2011 Community Earth System Model (CESM) Tutorial, August 1-5, 2011 (open access)

2011 Community Earth System Model (CESM) Tutorial, August 1-5, 2011

In fiscal year 2011, the Community Earth System Model (CESM) tutorial was taught at NCAR from 1-5 August 2011. This project hosted 79 full participants (1 accepted participant from China couldn't get a visa) selected from 180 applications. The tutorial was advertised through emails to CESM mailing lists. NCAR staff and long-term visitors (who were not eligible to attend) were also invited to 'audit' the climate and practical lectures and to work on the practical sessions on their own. 15 NCAR staff and long-term visitors took advantage of this opportunity. The majority of the students were graduate students, but several post-docs, faculty, and other research scientists also attended. Additionally, many people are using the on-line lessons and practical sessions. As of August 18, 2011, 407 people had registered to access and use the tutorial from 33 countries all over the world, but a majority from US universities. In fiscal year 2011, the Climate and Global Dynamics Division Information Systems Group (CGD/ISG) built and operated a temporary computer laboratory in a meeting room. This project was made possible through funding from the National Science Foundation Directorate of Geosciences, and the Department of Energy Office of Science.
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Hurrell, James W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Combustion (open access)

Advanced Combustion

The activity reported in this presentation is to provide the mechanical and physical property information needed to allow rational design, development and/or choice of alloys, manufacturing approaches, and environmental exposure and component life models to enable oxy-fuel combustion boilers to operate at Ultra-Supercritical (up to 650{degrees}C & between 22-30 MPa) and/or Advanced Ultra-Supercritical conditions (760{degrees}C & 35 MPa).
Date: March 11, 2013
Creator: Holcomb, Gordon R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Simulation and Computing Fiscal Year 14 Implementation Plan, Rev. 0.5 (open access)

Advanced Simulation and Computing Fiscal Year 14 Implementation Plan, Rev. 0.5

None
Date: September 11, 2013
Creator: Meisner, R.; McCoy, M.; Archer, B. & Matzen, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis Of 2H-Evaporator Scale Wall [HTF-13-82] And Pot Bottom [HTF-13-77] Samples (open access)

Analysis Of 2H-Evaporator Scale Wall [HTF-13-82] And Pot Bottom [HTF-13-77] Samples

Savannah River Remediation (SRR) is planning to remove a buildup of sodium aluminosilicate scale from the 2H-evaporator pot by loading and soaking the pot with heated 1.5 M nitric acid solution. Sampling and analysis of the scale material has been performed so that uranium and plutonium isotopic analysis can be input into a Nuclear Criticality Safety Assessment (NCSA) for scale removal by chemical cleaning. Historically, since the operation of the Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF), silicon in the DWPF recycle stream combines with aluminum in the typical tank farm supernate to form sodium aluminosilicate scale mineral deposits in the 2H-evaporator pot and gravity drain line. The 2H-evaporator scale samples analyzed by Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) came from two different locations within the evaporator pot; the bottom cone sections of the 2H-evaporator pot [Sample HTF-13-77] and the wall 2H-evaporator [sample HTF-13-82]. X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD) confirmed that both the 2H-evaporator pot scale and the wall samples consist of nitrated cancrinite (a crystalline sodium aluminosilicate solid) and clarkeite (a uranium oxyhydroxide mineral). On ''as received'' basis, the bottom pot section scale sample contained an average of 2.59E+00 {+-} 1.40E-01 wt % total uranium with a U-235 enrichment of 6.12E-01 {+-} 1.48E-02 …
Date: September 11, 2013
Creator: Oji, L. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Vernier Scans during RHIC Run-13 (open access)

Analysis of Vernier Scans during RHIC Run-13

N/A
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Drees, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Climate Research Facility Operations Quarterly Report October 1–December 31, 2012 (open access)

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Climate Research Facility Operations Quarterly Report October 1–December 31, 2012

Individual datastreams from instrumentation at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Climate Research Facility fixed and mobile research sites are collected and routed to the Data Management Facility (DMF) for processing in near-real-time. Instrument and processed data are then delivered approximately daily to the ARM Data Archive, where they are made freely available to the research community. For each instrument, we calculate the ratio of the actual number of processed data records received daily at the Data Archive to the expected number of data records. The results are tabulated by (1) individual datastream, site, and month for the current year and (2) site and fiscal year dating back to 1998.
Date: January 11, 2013
Creator: Voyles, JW
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
B \to K(*)l l- from B-factories and Tevatron (open access)

B \to K(*)l l- from B-factories and Tevatron

None
Date: June 11, 2013
Creator: Eigen, Gerald
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam-based alignment in RHIC (open access)

Beam-based alignment in RHIC

N/A
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Beebe-Wang, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Biofuels Revolution: Understanding the Social, Cultural and Economic Impacts of Biofuels Development on Rural Communities (open access)

The Biofuels Revolution: Understanding the Social, Cultural and Economic Impacts of Biofuels Development on Rural Communities

The aim of this research was an in-depth analysis of the impacts of biofuels industry and ethanol plants on six rural communities in the Midwestern states of Kansas and Iowa. The goal was to provide a better understanding of the social, cultural, and economic implications of biofuels development, and to contribute to more informed policy development regarding bioenergy.Specific project objectives were: 1. To understand how the growth of biofuel production has affected and will affect Midwestern farmers and rural communities in terms of economic, demographic, and socio-cultural impacts; 2. To determine how state agencies, groundwater management districts, local governments and policy makers evaluate or manage bioenergy development in relation to competing demands for economic growth, diminishing water resources, and social considerations; 3. To determine the factors that influence the water management practices of agricultural producers in Kansas and Iowa (e.g. geographic setting, water management institutions, competing water-use demands as well as producers’ attitudes, beliefs, and values) and how these influences relate to bioenergy feedstock production and biofuel processing; 4. To determine the relative importance of social-cultural, environmental and/or economic factors in the promotion of biofuels development and expansion in rural communities; The research objectives were met through the completion of …
Date: February 11, 2013
Creator: Selfa, Dr. Theresa L.; Goe, Dr. Richard; Kulcsar, Dr. Laszlo; Middendorf, Dr. Gerad & Bain, Dr. Carmen
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbonate solutions for carbon capture: A summary (open access)

Carbonate solutions for carbon capture: A summary

None
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Stolaroff, J K
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Cementitious Barriers Partnership (CBP) Software Toolbox Capabilities In Assessing The Degradation Of Cementitious Barriers (open access)

The Cementitious Barriers Partnership (CBP) Software Toolbox Capabilities In Assessing The Degradation Of Cementitious Barriers

The Cementitious Barriers Partnership (CBP) Project is a multi-disciplinary, multi-institutional collaboration supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (US DOE) Office of Tank Waste and Nuclear Materials Management. The CBP program has developed a set of integrated tools (based on state-of-the-art models and leaching test methods) that help improve understanding and predictions of the long-term structural, hydraulic and chemical performance of cementitious barriers used in nuclear applications. Tools selected for and developed under this program have been used to evaluate and predict the behavior of cementitious barriers used in near-surface engineered waste disposal systems for periods of performance up to 100 years and longer for operating facilities and longer than 1000 years for waste disposal. The CBP Software Toolbox has produced tangible benefits to the DOE Performance Assessment (PA) community. A review of prior DOE PAs has provided a list of potential opportunities for improving cementitious barrier performance predictions through the use of the CBP software tools. These opportunities include: 1) impact of atmospheric exposure to concrete and grout before closure, such as accelerated slag and Tc-99 oxidation, 2) prediction of changes in Kd/mobility as a function of time that result from changing pH and redox conditions, 3) concrete degradation …
Date: January 11, 2013
Creator: Flach, G. P.; Burns, H. H.; Langton, C.; Smith, F. G., III; Brown, K. G.; Kosson, D. S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of a megapixel CMOS charge dump and read camera (open access)

Characterization of a megapixel CMOS charge dump and read camera

None
Date: September 11, 2013
Creator: Kimbrough, J R; Bell, P M; Datte, P S; Thao, M S; de Dios, E & Peters, A S
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of Technetium Speciation in Cast Stone (open access)

Characterization of Technetium Speciation in Cast Stone

This report describes the results from laboratory tests performed at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) EM-31 Support Program (EMSP) subtask, “Production and Long-Term Performance of Low Temperature Waste Forms” to provide additional information on technetium (Tc) speciation characterization in the Cast Stone waste form. To support the use of Cast Stone as an alternative to vitrification for solidifying low-activity waste (LAW) and as the current baseline waste form for secondary waste streams at the Hanford Site, additional understanding of Tc speciation in Cast Stone is needed to predict the long-term Tc leachability from Cast Stone and to meet the regulatory disposal-facility performance requirements for the Integrated Disposal Facility (IDF). Characterizations of the Tc speciation within the Cast Stone after leaching under various conditions provide insights into how the Tc is retained and released. The data generated by the laboratory tests described in this report provide both empirical and more scientific information to increase our understanding of Tc speciation in Cast Stone and its release mechanism under relevant leaching processes for the purpose of filling data gaps and to support the long-term risk and performance assessments of Cast Stone in the IDF at the …
Date: November 11, 2013
Creator: Um, Wooyong; Jung, Hun Bok; Wang, Guohui; Westsik, Joseph H. & Peterson, Reid A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coherent Radiation Spectroscopy of Few-Femtosecond Electron Bunches Using a Middle-Infrared Prism Spectrometer (open access)

Coherent Radiation Spectroscopy of Few-Femtosecond Electron Bunches Using a Middle-Infrared Prism Spectrometer

None
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Maxwell, T. J.; Beherens, C.; Ding, Y.; Fisher, A. S.; Frisch, J.; Huang, Z. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commercial Building Energy Asset Score System: Program Overview and Technical Protocol (Version 1.0) (open access)

Commercial Building Energy Asset Score System: Program Overview and Technical Protocol (Version 1.0)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is developing a national voluntary energy asset score system that includes an energy asset score tool to help building owners evaluate their buildings with respect to the score system. The goal of the energy asset score system is to facilitate cost-effective investment in energy efficiency improvements of commercial buildings. The system will allow building owners and managers to compare their building infrastructure against peers and track building upgrade progress over time. The system can also help other building stakeholders (e.g., building operators, tenants, financiers, and appraisers) understand the relative efficiency of different buildings in a way that is independent from their operations and occupancy. This report outlines the technical protocol used to generate the energy asset score, explains the scoring methodology, and provides additional details regarding the energy asset score tool. This report also describes alternative methods that were considered prior to developing the current approach. Finally, this report describes a few features of the program where alternative approaches are still under evaluation.
Date: January 11, 2013
Creator: Wang, Na & Gorrissen, Willy J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Complementarity and Searches for Dark Matter in the pMSSM (open access)

Complementarity and Searches for Dark Matter in the pMSSM

None
Date: June 11, 2013
Creator: Cahill-Rowley, M.; Cotta, R.; Drlica-Wagner, A.; Funk, S.; Hewett, J.; Ismail, A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Component Slope Linear Model for Calculating Intensive Partial Molar Properties: Application to Waste Glasses (open access)

The Component Slope Linear Model for Calculating Intensive Partial Molar Properties: Application to Waste Glasses

Partial molar properties are the changes occurring when the fraction of one component is varied while the fractions of all other component mole fractions change proportionally. They have many practical and theoretical applications in chemical thermodynamics. Partial molar properties of chemical mixtures are difficult to measure because the component mole fractions must sum to one, so a change in fraction of one component must be offset with a change in one or more other components. Given that more than one component fraction is changing at a time, it is difficult to assign a change in measured response to a change in a single component. In this study, the Component Slope Linear Model (CSLM), a model previously published in the statistics literature, is shown to have coefficients that correspond to the intensive partial molar properties. If a measured property is plotted against the mole fraction of a component while keeping the proportions of all other components constant, the slope at any given point on a graph of this curve is the partial molar property for that constituent. Actually plotting this graph has been used to determine partial molar properties for many years. The CSLM directly includes this slope in a model …
Date: January 11, 2013
Creator: Reynolds, Jacob G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The component slope linear model for calculating intensive partial molar properties /application to waste glasses and aluminate solutions (open access)

The component slope linear model for calculating intensive partial molar properties /application to waste glasses and aluminate solutions

Partial molar properties are the changes occurring when the fraction of one component is varied while the fractions of all other component mole fractions change proportionally. They have many practical and theoretical applications in chemical thermodynamics. Partial molar properties of chemical mixtures are difficult to measure because the component mole fractions must sum to one, so a change in fraction of one component must be offset with a change in one or more other components. Given that more than one component fraction is changing at a time, it is difficult to assign a change in measured response to a change in a single component. In this study, the Component Slope Linear Model (CSLM), a model previously published in the statistics literature, is shown to have coefficients that correspond to the intensive partial molar properties. If a measured property is plotted against the mole fraction of a component while keeping the proportions of all other components constant, the slope at any given point on a graph of this curve is the partial molar property for that constituent. Actually plotting this graph has been used to determine partial molar properties for many years. The CSLM directly includes this slope in a model …
Date: January 11, 2013
Creator: Reynolds, Jacob G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Constraining Jet Production Scenarios by Studies of Narrow-Line-Radio-Galaxies (open access)

Constraining Jet Production Scenarios by Studies of Narrow-Line-Radio-Galaxies

None
Date: February 11, 2013
Creator: Sikora, Marek; Stasinska, Grazyna; Koziel-Wierzbowska, Dorota; Madejski, Greg M. & Asari, Natalia V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data Reorganization in Memory: A Data Centric Perspective (open access)

Data Reorganization in Memory: A Data Centric Perspective

None
Date: October 11, 2013
Creator: Lloyd, G. S.; Pearce, R. & Gokhale, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Degradation of dome cutting minerals in Hanford waste (open access)

Degradation of dome cutting minerals in Hanford waste

At the Hanford Tank Farms, recent changes in retrieval technology require cutting new risers in several single-shell tanks. The Hanford Tank Farm Operator is using water jet technology with abrasive silicate minerals such as garnet or olivine to cut through the concrete and rebar dome. The abrasiveness of these minerals, which become part of the high-level waste stream, may enhance the erosion of waste processing equipment. However, garnet and olivine are not thermodynamically stable in Hanford waste, slowly degrading over time. How likely these materials are to dissolve completely in the waste before the waste is processed in the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant can be evaluated using theoretical analysis for olivine and collected direct experimental evidence for garnet. Based on an extensive literature study, a large number of primary silicates decompose into sodalite and cancrinite when exposed to Hanford waste. Given sufficient time, the sodalite also degrades into cancrinite. Even though cancrinite has not been directly added to any Hanford tanks during process times, it is the most common silicate observed in current Hanford waste. By analogy, olivine and garnet are expected to ultimately also decompose into cancrinite. Garnet used in a concrete cutting demonstration was immersed in a …
Date: January 11, 2013
Creator: Reynolds, Jacob G.; Huber, Heinz J. & Cooke, Gary A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Demonstrating Reliable High Level Waste Slurry Sampling Techniques to Support Hanford Waste Processing - 14194 (open access)

Demonstrating Reliable High Level Waste Slurry Sampling Techniques to Support Hanford Waste Processing - 14194

The Hanford Tank Operations Contractor (TOC) and the Hanford Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant (WTP) contractor are both engaged in demonstrating mixing, sampling, and transfer system capability using simulated Hanford High-Level Waste (HL W) formulations. This work represents one of the remaining technical issues with the high-level waste treatment mission at Hanford. The TOC must demonstrate the ability to adequately mix and sample high-level waste feed to meet the WTP Waste Acceptance Criteria and Data Quality Objectives. The sampling method employed must support both TOC and WTP requirements. To facilitate information transfer between the two facilities the mixing and sampling demonstrations are led by the One System Integrated Project Team. The One System team, Waste Feed Delivery Mixing and Sampling Program, has developed a full scale sampling loop to demonstrate sampler capability. This paper discusses the full scale sampling loops ability to meet precision and accuracy requirements, including lessons learned during testing. Results of the testing showed that the Isolok(R) sampler chosen for implementation provides precise, repeatable results. The Isolok(R) sampler accuracy as tested did not meet test success criteria. Review of test data and the test platform following testing by a sampling expert identified several issues regarding the sampler …
Date: November 11, 2013
Creator: Kelly, Steven E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Department of Energy DE-FG02-05ER25686 Early Career Principal Investigator Award Final Report (open access)

Department of Energy DE-FG02-05ER25686 Early Career Principal Investigator Award Final Report

This project is researching FAST, a methodology to build very fast, cycleaccurate full system computer simulators and building the first set of such simulators and the first set of tools to help construct those simulators. The methodology relies on a functional model that is a fast, full-system but not cycle-accurate simulator coupled with a timing model that is models the micro-architectural structure and arbitration of a computer system, but not its functionality. The way FAST simulators differ from other simulators partitioned in the same way is that the interface between the functional and timing model is optimized to minimize the need for round-trip communication. The optimized communication enables FAST timing models to be implemented in an FPGA and the functional model in software while still achieving extremely high performance. Our general strategy is to design a methodology and then prototype an example using that methodology to ensure the methodology is sound before committing to it. This strategy ensures that the selected methodology has been tested and provides an early example of the output of that methodology.
Date: May 11, 2013
Creator: Derek, Chiou
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Atomic Data Pertinent to the Fusion Energy Program (open access)

Determination of Atomic Data Pertinent to the Fusion Energy Program

We summarize progress that has been made on the determination of atomic data pertinent to the fusion energy program. Work is reported on the identification of spectral lines of impurity ions, spectroscopic data assessment and compilations, expansion and upgrade of the NIST atomic databases, collision and spectroscopy experiments with highly charged ions on EBIT, and atomic structure calculations and modeling of plasma spectra.
Date: June 11, 2013
Creator: Reader, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library