Dry Cask Storage Inspection and Monitoring. Interim Report. (open access)

Dry Cask Storage Inspection and Monitoring. Interim Report.

None
Date: March 4, 2014
Creator: Bakhtiari, S.; Elmer, T. W.; Koehl, E. R.; Wang, K.; Raptis, A. C.; Kunerth, D. C. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORES 9 & 10: COLUMNAR HEXAGONAL POINT-ON-POINT PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO (open access)

HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORES 9 & 10: COLUMNAR HEXAGONAL POINT-ON-POINT PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO

PROTEUS is a zero-power research reactor based on a cylindrical graphite annulus with a central cylindrical cavity. The graphite annulus remains basically the same for all experimental programs, but the contents of the central cavity are changed according to the type of reactor being investigated. Through most of its service history, PROTEUS has represented light-water reactors, but from 1992 to 1996 PROTEUS was configured as a pebble-bed reactor (PBR) critical facility and designated as HTR-PROTEUS. The nomenclature was used to indicate that this series consisted of High Temperature Reactor experiments performed in the PROTEUS assembly. During this period, seventeen critical configurations were assembled and various reactor physics experiments were conducted. These experiments included measurements of criticality, differential and integral control rod and safety rod worths, kinetics, reaction rates, water ingress effects, and small sample reactivity effects (Ref. 3). HTR-PROTEUS was constructed, and the experimental program was conducted, for the purpose of providing experimental benchmark data for assessment of reactor physics computer codes. Considerable effort was devoted to benchmark calculations as a part of the HTR-PROTEUS program. References 1 and 2 provide detailed data for use in constructing models for codes to be assessed. Reference 3 is a comprehensive summary of …
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Bess, John D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
NEUTRON RADIOGRAPHY (NRAD) REACTOR 64-ELEMENT CORE UPGRADE (open access)

NEUTRON RADIOGRAPHY (NRAD) REACTOR 64-ELEMENT CORE UPGRADE

The neutron radiography (NRAD) reactor is a 250 kW TRIGA (registered) (Training, Research, Isotopes, General Atomics) Mark II , tank-type research reactor currently located in the basement, below the main hot cell, of the Hot Fuel Examination Facility (HFEF) at the Idaho National Laboratory (INL). It is equipped with two beam tubes with separate radiography stations for the performance of neutron radiography irradiation on small test components. The interim critical configuration developed during the core upgrade, which contains only 62 fuel elements, has been evaluated as an acceptable benchmark experiment. The final 64-fuel-element operational core configuration of the NRAD LEU TRIGA reactor has also been evaluated as an acceptable benchmark experiment. Calculated eigenvalues differ significantly (approximately +/-1%) from the benchmark eigenvalue and have demonstrated sensitivity to the thermal scattering treatment of hydrogen in the U-Er-Zr-H fuel.
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Bess, John D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORE 4: RANDOM PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO (open access)

HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORE 4: RANDOM PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO

In its deployment as a pebble bed reactor (PBR) critical facility from 1992 to 1996, the PROTEUS facility was designated as HTR-PROTEUS. This experimental program was performed as part of an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Coordinated Research Project (CRP) on the Validation of Safety Related Physics Calculations for Low Enriched HTGRs. Within this project, critical experiments were conducted for graphite moderated LEU systems to determine core reactivity, flux and power profiles, reaction-rate ratios, the worth of control rods, both in-core and reflector based, the worth of burnable poisons, kinetic parameters, and the effects of moisture ingress on these parameters. One benchmark experiment was evaluated in this report: Core 4. Core 4 represents the only configuration with random pebble packing in the HTR-PROTEUS series of experiments, and has a moderator-to-fuel pebble ratio of 1:1. Three random configurations were performed. The initial configuration, Core 4.1, was rejected because the method for pebble loading, separate delivery tubes for the moderator and fuel pebbles, may not have been completely random; this core loading was rejected by the experimenters. Cores 4.2 and 4.3 were loaded using a single delivery tube, eliminating the possibility for systematic ordering effects. The second and third cores differed slightly …
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Bess, John D. & Montierth, Leland M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Damping Ring Kickers (open access)

Damping Ring Kickers

None
Date: March 4, 2014
Creator: Bulos, F.; Tomlin, Bill T. & Weaver, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kicker Magnet and Pulser (open access)

Kicker Magnet and Pulser

None
Date: March 4, 2014
Creator: Bulos, Fatin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam-dump Kicker Magnets (open access)

Beam-dump Kicker Magnets

None
Date: March 4, 2014
Creator: Bulos, Fatin; Odian, A. & Tomlin, Bill T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transient Spectroscopic Investigations of Intermediates Involved in CO2 Reduction Under Supercritical CO2 Conditions (open access)

Transient Spectroscopic Investigations of Intermediates Involved in CO2 Reduction Under Supercritical CO2 Conditions

N/A
Date: March 16, 2014
Creator: C., Grills D.; Kawanami, H.; Ishizaka, T. & Chatterjee, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Savings and Peak Demand Reduction of a SEER 21 Heat Pump vs. a SEER 13 Heat Pump with Attic and Indoor Duct Systems (open access)

Energy Savings and Peak Demand Reduction of a SEER 21 Heat Pump vs. a SEER 13 Heat Pump with Attic and Indoor Duct Systems

This report describes results of experiments that were conducted in an unoccupied 1600 square foot house--the Manufactured Housing (MH Lab) at the Florida Solar Energy Center (FSEC)--to evaluate the delivered performance as well as the relative performance of a SEER 21 variable capacity heat pump versus a SEER 13 heat pump. The performance was evaluated with two different duct systems: a standard attic duct system and an indoor duct system located in a dropped-ceiling space.
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Cummings, J. & Withers, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Understanding Mechanisms of Radiological Contamination (open access)

Understanding Mechanisms of Radiological Contamination

Over the last 50 years, the study of radiological contamination and decontamination has expanded significantly. This paper addresses the mechanisms of radiological contamination that have been reported and then discusses which methods have recently been used during performance testing of several different decontamination technologies. About twenty years ago the Idaho Nuclear Technology Engineering Center (INTEC) at the INL began a search for decontamination processes which could minimize secondary waste. In order to test the effectiveness of these decontamination technologies, a new simulated contamination, termed SIMCON, was developed. SIMCON was designed to replicate the types of contamination found on stainless steel, spent fuel processing equipment. Ten years later, the INL began research into methods for simulating urban contamination resulting from a radiological dispersal device (RDD). This work was sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and included the initial development an aqueous application of contaminant to substrate. Since 2007, research sponsored by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has advanced that effort and led to the development of a contamination method that simulates particulate fallout from an Improvised Nuclear Device (IND). The IND method diverges from previous efforts to create tenacious contamination by simulating a reproducible “loose” contamination. Examining …
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Demmer, Rick; Drake, John & Ryan James, PhD
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modified Anti-de-Sitter Metric, Light-Front Quantized QCD, and Conformal Quantum Mechanics (open access)

Modified Anti-de-Sitter Metric, Light-Front Quantized QCD, and Conformal Quantum Mechanics

None
Date: March 3, 2014
Creator: Dosch, Hans Gunter; Brodsky, Stanley J. & de Teramond, Guy F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Technical Report - Large Deviation Methods for the Analysis and Design of Monte Carlo Schemes in Physics and Chemistry - DE-SC0002413 (open access)

Final Technical Report - Large Deviation Methods for the Analysis and Design of Monte Carlo Schemes in Physics and Chemistry - DE-SC0002413

This proposal is concerned with applications of Monte Carlo to problems in physics and chemistry where rare events degrade the performance of standard Monte Carlo. One class of problems is concerned with computation of various aspects of the equilibrium behavior of some Markov process via time averages. The problem to be overcome is that rare events interfere with the efficient sampling of all relevant parts of phase space. A second class concerns sampling transitions between two or more stable attractors. Here, rare events do not interfere with the sampling of all relevant parts of phase space, but make Monte Carlo inefficient because of the very large number of samples required to obtain variance comparable to the quantity estimated. The project uses large deviation methods for the mathematical analyses of various Monte Carlo techniques, and in particular for algorithmic analysis and design. This is done in the context of relevant application areas, mainly from chemistry and biology.
Date: March 14, 2014
Creator: Dupuis, Paul
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Representative Atmospheric Plume Development for Elevated Releases (open access)

Representative Atmospheric Plume Development for Elevated Releases

An atmospheric explosion of a low-yield nuclear device will produce a large number of radioactive isotopes, some of which can be measured with airborne detection systems. However, properly equipped aircraft may not arrive in the region where an explosion occurred for a number of hours after the event. Atmospheric conditions will have caused the radioactive plume to move and diffuse before the aircraft arrives. The science behind predicting atmospheric plume movement has advanced enough that the location of the maximum concentrations in the plume can be determined reasonably accurately in real time, or near real time. Given the assumption that an aircraft can follow a plume, this study addresses the amount of atmospheric dilution expected to occur in a representative plume as a function of time past the release event. The approach models atmospheric transport of hypothetical releases from a single location for every day in a year using the publically available HYSPLIT code. The effective dilution factors for the point of maximum concentration in an elevated plume based on a release of a non-decaying, non-depositing tracer can vary by orders of magnitude depending on the day of the release, even for the same number of hours after the release …
Date: March 3, 2014
Creator: Eslinger, Paul W.; Lowrey, Justin D.; McIntyre, Justin I.; Miley, Harry S. & Prichard, Andrew W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Observations of Continuum Depression in Warm Dense Matter with X-Ray Thomson scattering (open access)

Observations of Continuum Depression in Warm Dense Matter with X-Ray Thomson scattering

None
Date: March 10, 2014
Creator: Fletcher, L. B.; Kritcher, A. L.; Pak, A.; Ma, T.; Doppner, T.; Fortmann, C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Charmonium and Charmonium-Like States with BaBar (open access)

Charmonium and Charmonium-Like States with BaBar

This report describes Charmonium and Charmonium-Like States with BaBar.
Date: March 14, 2014
Creator: Guido, Elisa
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developing Spent Fuel Assembly for Advanced NDA Instrument Calibration - NGSI Spent Fuel Project (open access)

Developing Spent Fuel Assembly for Advanced NDA Instrument Calibration - NGSI Spent Fuel Project

None
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Hu, Jianwei; Gauld, Ian C; Banfield, James & Skutnik, Steven
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Locally Enhanced Conductivity due to the Tetragonal Domain Structure in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 Heterointerfaces (open access)

Locally Enhanced Conductivity due to the Tetragonal Domain Structure in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 Heterointerfaces

None
Date: March 13, 2014
Creator: Kalisky, Beena; Spanton, Eric M.; Noad, Hilary; Kirtley, John R.; Nowack, Katja C.; Bell, Christopher et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence for the decay B0 -> omega omega and search for B0 -> omega phi (open access)

Evidence for the decay B0 -> omega omega and search for B0 -> omega phi

None
Date: March 10, 2014
Creator: Lees, J. P.; Poireau, V.; Tisserand, V.; /Annecy, LAPP; Grauges, E.; /Barcelona U., ECM et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multiscale Design of Advanced Materials based on Hybrid Ab Initio and Quasicontinuum Methods (open access)

Multiscale Design of Advanced Materials based on Hybrid Ab Initio and Quasicontinuum Methods

This project united researchers from mathematics, chemistry, computer science, and engineering for the development of new multiscale methods for the design of materials. Our approach was highly interdisciplinary, but it had two unifying themes: first, we utilized modern mathematical ideas about change-of-scale and state-of-the-art numerical analysis to develop computational methods and codes to solve real multiscale problems of DOE interest; and, second, we took very seriously the need for quantum mechanics-based atomistic forces, and based our methods on fast solvers of chemically accurate methods.
Date: March 12, 2014
Creator: Luskin, Mitchell
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Heat Treatments and Coatings on the Outgassing Rate of Stainless Steel Chambers (open access)

The Effect of Heat Treatments and Coatings on the Outgassing Rate of Stainless Steel Chambers

The outgassing rates of four nominally identical 304L stainless steel vacuum chambers were measured to determine the effect of chamber coatings and heat treatments. One chamber was coated with titanium nitride (TiN) and one with amorphous silicon (a-Si) immediately following fabrication. One chamber remained uncoated throughout, and the last chamber was first tested without any coating, and then coated with a-Si following a series of heat treatments. The outgassing rate of each chamber was measured at room temperatures between 15 and 30 deg C following bakes at temperatures between 90 and 400 deg C. Measurements for bare steel showed a significant reduction in the outgassing rate by more than a factor of 20 after a 400 deg C heat treatment (3.5 x 10{sup 12} TorrL s{sup -1}cm{sup -2} prior to heat treatment, reduced to 1.7 x 10{ sup -13} TorrL s{sup -1}cm{sup -2} following heat treatment). The chambers that were coated with a-Si showed minimal change in outgassing rates with heat treatment, though an outgassing rate reduced by heat treatments prior to a-Si coating was successfully preserved throughout a series of bakes. The TiN coated chamber exhibited remarkably low outgassing rates, up to four orders of magnitude lower than the …
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Mamum, Md Abdullah A.; Elmustafa, Abdelmageed A,; Stutzman, Marcy L.; Adderley, Philip A. & Poelker, Matthew
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2013 SRNL LDRD Annual Report (open access)

2013 SRNL LDRD Annual Report

This report demonstrates the execution of our LDRD program within the objectives and guidelines outlined by the Department of Energy (DOE) through the DOE Order 413.2b. The projects described within the report align purposefully with SRNL’s strategic vision and provide great value to the DOE. The diversity exhibited in the research and development projects underscores the DOE Office of Environmental Management (DOE-EM) mission and enhances that mission by developing the technical capabilities and human capital necessary to support future DOE-EM national needs. As a multiprogram national laboratory, SRNL is applying those capabilities to achieve tangible results for the nation in National Security, Environmental Stewardship, Clean Energy and Nuclear Materials Management.
Date: March 7, 2014
Creator: McWhorter, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annual Report: Carbon Capture Simulation Initiative (CCSI) (30 September 2013) (open access)

Annual Report: Carbon Capture Simulation Initiative (CCSI) (30 September 2013)

The Carbon Capture Simulation Initiative (CCSI) is a partnership among national laboratories, industry and academic institutions that is developing and deploying state-of-the-art computational modeling and simulation tools to accelerate the commercialization of carbon capture technologies from discovery to development, demonstration, and ultimately the widespread deployment to hundreds of power plants. The CCSI Toolset will provide end users in industry with a comprehensive, integrated suite of scientifically validated models, with uncertainty quantification (UQ), optimization, risk analysis and decision making capabilities. The CCSI Toolset incorporates commercial and open-source software currently in use by industry and is also developing new software tools as necessary to fill technology gaps identified during execution of the project. Ultimately, the CCSI Toolset will (1) enable promising concepts to be more quickly identified through rapid computational screening of devices and processes; (2) reduce the time to design and troubleshoot new devices and processes; (3) quantify the technical risk in taking technology from laboratory-scale to commercial-scale; and (4) stabilize deployment costs more quickly by replacing some of the physical operational tests with virtual power plant simulations. CCSI is led by the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) and leverages the Department of Energy (DOE) national laboratories’ core strengths in modeling …
Date: March 5, 2014
Creator: Miller, David C.; Syamlal, Madhava; Cottrell, Roger; Kress, Joel D.; Sundaresan, S.; Sun, Xin et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Report for Project DE-FC02-06ER25755 [Pmodels2] (open access)

Final Report for Project DE-FC02-06ER25755 [Pmodels2]

In this report, we describe the research accomplished by the OSU team under the Pmodels2 project. The team has worked on various angles: designing high performance MPI implementations on modern networking technologies (Mellanox InfiniBand (including the new ConnectX2 architecture and Quad Data Rate), QLogic InfiniPath, the emerging 10GigE/iWARP and RDMA over Converged Enhanced Ethernet (RoCE) and Obsidian IB-WAN), studying MPI scalability issues for multi-thousand node clusters using XRC transport, scalable job start-up, dynamic process management support, efficient one-sided communication, protocol offloading and designing scalable collective communication libraries for emerging multi-core architectures. New designs conforming to the Argonne’s Nemesis interface have also been carried out. All of these above solutions have been integrated into the open-source MVAPICH/MVAPICH2 software. This software is currently being used by more than 2,100 organizations worldwide (in 71 countries). As of January ’14, more than 200,000 downloads have taken place from the OSU Web site. In addition, many InfiniBand vendors, server vendors, system integrators and Linux distributors have been incorporating MVAPICH/MVAPICH2 into their software stacks and distributing it. Several InfiniBand systems using MVAPICH/MVAPICH2 have obtained positions in the TOP500 ranking of supercomputers in the world. The latest November ’13 ranking include the following systems: 7th ranked Stampede …
Date: March 12, 2014
Creator: Panda, Dhabaleswar & Sadayappan, P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pixel Area Variations in Sensors: A Novel Framework for Predicting Pixel Fidelity and Distortion in Flat Field Response (open access)

Pixel Area Variations in Sensors: A Novel Framework for Predicting Pixel Fidelity and Distortion in Flat Field Response

None
Date: March 13, 2014
Creator: Rasmussen, Andrew
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library