium-nickel alloys: Fracture mechanics, microstructure and chemistry. Final technical report, June 1, 1988--November 30, 1993 (open access)

Corrosion fatigue of iron-chromium-nickel alloys: Fracture mechanics, microstructure and chemistry. Final technical report, June 1, 1988--November 30, 1993

A multi-disciplinary research program was undertaken to address certain fundamental issues relating to corrosion fatigue crack growth in structurally important alloys in aqueous solutions. Focus was placed on austenitic iron-chromium-nickel alloys.
Date: January 5, 1994
Creator: Wei, Robert P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CSER 94-014: Storage of metal-fuel loaded EBR-II casks in concrete vault on PFP grounds (open access)

CSER 94-014: Storage of metal-fuel loaded EBR-II casks in concrete vault on PFP grounds

A criticality safety evaluation is presented to permit EBR-2 spent fuel casks loaded with metallic fuel rods to be stored in an 8-ft diameter, cylindrical concrete vault inside the PFP security perimeter. The specific transfer of three casks with Pu alloy fuel from the Los Alamos Molten Plutonium Reactor Experiment from the burial grounds to the vault is thus covered. Up to seven casks may be emplaced in the casing with 30 inches center to center spacing. Criticality safety is assured by definitive packaging rules which keep the fissile medium dry and at a low effective volumetric density.
Date: December 5, 1994
Creator: Hess, A. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a coal quality expert. Technical progress report No. 17, April 1994--June 1994 (open access)

Development of a coal quality expert. Technical progress report No. 17, April 1994--June 1994

The work falls under DOE`s Clean Coal Technology Program category of `Advanced Coal Cleaning.` The 51-month project will provide the utility industry with a PC software program to evaluate the potential for coal cleaning, blending, and switching options to reduce emissions while producing electricity.
Date: October 5, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Emissions from energetic material waste during the Molten Salt Destruction process (open access)

Emissions from energetic material waste during the Molten Salt Destruction process

The Molten Salt Destruction (MSD) process is an alternative to open burn/open detonation for destroying energetic materials; MSD has inherently low gaseous emissions, and the salt bath can scrub both acidic gases and particulates. It was demonstrated that high explosives and a liquid propellant can be safely and completely destroyed using MSD. Gaseous emissions of NOx and CO are very low. Nitrate builds up in the salt bath when nitrate-rich materials are destroyed, but addition fuel reduces the nitrate to NO. A program has been begun to add catalytic materials to the bed to further reduce emissions; a small molten salt bath has been constructed for chemical kinetic studies.
Date: July 5, 1994
Creator: Watkins, B. E.; Upadhye, R. S.; Pruneda, C. O. & Brummond, W. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering work plan for design requirements document, Project W-058/028 (open access)

Engineering work plan for design requirements document, Project W-058/028

This work plan outlines the tasks necessary for developing the Design Requirements Document (DRD) for project W-058/028, Replacement of Cross-Site Transfer System. The DRD is a specification which bounds, at a high level, the requirements of a discrete system element of the Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) Program. This document defines the scope and schedule for the development and production of the Design Requirements, Document for Project W-058.
Date: January 5, 1994
Creator: Mendoza, D. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering work plan for tank 241-C-103 vapor phase characterization (ECN 613188). Revision 1 (open access)

Engineering work plan for tank 241-C-103 vapor phase characterization (ECN 613188). Revision 1

The tasks described by this work plan have been completed. The purpose of this revision it to document what actually occurred during the performance of this work plan. The scope was and is limited to phases 1 and 2 as described in the program plan, revision 1. Phases 1 and 2 include the tank 241-C-103 (C-103) vapor. For economic and as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA) reasons, we will limit our scope to characterize the C-103 vapor phase for the categories that could be expected to impact facility worker safety from a toxicological and flammability standpoint. In anticipation that a vapor treatment system may be required, categories necessary for design will also be included. It will be the intent of the C-103 vapor characterization program to: (1) identify the substances from the above list of categories that are applicable to the issues involving C-103, and (2) implement a phased plan which will develop the organic vapor phase characterization method and then characterize the organics and the other selected substances to the required quantitative certainty.
Date: October 5, 1994
Creator: Conrad, R. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Estimation of Fracture Toughness of Cast Stainless Steels During Thermal Aging in LWR Systems - Revison 1. (open access)

Estimation of Fracture Toughness of Cast Stainless Steels During Thermal Aging in LWR Systems - Revison 1.

This report presents a revision of the procedure and correlations presented earlier in NUREG/CR-4513, ANL-90/42 (June 1991) for predicting the change in mechanical properties of cast stainless steel components due to thermal aging during service in light water reactors at 280-330 C (535-625 F). The correlations presented in this report are based on an expanded data base and have been optimized with mechanical-property data on cast stainless steels aged up to {approx}58,000 h at 290-350 C (554-633 F). The correlations for estimating the change in tensile stress, including the Ramberg/Osgood parameters for strain hardening, are also described. The fracture toughness J-R curve, tensile stress, and Charpy-impact energy of aged cast stainless steels are estimated from known material information. Mechanical properties of a specific cast stainless steel are estimated from the extent and kinetics of thermal embrittlement. Embrittlement of cast stainless steels is characterized in terms of room-temperature Charpy-impact energy. The extent or degree of thermal embrittlement at 'saturation,' i.e., the minimum impact energy that can be achieved for a material after long-term aging, is determined from the chemical composition of the steel. Charpy-impact energy as a function of time and temperature of reactor service is estimated from the kinetics of …
Date: October 5, 1994
Creator: Chopra, O. K. & Technology, Energy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of HFIR vessel surveillance data and hydro-test conditions (open access)

Evaluation of HFIR vessel surveillance data and hydro-test conditions

None
Date: August 5, 1994
Creator: Cheverton, R. D. & Nanstad, R. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final report: In situ radio frequency heating demonstration (open access)

Final report: In situ radio frequency heating demonstration

A field demonstration of in situ radio frequency heating was performed at the Savannah River Site (SRS) as part of the US Department of Energy-Office of Technology Development`s Integrated Demonstration. The objective of the demonstration was to investigate the effectiveness of in situ radio frequency (RF) heating as an enhancement to vacuum extraction of residual solvents (primarily trichloroethylene and perchloroethylene) held in vadose zone clay deposits. Conventional soil vacuum extraction techniques are mass transfer limited because of the low permeabilities of the clays. By selectively heating the clays to temperatures at or above 100{degrees}C, the release or transport of the solvent vapors will be enhanced as a result of several factors including an increase in the contaminant vapor pressure and diffusivity and an increase in the effective permeability of the formation with the release of water vapor.
Date: January 5, 1994
Creator: Jarosch, T. R.; Beleski, R. J. & Faust, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The follow-up inspection of selected aspects of the Department of Energy`s administration of post retirement health benefits (open access)

The follow-up inspection of selected aspects of the Department of Energy`s administration of post retirement health benefits

In a September 1990 report entitled, ``General Management Inspection of the San Francisco Operations Office,`` we made recommendations to Departmental officials regarding the administration of M&O contractor post retirement health benefits. The majority of these recommendations were directed to the administration of benefits paid by one M&O contractor, the University of California. The purpose of this inspection was to determine what actions Departmental officials have taken in response to the recommendations made in our September 1990 report.
Date: May 5, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The future of finite element applications on massively parallel supercomputers (open access)

The future of finite element applications on massively parallel supercomputers

The current focus in large scale scientific computing is upon parallel supercomputers. While still relatively unproven, these machines are being slated for production-oriented, general purpose supercomputing applications. The promise, of course, is to use massively parallel computers to venture further into scientific realisms by performing computations with anywhere from 10{sup 6} to 10{sup 9} grid points thereby, in principle, obtaining a deeper understanding of physical processes. In approaching this brave new world of computing with finite element applications, many technical issues become apparent. This paper attempts to reveal some of the applications-oriented issues which are facing code developers and ultimately the users of engineering and scientific applications on parallel supercomputers, but which seem to be remaining unanswered by vendors, researchers and centralized computing facilities. At risk is the fundamental way in which analysis is performed in a production sense, and the insight into physical problems which results. while at first this treatise may seem to advocate traditional register-to-register vector supercomputers, the goal of this paper is simply an attempt to point out what is missing from the massively parallel computing picture not only for production finite element applications, but also for grand challenge problems. the limiting issues for the use …
Date: July 5, 1994
Creator: Christon, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geophysical investigation of 216-U-8 clay vitrified pipe transfer line, 200 West Area (open access)

Geophysical investigation of 216-U-8 clay vitrified pipe transfer line, 200 West Area

Two geophysical surveys were conducted over a vitrified clay pipeline (VCP) that was used to transfer liquid radioactive waste from the 224-U Building to the 216-U-8 and 216-U-12 cribs. The objectives of the surveys were to locate the VCP in the northern site, locate the bends in the VCP in the southern site, and locate possible utilities or pipelines at both sites. Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) was the method chosen for the surveys. Electromagnetic induction (EMI) was also used at the southern site to map the extent of a possible pipeline. It is very difficult to detect most VCPs with GPR, however, excavation boundaries for the pipeline are often discernible. The VCP was not identified in the GPR data at the northern site. Its anticipated depth was 10--12 ft. The VCP at the southern site appears to be much shallower. The data suggest it may be 5 ft or less below the surface in places. The edges of the excavation from N100 to N190 are between E120 and E135 and were quite distinct in the data. However, the excavation boundaries weren`t apparent north of N190, suggesting that the VCP bends to the north near N200. Several profiles were extended beyond N200. …
Date: December 5, 1994
Creator: Bergstrom, K. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Glossary of formal operations (open access)

Glossary of formal operations

The purpose of this document is to establish definitions for the terms used in the planning, development, and implementation of a formal operations program at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Date: January 5, 1994
Creator: Cort, G.; Donahue, S.; Frank, J.; Perkins, B. & Wrye, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The human DNA-activated protein kinase, DNA-PK: Substrate specificity (open access)

The human DNA-activated protein kinase, DNA-PK: Substrate specificity

Although much has been learned about the structure and function of p53 and the probable sequence of subsequent events that lead to cell cycle arrest, little is known about how DNA damage is detected and the nature of the signal that is generated by DNA damage. Circumstantial evidence suggests that protein kinases may be involved. In vitro, human DNA-PK phosphorylates a variety of nuclear DNA-binding, regulatory proteins including the tumor suppressor protein p53, the single-stranded DNA binding protein RPA, the heat shock protein hsp90, the large tumor antigen (TAg) of simian virus 40, a variety of transcription factors including Fos, Jun, serum response factor (SRF), Myc, Sp1, Oct-1, TFIID, E2F, the estrogen receptor, and the large subunit of RNA polymerase II (reviewed in Anderson, 1993; Jackson et al., 1993). However, for most of these proteins, the sites that are phosphorylated by DNA-PK are not known. To determine if the sites that were phosphorylated in vitro also were phosphorylated in vivo and if DNA-PK recognized a preferred protein sequence, the authors identified the sites phosphorylated by DNA-PK in several substrates by direct protein sequence analysis. Each phosphorylated serine or threonine is followed immediately by glutamine in the polypeptide chain; at no …
Date: November 5, 1994
Creator: Anderson, C.W.; Connelly, M.A.; Zhang, H.; Sipley, J.A.; Lees-Miller, S.P.; Lintott, L.G. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated formal operations plan (open access)

Integrated formal operations plan

The concept of formal operations (that is, a collection of business practices to assure effective, accountable operations) has vexed the Laboratory for many years. To date most attempts at developing such programs have been based upon rigid, compliance-based interpretations of a veritable mountain of Department of Energy (DOE) orders, directives, notices, and standards. These DOE dictates seldom take the broad view but focus on highly specialized programs isolated from the overall context of formal operations. The result is a confusing array of specific, and often contradictory, requirements that produce a patchwork of overlapping niche programs. This unnecessary duplication wastes precious resources, dramatically increases the complexity of our work processes, and communicates a sense of confusion to our customers and regulators. Coupled with the artificial divisions that have historically existed among the Laboratory`s formal operations organizations (quality assurance, configuration management, records management, training, etc.), this approach has produced layers of increasingly vague and complex formal operations plans, each of which interprets its parent and adds additional requirements of its own. Organizational gridlock ensues whenever an activity attempts to implement these bureaucratic monstrosities. The integrated formal operations plan presented is to establish a set of requirements that must be met by an …
Date: January 5, 1994
Creator: Cort, G.; Dearholt, W.; Donahue, S.; Frank, J.; Perkins, B.; Tyler, R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser plasma interactions in hohlraums (open access)

Laser plasma interactions in hohlraums

Lasers plasma instabilities are an important constraint in x-ray driven inertial confinement fusion. In hohlraums irradiated with 1.06 {mu}m light on the Shiva laser, plasma instabilities were extremely deleterious, driving the program to the use of shorter wavelength light. Excellent coupling has been achieved in hohlraums driven with 0.35 {mu}m light on the Nova laser. Considerable attention is being given to the scaling of this excellent coupling to the larger hohlraums for an ignition target. Various instability control mechanisms such as large plasma wave damping and laser beam incoherence are discussed, as well as scaling experiments to check the instability levels.
Date: October 5, 1994
Creator: Kruer, W.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library