Test results of chemical reactivity test (CRT) analysis of structural materials and explosives (open access)

Test results of chemical reactivity test (CRT) analysis of structural materials and explosives

The chemical reactivity test, CRT, is a procedure used to screen the compatibility of component structure materials with explosives. This report contains the results of CRT materials evaluations conducted at Mound Facility. Data about materials combinations are catalogued both under the name of the explosive and the nonexplosive.
Date: March 21, 1980
Creator: Back, Paul S.; Barnhart, Brady V.; Walters, Ronald R.; Haws, Lowell D. & Collins, Louis W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Octupole anchor for tandem mirrors (open access)

Octupole anchor for tandem mirrors

The octupole anchor is a very promising alternative to the usual quadrupole designs. The most critical unsolved problem is stabilization of the trapped particle mode. The anchor magnetic field is low because MHD stabilization is by hot electrons, thus permitting relatively small magnet currents and conductor cross sections. Increasing the field to a sufficient level to permit operation of the thermal barrier and electrostatic plug required for trapped particle mode stabilization would require much more massive magnets, higher ECRH power, and the much more complex operating scenario associated with standard quadrupole operation. Despite these complications, the absence of a long transition (with an axial minimum in B) between the central cell and the octupole makes the option attractive.
Date: March 21, 1984
Creator: Hopper, E.B. Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Letter report (T-418): Progress report on solubility measurements, October 1, 1987--September 30, 1988 (open access)

Letter report (T-418): Progress report on solubility measurements, October 1, 1987--September 30, 1988

This letter report describes the technical activities of the waste element solubility study during Fiscal Year (FY88, October 1, 1987 to September 30, 1988). This experimental waste element solubility study provides experimentally determined limits on radionuclide concentrations in groundwater from Yucca Mountain. Furthermore, the results of this study are essential for verifying the validity of radionuclide transport calculations, and for providing the maximum concentrations for the radionuclide sorption tests. Solubility is the source term for radionuclide transport calculations. The solubility in this study is controlled by fewer variables than are used in the multiparameter transport model. Therefore, modeling must be capable of predicting the results of this waste element solubility study. Agreement between the experimental result and the modeling predictions will validate the geochemical module of the transport model. 3 refs., 8 figs.
Date: March 21, 1989
Creator: Nitsche, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pattern of explosive reaction between uranium hexafluoride and hydrocarbon oils. Revision 1 (open access)

Pattern of explosive reaction between uranium hexafluoride and hydrocarbon oils. Revision 1

Examination of uranium hexafluoride release incidents occurring over the past three decades of ORGDP experience has identified only four which apparently involved an explosion of a container resulting from reaction between uranium hexafluoride and an impurity. These four incidents exhibit a certain degree of commonality. Each has involved: (1) condensed phase uranium hexafluoride, (2) a moderately elevated temperature, (3) a sufficient quantity of uranium hexafluoride for a significant partial pressure to be maintained independently above that which can be consumed by chemical reaction, and (4) an organic liquid (probably hydrocarbon oil) accidentally present in the container as a contaminant. The purpose of this investigative search was to establish some conditional pattern for these four incidents to which their violent consequences could be attributed. Fortunately, the number of such incidents is relatively small, which emphasizes even more pointedly the unfortunate fact that documentation ranges from thorough to very limited. Documented sources of information are given in the bibliography. Copies of those which are not readily available are contained in six appendices. 8 refs.
Date: March 21, 1986
Creator: Rapp, Karl E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comments of the PRA Senior Review Panel on the meeting held December 1--3, 1987 (open access)

Comments of the PRA Senior Review Panel on the meeting held December 1--3, 1987

This memorandum records the minutes of the PRA Senior Review Panel meeting held at Savannah River Laboratory (SRL) on December 1--3, 1987, and the report on that meeting written subsequently by the panel members. The minutes are contained as Attachment 2 of this memorandum, and the report as Attachment 1. The Panel indicated two principal concerns in their report: (1) that insufficient emphasis is being placed on the reliability data development program, and (2) that excessive detail is being built into the fault trees. These concerns have been addressed in a subsequent meeting with the Panel, held March 2--4, 1988. In addition, the members have been provided with a program document (Reference 1) indicating the extent, the timing, and the limitations of the data analysis effort for the PRA.
Date: March 21, 1988
Creator: Sharp, D. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Antisatellites (Killer Satellites) (open access)

Antisatellites (Killer Satellites)

This issue brief discusses "killer satellites," the unofficial moniker for antisatellite (ASAT) missiles possessed by the Soviet Union in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as U.S. efforts to develop ASAT systems and simultaneously limit their development and use.
Date: March 21, 1983
Creator: Smith, Marcia S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Space Shuttle (open access)

Space Shuttle

The national Aeronautics an6 Space Administration's major manner program of the post-Apollo era is the development of a space transportation system (STS) based on a reusable space shuttle launch vehicle. Funded since FY71, the shuttle program is coming to fruition: the space shuttle successfully completed its series of four test flights on July 4, 1982. The first operational f1ig; fit was successfully completed in November 1982. The next shuttle flight has been delayed because of leaks in one of the orbiter's main engines. NASA hopes to be ready for launch on Apr. 4, 1963.
Date: March 21, 1983
Creator: Smith, Marcia S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
AIDS: An Overview of Issues (open access)

AIDS: An Overview of Issues

This report discusses the many difficult policy dilemmas associated with the AIDS epidemic, including past Congressional funding to support AIDS research and education efforts, strategies for controlling the spread of the AIDS virus, and methods and resources available for the care and treatment of persons with AIDS.
Date: March 21, 1988
Creator: Smith, Pamela W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetic-field considerations in superferric dipole (open access)

Magnetic-field considerations in superferric dipole

Iron dominated magnets are characterized in the limit of infinite permeability by a pole shape that is a magnetic equipotential. Deviations from this ideal because of finite permeability are associated with differences in path length, local saturation, flux concentration in slotted pole if crenellation is used, and sub surface voids. For moderate field levels the variation in flux path length throughout the iron lowers the magnetic potential on the iron surface more for the longer paths. As the excitation increases the permeability is lowered in regions of high flux density. Crenellation in this region offers some degree of control over the permeability by concentrating the flux. To a lesser degree sub surface voids can be used to control the reluctance of a flux path. The net result suggests that the shape of the effective air gap can be adjusted to be a magnetic equipotential sensibly equivalent to the ideal pole shape for infinite permeability.
Date: March 21, 1983
Creator: Snowdon, S.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nonimaging Concentrators for Solar Thermal Energy. Final Report (open access)

Nonimaging Concentrators for Solar Thermal Energy. Final Report

A small experimental solar collector test facility has been established on the campus of the University of Chicago. This capability has been used to explore applications of nonimaging optics for solar thermal concentration in three substantially different configurations: (1) a single stage system with moderate concentration on an evacuated absorber (a 5.25X evacuated tube Compound Parabolic Concentrator or CPC), (2) a two stage system with high concentration and a non-evacuated absorber (a 16X Fresnel lens/CPC type mirror) and (3) moderate concentration single stage systems with non-evacuated absorbers for lower temperature (a 3X and a 6.5X CPC). Prototypes of each of these systems have been designed, built and tested. The performance characteristics are presented. In addition a 73 m/sup 2/ experimental array of 3X non-evacuated CPC's has been installed in a school heating system on the Navajo Indian Reservation in New Mexico. The full array has a peak noon time efficiency of approx. 50% at ..delta..T = 50/sup 0/C above ambient and has supplied about half the school's heat load for the past two heating seasons. Several theoretical features of nonimaging concentration have been investigated including their long term energy collecting behavior. The measured performance of the different systems shows clearly …
Date: March 21, 1980
Creator: Winston, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Thirteenth Annual Interagency Geothermal Coordinating Council Report for Fiscal Year 1988 (open access)

The Thirteenth Annual Interagency Geothermal Coordinating Council Report for Fiscal Year 1988

The U.S. Interagency Geothermal Coordinating Council was a multi-agency group charged with identifying and reducing barriers to geothermal energy development in the U.S. Many of the issues covered related to regulations for and progress in the leasing of Federal lands in the West for power development. The IGCC reports are important sources of historical information. (DJE 2005)
Date: March 21, 1989
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library