States

10-MWe pilot-plant-receiver panel test requirements document solar thermal test facility (open access)

10-MWe pilot-plant-receiver panel test requirements document solar thermal test facility

Testing plans for a full-scale test receiver panel and supporting hardware which essentially duplicate both physically and functionally, the design planned for the Barstow Solar Pilot Plant are presented. Testing is to include operation during normal start and shutdown, intermittent cloud conditions, and emergencies to determine the panel's transient and steady state operating characteristics and performance under conditions equal to or exceeding those expected in the pilot plant. The effects of variations of input and output conditions on receiver operation are also to be investigated. Test hardware are described, including the pilot plant receiver, the test receiver assembly, receiver panel, flow control, electrical control and instrumentation, and structural assembly. Requirements for the Solar Thermal Test Facility for the tests are given. The safety of the system is briefly discussed, and procedures are described for assembly, installation, checkout, normal and abnormal operations, maintenance, removal and disposition. Also briefly discussed are quality assurance, contract responsibilities, and test documentation. (LEW)
Date: August 25, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
44-BWR WASTE PACKAGE LOADING CURVE EVALUATION (open access)

44-BWR WASTE PACKAGE LOADING CURVE EVALUATION

The objective of this calculation is to evaluate the required minimum burnup as a function of initial boiling water reactor (BWR) assembly enrichment that would permit loading of spent nuclear fuel into the 44 BWR waste package configuration as provided in Attachment IV. This calculation is an application of the methodology presented in ''Disposal Criticality Analysis Methodology Topical Report'' (YMP 2003). The scope of this calculation covers a range of enrichments from 0 through 5.0 weight percent (wt%) U-235, and a burnup range of 0 through 40 GWd/MTU. This activity supports the validation of the use of burnup credit for commercial spent nuclear fuel applications. The intended use of these results will be in establishing BWR waste package configuration loading specifications. Limitations of this evaluation are as follows: (1) The results are based on burnup credit for actinides and selected fission products as proposed in YMP (2003, Table 3-1) and referred to as the ''Principal Isotopes''. Any change to the isotope listing will have a direct impact on the results of this report. (2) The results of 100 percent of the current BWR projected waste stream being able to be disposed of in the 44-BWR waste package with Ni-Gd Alloy …
Date: August 25, 2004
Creator: Scaglione, J.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AN-A pit leak detection ANA-WT-LDSTA-331 acceptance test procedure (open access)

241-AN-A pit leak detection ANA-WT-LDSTA-331 acceptance test procedure

This document describes the method used to test design criteria for Safety Class, Intrinsically Safe leak detector system installed in 241-AN-A Valve Pit located at 200E Tank Farms. The purpose of this Procedure is to demonstrate that the pit leak detection relay cabinet and intrinsically safe probe circuit is fully operable.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: VANDYKE, D.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AN-A valve pit manifold valves and position indication acceptance test procedure (open access)

241-AN-A valve pit manifold valves and position indication acceptance test procedure

This document describes the method used to test design criteria for gear actuated ball valves installed in 241-AN-A Valve Pit located at 200E Tank Farms. The purpose of this procedure is to demonstrate the following: Equipment is properly installed, labeled, and documented on As-Built drawings; New Manifold Valves in the 241-AN-A Valve Pit are fully operable using the handwheel of the valve operators; New valve position indicators on the valve operators will show correct valve positions; New valve position switches will function properly; and New valve locking devices function properly.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: VANDYKE, D.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AN-B pit leak detection ANA-WT-LDSTA-231 acceptance test procedure (open access)

241-AN-B pit leak detection ANA-WT-LDSTA-231 acceptance test procedure

This document describes the method used to test design criteria for Safety Class, Intrinsically Safe leak detector system installed in 241-AN-B Valve Pit located at 200E Tank Farms. The purpose of this Procedure is to demonstrate that the pit leak detection relay cabinet and intrinsically safe probe circuit is fully operable.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: VANDYKE, D.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AN-B valve pit manifold valves and position indication acceptance test procedure (open access)

241-AN-B valve pit manifold valves and position indication acceptance test procedure

This document describes the method used to test design criteria for gear actuated ball valves installed in 241-AN-B Valve Pit located at 200E Tank Farms. The purpose of this procedure is to demonstrate the following: Equipment is properly installed, labeled, and documented on As-Built drawings; New Manifold Valves in the 241-AN-B Valve Pit are fully operable using the handwheel of the valve operators; New valve position indicators on the valve operators will show correct valve positions; New valve position switches will function properly; and New valve locking devices function properly.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: VANDYKE, D.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-U-701 new compressor building and instrument air piping analyses (open access)

241-U-701 new compressor building and instrument air piping analyses

Building anchorage analysis is performed to qualify the design of the new compressor building foundation given in the ECN ``241-U-701 New Compressor Building.`` Recommendations for some changes in the ECN are made accordingly. Calculations show that the 6-in.-slab is capable of supporting the pipe supports, and that the building foundation, air compressor and dryer anchorage, and electric rack are adequate structurally. Analysis also shows that the instrument air piping and pipe supports for the compressed air system meet the applicable code requirements and are acceptable. The building is for the U-Farm instrument air systems.
Date: August 25, 1994
Creator: Huang, F. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
242-A Campaign 99-1 process control plan (open access)

242-A Campaign 99-1 process control plan

242-A Evaporator 99-1 will process approximately one million gallons of waste from tank 102-AW in June 1999. The process control Plan provides a general description of activities, which will occur during 242-A Evaporator Campaign 99-1 and to document analyses conducted to demonstrate that 102-AW waste is acceptable for processing. Predict is a registered trademark of Risk Decisions England Corporation, United Kingdom.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: Le, E. Q.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
1997 Gordon Research Conference on Plant Cell Walls. Final progress report (open access)

1997 Gordon Research Conference on Plant Cell Walls. Final progress report

The Gordon Research Conference (GRC) on Plant Cell Walls was held at Tilton School, Tilton, New Hampshire, July 18-22, 1997. The conference was well attended with 106 participants. The attendees represented the spectrum of endeavor in this field coming from academia, industry, and government laboratories, both US and foreign scientists, senior researchers, young investigators, and students. In designing the formal speakers program, emphasis was placed on current unpublished research and discussion of the future target areas in this field. There was a conscious effort to stimulate lively discussion about the key issues in the field today. Time for formal presentations was limited in the interest of group discussions. In order that more scientists could communicate their most recent results, poster presentation time was scheduled. In addition to these formal interactions, free time was scheduled to allow informal discussions. Such discussions are fostering new collaborations and joint efforts in the field.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: Staehelin, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
1998 Gordon Research Conference on Mutagenesis. Final progress report. (open access)

1998 Gordon Research Conference on Mutagenesis. Final progress report.

This final progress report includes brief comments on the organization of the conference, the conference program, and a list of attendees.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: Wallace, Susan & Jiricny, Josef
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2002 Initial Assessments for B-BX-BY Field Investigation Report (FIR): Numerical Simulations (open access)

2002 Initial Assessments for B-BX-BY Field Investigation Report (FIR): Numerical Simulations

IIn support of CH2M HILL Hanford Group, Inc.'s (CHG) preparation of a Field Investigative Report (FIR) for the Hanford Site Single-Shell Tank (SST) Waste Management Area (WMA) B-BX-BY, a set of numerical simulations of flow and solute transport was executed to predict the performance of surface barriers for reducing long-term risks from potential groundwater contamination at the B-BX-BY WMA. This report documents the simulation of 14 cases involving two-dimensional cross sections through the B-BX-BY WMA. Two cross-sections were used for this analysis, one through the BX WMA from tanks BX-108 to BX-102, and another through the trench B-38 for simulating B trench discharges. The simulations were used to investigate the impact of surface barriers, water-line leaks, inventory placement, meteoric recharge and partitioning between the aqueous and sorbed phases. Three transported solutes were considered: uranium-238 (U-238), technetium-99 (Tc-99), and nitrate (NO3). For the BX tank simulations, results showed that simulations investigating water-line leaks demonstrated the highest peak concentrations. Interim barriers had a significant impact on peak concentrations in later times, but not in early times due to a high concentration zone of contaminants near the water table. Overall, simulation results for the BX WMA showed that only a small fraction of …
Date: August 25, 2002
Creator: Freedman, Vicky L.; Williams, Mark D.; Cole, C. R.; White, Mark D. & Bergeron, Marcel P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator Production Options for 99MO (open access)

Accelerator Production Options for 99MO

Shortages of {sup 99}Mo, the most commonly used diagnostic medical isotope, have caused great concern and have prompted numerous suggestions for alternate production methods. A wide variety of accelerator-based approaches have been suggested. In this paper we survey and compare the various accelerator-based approaches.
Date: August 25, 2010
Creator: Bertsche, Kirk
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test procedure for removal of CS1K circuit switcher block and trip schemes (open access)

Acceptance test procedure for removal of CS1K circuit switcher block and trip schemes

This supporting document provides a detailed process to test the functions of the circuit switcher, protective relays, alarms, SCADA and 125VDC control logic of 115kV and 13.8kV systems at B3S4 substation following the removal of trip and blocking schemes to Transformer No.1 Circuit Switcher B594.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: HACHE, J.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accuracy Limitations in Long Trace Profilometry (open access)

Accuracy Limitations in Long Trace Profilometry

As requirements for surface slope error quality of grazing incidence optics approach the 100 nanoradian level, it is necessary to improve the performance of the measuring instruments to achieve accurate and repeatable results at this level. We have identified a number of internal error sources in the Long Trace Profiler (LTP) that affect measurement quality at this level. The LTP is sensitive to phase shifts produced within the millimeter diameter of the pencil beam probe by optical path irregularities with scale lengths of a fraction of a millimeter. We examine the effects of mirror surface ''macroroughness'' and internal glass homogeneity on the accuracy of the LTP through experiment and theoretical modeling. We will place limits on the allowable surface ''macroroughness'' and glass homogeneity required to achieve accurate measurements in the nanoradian range.
Date: August 25, 2003
Creator: Takacs, P. Z. & Qian, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Activation Layer Stabilization of High Polarization Photocathodes in Sub-Optimal RF Gun Environments (open access)

Activation Layer Stabilization of High Polarization Photocathodes in Sub-Optimal RF Gun Environments

We have developed an activation procedure by which the reactivity to CO{sub 2}, a principal cause of yield decay for GaAs photocathodes, is greatly reduced. The use of a second alkali in the activation process is responsible for the increased immunity of the activated surface. The best immunity was obtained by using a combination of Cs and Li without any loss in near bandgap yield. Optimally activated photocathodes have nearly equal quantities of both alkalis.
Date: August 25, 2010
Creator: Mulhollan, Gregory & /SLAC /Saxed Surface Science, Austin, TX
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The added economic and environmental value of plug-in electric vehicles connected to commercial building microgrids (open access)

The added economic and environmental value of plug-in electric vehicles connected to commercial building microgrids

Connection of electric storage technologies to smartgrids or microgrids will have substantial implications for building energy systems. In addition to potentially supplying ancillary services directly to the traditional centralized grid (or macrogrid), local storage will enable demand response. As an economically attractive option, mobile storage devices such as plug-in electric vehicles (EVs) are in direct competition with conventional stationary sources and storage at the building. In general, it is assumed that they can improve the financial as well as environmental attractiveness of renewable and fossil based on-site generation (e.g. PV, fuel cells, or microturbines operating with or without combined heat and power). Also, mobile storage can directly contribute to tariff driven demand response in commercial buildings. In order to examine the impact of mobile storage on building energy costs and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, a microgrid/distributed-energy-resources (DER) adoption problem is formulated as a mixed-integer linear program with minimization of annual building energy costs applying CO2 taxes/CO2 pricing schemes. The problem is solved for a representative office building in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2020. By using employees' EVs for energy management, the office building can arbitrage its costs. But since the car battery lifetime is reduced, a business model …
Date: August 25, 2010
Creator: Stadler, Michael; Momber, Ilan; Megel, Olivier; Gomez, Tomás; Marnay, Chris; Beer, Sebastian et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The AdS/QCD Correspondence and Exclusive Processes (open access)

The AdS/QCD Correspondence and Exclusive Processes

The AdS/CFT correspondence between theories in AdS space and conformal field theories in physical space-time provides an analytic, semi-classical, color-confining model for strongly-coupled QCD. The soft-wall AdS/QCD model modified by a positive-sign dilaton metric leads to a remarkable one-parameter description of nonperturbative hadron dynamics at zero quark mass, including a zero-mass pion and a Regge spectrum of linear trajectories with the same slope in orbital angular momentum L and radial quantum number n for both mesons and baryons. One also predicts the form of the non-perturbative effective coupling {alpha}{sub s}{sup AdS}(q) and its {beta}-function which agrees with the effective coupling {alpha}{sub ga} extracted from the Bjorken sum rule. Light-front holography, which connects the fifth-dimensional coordinate of AdS space z to an invariant impact separation variable {zeta}, allows one to compute the analytic form of the frame-independent light-front wavefunctions, the fundamental entities which encode hadron properties as well as decay constants, form factors, deeply virtual Compton scattering, exclusive heavy hadron decays and other exclusive scattering amplitudes. One thus obtains a relativistic description of hadrons in QCD at the amplitude level with dimensional counting for hard exclusive reactions at high momentum transfer. As specific examples we discuss the behavior of the pion …
Date: August 25, 2010
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.; /SLAC /Southern Denmark U., CP3-Origins; de Teramond, Guy F.; U., /Costa Rica; Deur, Alexandre & Lab, /Jefferson
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Advanced Control System For Fine Coal Flotation (open access)

An Advanced Control System For Fine Coal Flotation

A model-based flotation control scheme is being implemented to achieve optimal performance in the handling and treatment of fine coal. The control scheme monitors flotation performance through on-line analysis of ash content. Then, based on the economic and metallurgical performance of the circuit, variables such as collector dosage, frother dosage, and pulp level are adjusted using model-based control algorithms to compensate for feed variations and other process disturbances. Recent developments in sensor technology are being applied for on-line determination of slurry ash content. During the ninth quarter of this project, Task 3 (Model Building and Computer Simulation) and Task 4 (Sensor Testing) were nearly completed, and Task 6 (Equipment Procurement and Installation) was initiated. Previously, data collected from the plant sampling campaign (Task 2) were used to construct a population balance model to describe the steady-state and dynamic behavior of the flotation circuit. The details of this model were presented in the Eighth Quarterly Technical Progress Report. During the past quarter, a flotation circuit simulator was designed and used to evaluate control strategies. As a result of this work, a model-based control strategy has been conceived which will allow manipulated variables to be adjusted in response to disturbances to achieve …
Date: August 25, 1998
Creator: Luttrell, G. H. & Adel, G. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Heavy-Ion Beam Images and Comparison to RetardingPotential Analyzer Measurements (open access)

Analysis of Heavy-Ion Beam Images and Comparison to RetardingPotential Analyzer Measurements

It has been predicted that world energy demand will soon put enormous pressure on the currently available energy sources. Fusion energy is a potential solution to this problem if it can be controlled and converted into electricity in an economically feasible manner. One type of potential fusion energy plant uses heavy-ion beam drivers for inertial fusion energy. As part of the High Current Experiment (HCX), we seek to understand the injection, transport and focusing of high-current ion beams, by investigating the interactions of background gas and electrons (which can deteriorate the beam quality) with the primary K{sup +} beam. We present here a method of analyzing the electrostatic potential distribution due to the beam space charge within the grounded conducting vacuum pipe. This method enables tracking of ions arising from the ionization of background gas atoms by the incident K{sup +} beam. The beam intensity distribution is obtained from images gathered using a scintillator placed in the beam path. These data are used to calculate the expelled ion energy distribution, which is then compared to data collected from a Retarding Potential Analyzer (RPA). The comparison of the image analysis with RPA measurements is in fair agreement, given model and experimental …
Date: August 25, 2005
Creator: Rosenberg, Beth E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Angle-dependent Ni2+ x-ray magnetic linear dichroism: Interfacialcoupling revisited (open access)

Angle-dependent Ni2+ x-ray magnetic linear dichroism: Interfacialcoupling revisited

Using x ray magnetic linear dichroism (XMLD) for magnetometry requires detailed knowledge of its dependence on the relative orientation of polarization, magnetic moments, and crystallographic axes. We show that Ni{sup 2+} L{sub 2,3} XMLD in cubic lattices has to be described as linear combination of two fundamental spectra - not one as previously assumed. The spectra are calculated using atomic multiplet theory and the angular dependence is derived from crystal field symmetry. Applying our results to Co/NiO(001) interfaces, we find perpendicular coupling between Ni and Co moments.
Date: August 25, 2007
Creator: Arenholz, Elke; van der Laan, Gerrit; Chopdekar, Rajesh V. & Suzuki, Yuri
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Angular Dependence of 3 Omega 0/2 Spectra from Laser-produced Plasmas (open access)

Angular Dependence of 3 Omega 0/2 Spectra from Laser-produced Plasmas

Scattered light at three-halves of the incident laser frequency from solid targets is observed at five different angles. When the incident laser intensity is low enough, rescattering of two plasmon decay (TPD) instability electron plasma waves by ion acoustic waves is not significant. In this regime, Thomson scattering measurements of the electron temperature and the plasma flow velocity allow quantitative comparison of the angular dependence of the spectrum to theory.
Date: August 25, 1999
Creator: Young, P.E.; Moody, J.D. & Rhizomes, W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ASC Supercomputers Predict Effects of Aging on Materials (open access)

ASC Supercomputers Predict Effects of Aging on Materials

In an extensive molecular dynamics (MD) study of shock compression of aluminum containing such microscopic defects as found in aged plutonium, LLNL scientists have demonstrated that ASC supercomputers live up to their promise as powerful tools to predict aging phenomena in the nuclear stockpile. Although these MD investigations are carried out on material samples containing only about 10 to 40 million atoms, and being not much bigger than a virus particle, they have shown that reliable materials properties and relationships between them can be extracted for density, temperature, pressure, and dynamic strength. This was proven by comparing their predictions with experimental data of the Hugoniot, with dynamic strength inferred from gas-gun experiments, and with the temperatures behind the shock front as calculated with hydro-codes. The effects of microscopic helium bubbles and of radiation-induced dislocation loops and voids on the equation of state were also determined and found to be small and in agreement with earlier theoretical predictions and recent diamond-anvil-cell experiments. However, these microscopic defects play an essential role in correctly predicting the dynamic strength for these nano-crystalline samples. These simulations also prove that the physics involved in shock compression experiments remains the same for macroscopic specimens used in gas-gun …
Date: August 25, 2005
Creator: Kubota, A; Reisman, D B & Wolfer, W G
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Astron Program final report (open access)

Astron Program final report

This report describes important experimental results obtained in the last two years of the Astron Program, an LLL controlled nuclear fusion program which terminated in 1973. Little theoretical work is included, but an extensive bibliography is given. (auth)
Date: August 25, 1975
Creator: Briggs, R. J.; Hester, R. E.; Porter, G. D.; Sherwood, W. A.; Spoerlein, R.; Stallard, B. W. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric Dispersal and Deposition of Tephra from a Potential Volcanic Eruption at Yucca Mountain (open access)

Atmospheric Dispersal and Deposition of Tephra from a Potential Volcanic Eruption at Yucca Mountain

The purpose of this model report is to provide documentation of the conceptual and mathematical model for atmospheric dispersion and subsequent depositions of ash on the land surfaces from a potential volcano eruptions at Yucca Mountain Nevada.
Date: August 25, 2005
Creator: Keating, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library