Electrical aspects of rainout (open access)

Electrical aspects of rainout

Rainout commonly denotes the aggregate of phenomena associated with precipitation scavenging of radioactivity from a cloud of nuclear debris that is within a natural rain cloud. (In contrast, the term, washout, is applicable when the nuclear cloud is below the rain cloud and the term, fallout, commonly denotes the direct gravitational settling of contaminated solid material from a nuclear cloud.) Nuclear debris aerosols may be scavenged within natural clouds by a variety of different physical processes which may involve diffusion, convection, impaction, nucleation, phoresis, turbulence, and/or electricity among others. Processes which involve electrical aspects are scrutinized for their susceptibility to the intimate presence of the radioactive-cloud environment. This particular choice of electrical processes is not accidental. Nearly all of the listed processes were examined earlier by Williams. His rough estimates suggested that electrical effects, and to a lesser extent turbulence, could enhance the scavenging of those submicron aerosols which reside in the size-range that bridges the minimum in the scavenging rate coefficient which is commonly called the Greenfield gap. This minimum in the scavenging-rate coefficient is created by the simultaneous reduction of scavenging via diffusion and the reduction of scavenging via inertial impaction. However, Williams omitted the specific influence of …
Date: November 23, 1981
Creator: Rosenkilde, C.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of multi-frequency ECRH (open access)

Simulation of multi-frequency ECRH

We use a test particle simulation code to investigate electron cyclotron heating in a magnetic mirror well. A comparison is made between heating with one frequency and heating with two closely spaced frequencies. The code follows electron orbits in the presence of one or two monochromatic ECRH waves using guiding center equations and an equation for the electron gyrophase. Coulomb collisions with electrons and ions are simulated as a Monte Carlo scattering process. We find for the parameters of SM-1 that at the fundamental resonance the heating rate, or velocity rf diffusion coefficient, begins to decrease significantly from the quasilinear value for epsilon/sub e/ greater than or equal to 10 keV due to superadiabatic effects. As suggested by Howard et al., using multiple frequencies pushes the superadiabatic boundary to higher energies. For a given energy, the optimum frequency separations for two frequencies are those which cause the axial bounce resonances to interlace; i.e., odd multiples of the bounce frequency, ..omega../sub b/. This interlacing increases the chance of resonance overlap and thus stochasticity. If the frequency difference is equal to an even multiple of ..omega../sub b/, the diffusion coefficient returns to near its one frequency value. More generally, for more than …
Date: November 23, 1981
Creator: Rognlien, T.D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Manufacture and evaluation of Nb/sub 3/Sn conductors fabricated by the MJR method (open access)

Manufacture and evaluation of Nb/sub 3/Sn conductors fabricated by the MJR method

The bronze matrix/niobium filament process has become established as a commercially viable method for producing multifilamentary Nb/sub 3/Sn superconductors. This paper describes a new method, the Modified Jelly-Roll (MJR) approach, which can produce a structure similar to that in a conventionally fabricated multifilamentary Nb/sub 3/Sn conductor. This approach utilizes alternate sheets of niobium expanded metal and bronze, which are rolled into a jelly-roll configuration and then extruded. During extrusion and subsequent drawing, the junctures in the niobium are elongated and the material develops a filamentary structure. This method may offer significant advantages in terms of reduced fabrication time and cost over the conventional approach. Results of a manufacturing development program will be presented in which two lengths of conductor were made to High-Field Test Facility conductor specifications. In addition, critical current and transition temperature measurements of the sub-elements used to construct the HFTF-type lengths will be reported.
Date: November 23, 1982
Creator: McDonald, W. K.; Curtis, C. W.; Scanlan, R. M.; Larbalestier, D. C.; Marken, K. & Smathers, D. B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nondestructive Assay of Uranium Enrichment with Gamma Rays (open access)

Nondestructive Assay of Uranium Enrichment with Gamma Rays

An instrument has been developed and tested for nondestructive assay of 235U enrichment of uranium oxide powder contained in sealed 1-gallon cans. A theoretical correlation of enrichment vs. count rate agrees well with the calibration measurements and provides guidelines for applicability. A microcomputer simplifies operator requirements and provides on-line enrichment results.
Date: November 23, 1982
Creator: Winn, Willard G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator Physics Project Review On The November 23, 1983 Meeting (open access)

Accelerator Physics Project Review On The November 23, 1983 Meeting

This report is about the Accelerator Physics Project Review On The November 23, 1983 Meeting
Date: November 23, 1983
Creator: Ruggiero, Alessandro G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of the plasma current sensor diagnostic for MFTF-B (open access)

Design of the plasma current sensor diagnostic for MFTF-B

The Plasma Current Sensor (PCS) diagnostic includes large diamagnetic loops (DL) that fully encircle the plasma as well as small multi-turn pickup coils (PCs) located between the plasma and the superconducting magnets. Both types of sensors respond to changing magnetic flux linkages caused by plasma currents and are used to measure plasma diamagnetism, from which estimates of temperature and density can be made. The DLs are used in the central cell and Axicell regions, while the PCs are used in the Yin-yang regions where DLs are impractical. Other PCs are used in the central cell to detect axial plasma currents, to help tune trim coils in the transition cell and confirm theoretical estimates of radial diffusion limits. This paper describes the PCS diagnostic and presents the detailed mechanical and electrical designs.
Date: November 23, 1983
Creator: Goerz, D. A.; House, P. A. & Wells, C. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimized baffle and aperture placement in neutral beamlines (open access)

Optimized baffle and aperture placement in neutral beamlines

Most neutral beamlines contain an iron-core ion-bending magnet that requires shielding between the end of the neutralizer and this magnet. This shielding allows the gas pressure to drop prior to the beam entering the magnet and therefore reduces beam losses in this drift region. We have found that the beam losses can be reduced even further by eliminating the iron-core magnet and the magnetic shielding altogether. The required bending field can be supplied by current coils without the iron poles. In addition, placement of the baffles and apertures can affect the cold gas entering the plasma region and the losses in the neutral beam due to re-ionization. In our study we varied the placement of the baffles, which determine the amount of pumping in each chamber, and the apertures, which determine the beam loss. Our results indicate that a baffle/aperture configuration can be set for either minimum cold gas into the plasma region or minimum beam losses, but not both.
Date: November 23, 1983
Creator: Stone, R.; Duffy, T. & Vetrovec, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Organization and performance of the neutral beam system for the Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) (open access)

Organization and performance of the neutral beam system for the Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U)

The Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) uses 24 neutral-beam injectors to heat and fuel the experimental plasmas. This system is unique because TMX-U operates four times more injectors than any other fusion experiment. These injectors deliver an average of 50 A (accel) at 17 keV for 75 ms. Source conditioning time has been reduced to approximately four days for the entire system after extended machine air cycles. TMX-U is also unique because it has 35 usable injector assemblies for the 24 power systems. This quantity of injectors makes possible the development of new hardware and injector modifications, and the reconditioning of damaged sources without affecting machine operation. Efficient operation of a system of this size requires coordinated interaction between the injector service groups and the physics organization. We describe the current state of TMX-U performance and the aspects of group interaction essential to a project of this size.
Date: November 23, 1983
Creator: Kane, R. J.; Hibbs, S. M.; Kerr, R. G. & Poulsen, P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RHIC Magnetic Design Study (open access)

RHIC Magnetic Design Study

None
Date: November 23, 1983
Creator: H., Hahn
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trim coils and magnet alignment in MFTF-B (open access)

Trim coils and magnet alignment in MFTF-B

Performance of the MFTF-B tandem mirror reactor is critically dependent upon precise alignment of the superconducting magnets in the transition region. Given the size and nature of these magnets, mechanical alignment under operating conditions to the tolerances required is an impossible task, as placement must anticipate deflections due to vacuum conditions, cooling to cryogenic temperatures, and magnetic forces. A cost-effective solution to the alignment problem is presented here. In each transition region, a set of eight trimming magnets capable of introducing dipole- and quadrupole-field components allows the field curvatures to be finely tuned to offset the effects of mechanical alignment errors. Trimming current values for correcting representative single- and multiple-coil misalignments, as well as an analytic method for determining them are given. Finally, design considerations that will minimize the need for trim coils in future tandem mirror devices are suggested.
Date: November 23, 1983
Creator: Yamaguchi, G. T. & Baldwin, D. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Observations on LEP with a view to SSC (open access)

Observations on LEP with a view to SSC

From 24-29 October 1984 a visit was made to the LEP project at CERN with a view to extracting from the LEP planning and experience what might be useful in planning an SSC. With a circumference of 26.7 km, in a reasonably densely-populated area outside the boundaries of the CERN site, LEP already faces most of the problems of environment, public relations, maintenance and operation that will be faced by an SSC project. Information is presented under the headings of: (1) radiation protection; (2) heating, ventilation, and airconditioning; (3) electrical power distribution; (4) LEP experiments/UA1, UA2; (5) civil; (6) infrastructure installation; (7) survey; (8) safety; and (9) LEP controls. Each report lists the CERN individuals who generously provided their insights and help.
Date: November 23, 1984
Creator: Toohig, T.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plastic Finite Element Analysis of D0 Toroid Iron Welds (open access)

Plastic Finite Element Analysis of D0 Toroid Iron Welds

The assembly of the DO toroid iron involves the use of large groove welds to connect massive blocks of steel. These welds are very heavily constrained, and large thermal strains develop which have produced large cracks in the base metal near the weld. The effort to solve these problems has involved investigations of weld geometry, weld preparation, and the metallurgy of both the base metal and the welding rod. The purpose of this analysis was to compare the effects of two welding rods with markedly different yield strengths and post-yieding behaviour on the plastic strains developed in the base metal near the weld.
Date: November 23, 1987
Creator: Wands, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library