D-0 South End Cap Calorimeter Cold Test Results (open access)

D-0 South End Cap Calorimeter Cold Test Results

The South endcap calorimeter vessel was moved into Lab A on Sept. 18, 1990. A cooldown of the pressure vessel with liquid nitrogen was performed on Sept. 26 to check the vessel's integrity. With the pressure vessel cold, the insulating vacuum was monitored for leaks. Through out the testing, the insulating vacuum remained good and the vessel passed the test. The cold test was carried out per the procedures of D-Zero engineering note 3740.220-EN-250. The test was very similar to the cold test performed on the Central Calorimeter in October of 1987. The test of the ECS was performed in the same manner using the same equipment as the ECN cold test. Reference D-Zero engineering notes 3740.210-EN-122, 3740.000-EN-I07, and 3740.210-EN-II0 for information about the CC cold test. Reference EN-260 for the results of the ECN cold test. The insulating vacuum space was pumped on while equipment was being connected to the pressure vessel. Two hours after starting to pump with the blower the vacuum space pressure was at about 40 microns. The pumping continued overnight (another 16 hours). In the morning the pressure was 11.5 microns. A rate of rise test was performed. With the pump valved off, the pressure …
Date: November 26, 1990
Creator: Rucinski, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
234-5 Building design philosophy (open access)

234-5 Building design philosophy

This report presents the building and design philosophy of Building 234-5 at the Hanford site.
Date: November 26, 1947
Creator: Work, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
300 Area Uranium Leach and Adsorption Project (open access)

300 Area Uranium Leach and Adsorption Project

The objective of this study was to measure the leaching and adsorption characteristics of uranium in six near-surface sediment samples collected from the 300 Area of the Hanford Site. Scanning electron micrographs of the samples showed that the uranium contamination in the sediments is most likely present as co-precipitates and/or discrete uranium particles. Molecular probe techniques also confirm the presence of crystalline discrete uranium bearing phases. In all cases, the uranium is present as oxidized uranium (uranyl [U(VI)]). Results from the column leach tests showed that uranium leaching did not follow a constant solubility paradigm. Four of the five contaminated sediments showed a large near instantaneous release of a few percent of the total uranium followed by a slower continual release. Steady-state uranium leachate concentrations were never measured and leaching characteristics and trends were not consistent among the samples. Dissolution kinetics were slow, and the measured leach curves most likely represent a slow kinetically controlled desorption or dissolution paradigm. Batch adsorption experiments were performed to investigate the effect of pH and uranium and carbonate solution concentrations on uranium adsorption onto the uncontaminated sediment. Uranium adsorption Kd values ranged from 0 to > 100 ml/g depending on which solution parameter was …
Date: November 26, 2002
Creator: Serne, R. Jeffrey; Brown, Christopher F.; Schaef, Herbert T.; Pierce, Eric M.; Lindberg, Michael J.; Wang, Zheming et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acclerator R&D for a Linear Collider (open access)

Acclerator R&D for a Linear Collider

The goal of this project was to perform simulations of beam transport in linear colliders, with an emphasis on emittance dilution, spin polarization transport, and development and testing of beam based tuning algorithms. Our simulations are based on an existing object-oriented particle-tracking library, Bmad. To facilitate the efficient development of simulations, an accelerator design and analysis program based on Bmad has been developed called Tao (Tool for Accelerator Optics). The three beam-based alignment algorithms, Dispersion Free Steering, Ballistic Alignment (BA), and the Kubo Method have been implemented in Tao. We have studied the effects of magnet misalignments, BPM resolution, beam jitter, stray fields, BPM and steering magnet failure and the effects of various cavity shape wakefields. A parametric study has been conducted in the presence of the above types of errors for all three alignment algorithms. We find that BPM resolution has only modest impact on the effectiveness of beam based alignment. The DFS correction algorithm was found to be very robust in situations where there were BPM and/or steering magnet failures. The wakefields in the main linac are very weak and cause negligible emittance growth. Spin tracking was extended to study all accelerator components between the damping ring and …
Date: November 26, 2008
Creator: Rubin, D.L.; Dugan, G.; Gibbons, L.; Palmer, M.; Patterson, R.; Sagan, D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An advanced control system for fine coal flotation. Final technical progress report, October 1, 1995--June 30, 1996 (open access)

An advanced control system for fine coal flotation. Final technical progress report, October 1, 1995--June 30, 1996

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 reagent dosage, air addition rate, pulp density and pulp level are adjusted using model-based control algorithms to compensate for feed variations and other process disturbances. Recent developments in video-based sensor technology are being applied for on-line determination of slurry ash content. During the third quarter of this project, work continued on the testing and calibration of the video-based ash analyzer, and a plant sampling campaign was conducted to provide data for the development of a mathematical process model and the model-based control algorithms.
Date: November 26, 1996
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advances in National Capabilities for Consequence Assessment Modeling of Airborne Hazards (open access)

Advances in National Capabilities for Consequence Assessment Modeling of Airborne Hazards

This paper describes ongoing advancement of airborne hazard modeling capabilities in support of multiple agencies through the National Atmospheric Release Advisory Center (NARAC) and the Interagency Atmospheric Modeling and Atmospheric Assessment Center (IMAAC). A suite of software tools developed by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and collaborating organizations includes simple stand-alone, local-scale plume modeling tools for end user's computers, Web- and Internet-based software to access advanced 3-D flow and atmospheric dispersion modeling tools and expert analysis from the national center at LLNL, and state-of-the-science high-resolution urban models and event reconstruction capabilities.
Date: November 26, 2007
Creator: Nasstrom, J; Sugiyama, G; Foster, K; Larsen, S; Kosovic, B; Eme, B et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advantages of High Order Schemes and How to Confirm These Advantages (open access)

Advantages of High Order Schemes and How to Confirm These Advantages

This manuscript is meant to give a short summary of the advantages of high order schemes and suitable test problems which can properly illustrate these advantages.
Date: November 26, 2001
Creator: Jameson, L
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerosol climate effects and air quality impacts from 1980 to 2030 (open access)

Aerosol climate effects and air quality impacts from 1980 to 2030

We investigate aerosol effects on climate for 1980, 1995 (meant to reflect present-day) and 2030 using the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies climate model coupled to an on-line aerosol source and transport model with interactive oxidant and aerosol chemistry. Aerosols simulated include sulfates, organic matter (OM), black carbon (BC), sea-salt and dust and additionally, the amount of tropospheric ozone is calculated, allowing us to estimate both changes to air quality and climate for different time periods and emission amounts. We include both the direct aerosol effect and indirect aerosol effects for liquid-phase clouds. Future changes for the 2030 A1B scenario are examined, focusing on the Arctic and Asia, since changes are pronounced in these regions. Our results for the different time periods include both emission changes and physical climate changes. We find that the aerosol indirect effect (AIE) has a large impact on photochemical processing, decreasing ozone amount and ozone forcing, especially for the future (2030-1995). Ozone forcings increase from 0 to 0.12 Wm{sup -2} and the total aerosol forcing increases from -0.10 Wm{sup -2} to -0.94 Wm{sup -2} (AIE increases from -0.13 to -0.68 Wm{sup -2}) for 1995-1980 versus 2030-1995. Over the Arctic we find that compared to …
Date: November 26, 2007
Creator: Menon, Surabi; Menon, Surabi; Unger, Nadine; Koch, Dorothy; Francis, Jennifer; Garrett, Tim et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ALSNews 2008 (open access)

ALSNews 2008

Compilation of Advanced Light Source newsletter, ALSNews, for 2008, Volumes 283-293.
Date: November 26, 2008
Creator: McCullough (Ed.), Julie & Tamura (Ed.), Lori
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Amarillo National Resource Center for Plutonium. Quarterly technical progress report, August 1, 1996--October 31, 1996 (open access)

Amarillo National Resource Center for Plutonium. Quarterly technical progress report, August 1, 1996--October 31, 1996

This report from the Amarillo National Resource Center for Plutonium describes progress in the following areas: electronic resource library; the senior technical review group; environment, health, and safety and remedial action activities; communications, education, and training; and plutonium and other materials.
Date: November 26, 1996
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Amines as Extractants--Survey of the Descriptive and Fundamental Extraction Chemistry (open access)

Amines as Extractants--Survey of the Descriptive and Fundamental Extraction Chemistry

Both the study and the use of extractions with highmolecular-weight amines (including quaternary ammoniums) in organic solution are increasing extensively. While equilibria have been measured in the extraction of an increasing range of acids and Aetal ions, a difficulty remains unresolved in that the amine concentration powerdependence of extraction often indicates a different stoichiometry of the complex existing in the organic phase than do limiting loading and other considerations. Nevertheless, amine extraction serves as a useful tool in studying complexes formed in aqueous systems. Process applications have progressed especially in nitrate and chioride systems, in addition to the sulfate systems first emphasized. Systematic surveys, together with information accruing from process development, have extended the ranges of extractions that can be correlated in usefully generalized patterns, which in turn should accelerate the development of new applications. However, many more areas remain to be surveyed before the many pertinent variables will have been covered. New amines of all classes have become available at commercial, development, or researchsample levels, while a few previously promising amines have become less available. Descriptions and current sources are reviewed. (auth)
Date: November 26, 1963
Creator: Coleman, C. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytic technique for router comparison (open access)

Analytic technique for router comparison

A model for printed circuit boards which can be used to predict the probability that a router will successfully make a connection is presented. The model reflects certain characteristics of the circuit board that is being routed and the model incrementally changes as the board is routed. Routing procedures typically have certain parameters which influence selection of the set of paths that are explored, and determine the order of exploration. These parameters obviously influence the probability that a particular connection can be made. These parameters may also be used to formulate a model of the behavior of a particular routing procedure.
Date: November 26, 1975
Creator: Wilson, D. C. & Smith, R. J., II
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Plans Supporting The Sludge Batch 8 Glass Variability Study Being Conducted By Energysolutions And Cua's Vitreous State Laboratory (open access)

Analytical Plans Supporting The Sludge Batch 8 Glass Variability Study Being Conducted By Energysolutions And Cua's Vitreous State Laboratory

EnergySolutions (ES) and its partner, the Vitreous State Laboratory (VSL) of The Catholic University of America (CUA), are to provide engineering and technical services support to Savannah River Remediation, LLC (SRR) for ongoing operation of the Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF) flowsheet as well as for modifications to improve overall plant performance. SRR has requested via a statement of work that ES/VSL conduct a glass variability study (VS) for Sludge Batch 8. SRR issued a technical task request (TTR) asking that the Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) provide planning and data reduction support for the ES/VSL effort. This document provides two analytical plans for use by ES/VSL: one plan is to guide the measurement of the chemical composition of the study glasses while the second is to guide the measurement of the durability of the study glasses. The measurements generated by ES/VSL are to be provided to SRNL for data reduction and evaluation. SRNL is to review the results of its evaluation with ES/VSL and SRR. The results will subsequently be incorporated into a joint report with ES/VSL as a deliverable to SRR to support the processing of SB8 at DWPF.
Date: November 26, 2012
Creator: Edwards, T. B. & Peeler, D. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of the Scenario Planning Process - a Case Study: The Technical Information Department at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (open access)

Application of the Scenario Planning Process - a Case Study: The Technical Information Department at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

When the field of modern publishing was on a collision course with telecommunications, publishing organizations had to come up to speed in fields that were, heretofore, completely foreign and technologically forbidding to them. For generations, the technology of publishing centered on offset lithography, typesetting, and photography--fields that saw evolutionary and incremental change from the time of Guttenberg. But publishing now includes making information available over the World Wide Web--Internet publishing--with its ever-accelerating rate of technological change and dependence on computers and networks. Clearly, we need a methodology to help anyone in the field of Internet publishing plan for the future, and there is a well-known, well-tested technique for just this purpose--Scenario Planning. Scenario Planning is an excellent tool to help organizations make better decisions in the present based on what they identify as possible and plausible scenarios of the future. Never was decision making more difficult or more crucial than during the years of this study, 1996-1999. This thesis takes the position that, by applying Scenario Planning, the Technical Information Department at LLNL, a large government laboratory (and organizations similar to it), could be confident that moving into the telecommunications business of Internet publishing stood a very good chance of …
Date: November 26, 2001
Creator: Schuster, J A
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Architectural Analysis of a LLNL LWIR Sensor System (open access)

Architectural Analysis of a LLNL LWIR Sensor System

None
Date: November 26, 2013
Creator: Bond, E J; Curry, J R; LaFortune, K N & Williams, A M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Asymptotically Optimal High-Order Accurate Algorithms for the Solution of Certain Elliptic PDEs (open access)

Asymptotically Optimal High-Order Accurate Algorithms for the Solution of Certain Elliptic PDEs

The main goal of the project, "Asymptotically Optimal, High-Order Accurate Algorithms for the Solution of Certain Elliptic PDE's" (DE-FG02-03ER25577) was to develop fast, high-order algorithms for the solution of scattering problems and spectral problems of photonic crystals theory. The results we obtained lie in three areas: (1) asymptotically fast, high-order algorithms for the solution of eigenvalue problems of photonics, (2) fast, high-order algorithms for the solution of acoustic and electromagnetic scattering problems in the inhomogeneous media, and (3) inversion formulas and fast algorithms for the inverse source problem for the acoustic wave equation, with applications to thermo- and opto- acoustic tomography.
Date: November 26, 2008
Creator: Kunyansky, Leonid
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic and electronic structure of metals and alloys: Clean surfaces and chemisorbed molecules (open access)

Atomic and electronic structure of metals and alloys: Clean surfaces and chemisorbed molecules

The accomplishments of the work done under DOE sponsorship are summarized in the list of publications at the end of this narrative. Here we give a brief description of the nature and the significance of the accomplishments. The activity can be roughly subdivided into three parts: studies of surface alloys, studies of epitaxial ultra-thin films, and studies of electron band structure of metals. The list reflects the developments of particular areas of research and the phasing out of others as this was suggested by the interest in, and the success of, specific experimental projects.
Date: November 26, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic and electronic structure of metals and alloys: Clean surfaces and chemisorbed molecules. Progress report (open access)

Atomic and electronic structure of metals and alloys: Clean surfaces and chemisorbed molecules. Progress report

The accomplishments of the work done under DOE sponsorship are summarized in the list of publications at the end of this narrative. Here we give a brief description of the nature and the significance of the accomplishments. The activity can be roughly subdivided into three parts: studies of surface alloys, studies of epitaxial ultra-thin films, and studies of electron band structure of metals. The list reflects the developments of particular areas of research and the phasing out of others as this was suggested by the interest in, and the success of, specific experimental projects.
Date: November 26, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Bbar ---> D* l nu bar form factor at zero recoil and the determination of |V{sub cb}| (open access)

The Bbar ---> D* l nu bar form factor at zero recoil and the determination of |V{sub cb}|

We summarize our lattice QCD study of the form factor at zero recoil in the decay {bar B} {yields} D*{ell}{bar {nu}}. After careful consideration of all sources of systematic uncertainty, we find, h{sub A{sub 1}}(1) = 0.913{sub -17-30}{sup +24+17}, where the first uncertainty is from statistics and fitting while the second combined uncertainty is from all other systematic effects.
Date: November 26, 2001
Creator: al., J.N. Simone et
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cache Performance Analysis and Optimization (open access)

Cache Performance Analysis and Optimization

None
Date: November 26, 2012
Creator: Mohror`, K. & Rountree, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbonate Cleavage in the Hydrolysis of Diethyla-Naphthylmalonate (open access)

Carbonate Cleavage in the Hydrolysis of Diethyla-Naphthylmalonate

A kinetic product study of the carbonate cleavage of malonic ester has been made, and it is shown that the formation of carbonate from malonic ester in alkaline solution involves the direct fission of the half acid ester.
Date: November 26, 1951
Creator: Fry, Arthur & Calvin, Melvin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cast Stone Oxidation Front Evaluation: Preliminary Results For Samples Exposed To Moist Air (open access)

Cast Stone Oxidation Front Evaluation: Preliminary Results For Samples Exposed To Moist Air

The rate of oxidation is important to the long-term performance of reducing salt waste forms because the solubility of some contaminants, e.g., technetium, is a function of oxidation state. TcO{sub 4}{sup −} in the salt solution is reduced to Tc(IV) and has been shown to react with ingredients in the waste form to precipitate low solubility sulfide and/or oxide phases. Upon exposure to oxygen, the compounds containing Tc(IV) oxidize to the pertechnetate ion, Tc(VII)O{sub 4}{sup −}, which is very soluble. Consequently the rate of technetium oxidation front advancement into a monolith and the technetium leaching profile as a function of depth from an exposed surface are important to waste form performance and ground water concentration predictions. An approach for measuring contaminant oxidation rate (effective contaminant specific oxidation rate) based on leaching of select contaminants of concern is described in this report. In addition, the relationship between reduction capacity and contaminant oxidation is addressed. Chromate (Cr(VI) was used as a non-radioactive surrogate for pertechnetate, Tc(VII), in Cast Stone samples prepared with 5 M Simulant. Cast Stone spiked with pertechnetate was also prepared and tested. Depth discrete subsamples spiked with Cr were cut from Cast Stone exposed to Savannah River Site (SRS) …
Date: November 26, 2013
Creator: Langton, C. A. & Almond, P. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemistry, phase formation, and catalytic activity of thin palladium-containing oxide films synthesized by plasma-assisted physical vapor deposition (open access)

Chemistry, phase formation, and catalytic activity of thin palladium-containing oxide films synthesized by plasma-assisted physical vapor deposition

The chemistry, microstructure, and catalytic activity of thin films incorporating palladium were studied using scanning and transmission electron microscopies, X-ray diffraction, spectrophotometry, 4-point probe and catalytic tests. The films were synthesized using pulsed filtered cathodic arc and magnetron sputter deposition, i.e. techniques far from thermodynamic equilibrium. Catalytic particles were formed by thermally cycling thin films of the Pd-Pt-O system. The evolution and phase formation in such films as a function of temperature were discussed in terms of the stability of PdO and PtO2 in air. The catalytic efficiency was found to be strongly affected by the chemical composition, with oxidized palladium definitely playing a major role in the combustion of methane. Reactive sputter deposition of thin films in the Pd-Zr-Y-O system allowed us forming microstructures ranging from nanocrystalline zirconia to palladium nanoparticles embedded in a (Zr,Y)4Pd2O matrix. The sequence of phase formation is put in relation to simple thermodynamic considerations.
Date: November 26, 2010
Creator: Anders, Andre
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of the in situ measurement of terrestrial americium with a Ge(Li) spectrometer and a FIDLER (open access)

Comparison of the in situ measurement of terrestrial americium with a Ge(Li) spectrometer and a FIDLER

None
Date: November 26, 1973
Creator: Roth, S.J. & Huckabay, G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library