Tanks Focus Area Site Needs Assessment FY 2000 (open access)

Tanks Focus Area Site Needs Assessment FY 2000

This document summarizes the Tanks Focus Area (TFA's) process of collecting, analyzing, and responding to high-level radioactive tank waste science and technology needs developed from across the DOE complex in FY 2000. The document also summarizes each science and technology need, and provides an initial prioritization of TFA's projected work scope for FY 2001 and FY 2002.
Date: March 10, 2000
Creator: Allen, Robert W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Relation Between Accretion Rate And Jet Power in X-Ray Luminous Elliptical Galaxies (open access)

The Relation Between Accretion Rate And Jet Power in X-Ray Luminous Elliptical Galaxies

Using Chandra X-ray observations of nine nearby, X-ray luminous elliptical galaxies with good optical velocity dispersion measurements, we show that a tight correlation exists between the Bondi accretion rates calculated from the observed gas temperature and density profiles and estimated black hole masses, and the power emerging from these systems in relativistic jets. The jet powers, which are inferred from the energies and timescales required to inflate cavities observed in the surrounding X-ray emitting gas, can be related to the accretion rates using a power law model of the form log (P{sub Bondi}/10{sup 43} erg s{sup -1}) = A + B log (P{sub jet}/10{sup 43} erg s{sup -1}), with A = 0.62 {+-} 0.15 and B = 0.77 {+-} 0.18. Our results show that a significant fraction of the energy associated with the rest mass of material entering the Bondi accretion radius (2.4{sub -0.7}{sup +1.0} per cent, for P{sub jet} = 10{sup 43} erg s{sup -1}) eventually emerges in the relativistic jets. Our results have significant implications for studies of accretion, jet formation and galaxy formation. The observed tight correlation suggests that the Bondi formulae provide a reasonable description of the accretion process in these systems, despite the likely presence …
Date: March 10, 2006
Creator: Allen, Steven W.; Dunn, R. J. H.; Fabian, A. C.; Taylor, G. B. & Reynolds, C. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enabling Science and Technology Computation Directorate 2005 Annual Report (open access)

Enabling Science and Technology Computation Directorate 2005 Annual Report

None
Date: March 10, 2006
Creator: Anderson, S R; Zosel, M E & Miller, M C
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Branching Fraction Limits for B0 Decays to eta' eta, eta' pi0 and eta pi0 (open access)

Branching Fraction Limits for B0 Decays to eta' eta, eta' pi0 and eta pi0

We describe searches for decays to two-body charmless final states {eta}'{eta}, {eta}'{pi}{sup 0} and {eta}{pi}{sup 0} of B{sup 0} mesons produced in e{sup +}e{sup -} annihilation. The data, collected with the BABAR detector at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, represent 232 million produced B{bar B} pairs. The results for branching fractions are, in units of 10{sup -6} (upper limits at 90% C.L.): {Beta}(B{sup 0} {yields} {eta}'{eta}) = 0.2{sub -0.5}{sup +0.7} {+-} 0.4 (< 1.7), {Beta}(B{sup 0} {yields} {eta}{pi}{sup 0}) = 0.6{sub -0.4}{sup +0.5} {+-} 0.1 (< 1.3), and {Beta}(B{sup 0} {yields} {eta}'{pi}{sup 0}) = 0.8{sub -0.6}{sup +0.8} {+-} 0.1 (< 2.1). The first error quoted is statistical and the second systematic.
Date: March 10, 2006
Creator: Aubert, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design and Performance of Capping Layers for EUV Multilayer Mirrors (open access)

Design and Performance of Capping Layers for EUV Multilayer Mirrors

The reflectance stability of multilayer coatings for extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL) in a commercial tool environment is of uttermost importance to ensure continuous exposures with minimum maintenance cost. We have made substantial progress in designing the protective capping layer coatings, understanding their performance and estimating their lifetimes based on accelerated electron beam and EUV exposure studies. Our current capping layer coatings have about 40 times longer lifetimes than Si-capped multilayer optics. Nevertheless, the lifetime of current Ru-capped multilayers is too short to satisfy commercial tool requirements and further improvements are essential.
Date: March 10, 2003
Creator: Bajt, S.; Chapman, H. N.; Nuygen, N.; Alameda, J.; Robinson, J. C.; Malinowski, M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Role of Demand Response in Default Service Pricing (open access)

The Role of Demand Response in Default Service Pricing

Dynamic retail electricity pricing, especially real-time pricing (RTP), has been widely heralded as a panacea for providing much-needed demand response in electricity markets. However, in designing default service for competitive retail markets, demand response often appears to be an afterthought. But that may be changing as states that initiated customer choice in the past 5-7 years reach an important juncture in retail market design. Most states with retail choice established an initial transitional period, during which utilities were required to offer a default or ''standard offer'' generation service, often at a capped or otherwise administratively-determined rate. Many retail choice states have reached, or are nearing, the end of their transitional period and several states have adopted an RTP-type default service for large commercial and industrial (C&I) customers. Are these initiatives motivated by the desire to induce greater demand response, or is RTP being called upon to serve a different role in competitive markets? Surprisingly, we found that in most cases, the primary reason for adopting RTP as the default service was not to encourage demand response, but rather to advance policy objectives related to the development of competitive retail markets. However, we also find that, if efforts are made in …
Date: March 10, 2006
Creator: Barbose, Galen; Goldman, Chuck & Neenan, Bernie
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
VOC Destruction by Catalytic Combustion Microturbine (open access)

VOC Destruction by Catalytic Combustion Microturbine

This project concerned the application of a catalytic combustion system that has been married to a micro-turbine device. The catalytic combustion system decomposes the VOC's and transmits these gases to the gas turbine. The turbine has been altered to operate on very low-level BTU fuels equivalent to 1.5% methane in air. The performance of the micro-turbine for VOC elimination has some flexibility with respect to operating conditions, and the system is adaptable to multiple industrial applications. The VOC source that was been chosen for examination was the emissions from coal upgrading operations. The overall goal of the project was to examine the effectiveness of a catalytic combustion based system for elimination of VOCs while simultaneously producing electrical power for local consumption. Project specific objectives included assessment of the feasibility for using a Flex-Microturbine that generates power from natural gas while it consumes VOCs generated from site operations; development of an engineering plan for installation of the Flex-Microturbine system; operation of the micro-turbine through various changes in site and operation conditions; measurement of the VOC destruction quantitatively; and determination of the required improvements for further studies. The micro-turbine with the catalytic bed worked effectively to produce power on levels of fuel …
Date: March 10, 2009
Creator: Barton, Tom
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron Detection with Cryogenics and Semiconductors (open access)

Neutron Detection with Cryogenics and Semiconductors

The common methods of neutron detection are reviewed with special attention paid to the application of cryogenics and semiconductors to the problem. The authors' work with LiF- and boron-based cryogenic instruments is described as well as the use of CdTe and HgI{sub 2} for direct detection of neutrons.
Date: March 10, 2005
Creator: Bell, Z. W.; Carpenter, D. A.; Cristy, S. S. & Lamberti, V. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Report for LDRD Project 06-ERD-063 (open access)

Final Report for LDRD Project 06-ERD-063

None
Date: March 10, 2008
Creator: Beller, H R; Chakicherla, A; Coleman, M A; Esser, B K; Kane, S R; Legler, T C et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A human breast cell model of pre-invasive to invasive transition (open access)

A human breast cell model of pre-invasive to invasive transition

A crucial step in human breast cancer progression is the acquisition of invasiveness. There is a distinct lack of human cell culture models to study the transition from pre-invasive to invasive phenotype as it may occur 'spontaneously' in vivo. To delineate molecular alterations important for this transition, we isolated human breast epithelial cell lines that showed partial loss of tissue polarity in three-dimensional reconstituted-basement membrane cultures. These cells remained non-invasive; however, unlike their non-malignant counterparts, they exhibited a high propensity to acquire invasiveness through basement membrane in culture. The genomic aberrations and gene expression profiles of the cells in this model showed a high degree of similarity to primary breast tumor profiles. The xenograft tumors formed by the cell lines in three different microenvironments in nude mice displayed metaplastic phenotypes, including squamous and basal characteristics, with invasive cells exhibiting features of higher grade tumors. To find functionally significant changes in transition from pre-invasive to invasive phenotype, we performed attribute profile clustering analysis on the list of genes differentially expressed between pre-invasive and invasive cells. We found integral membrane proteins, transcription factors, kinases, transport molecules, and chemokines to be highly represented. In addition, expression of matrix metalloproteinases MMP-9,-13,-15,-17 was up regulated …
Date: March 10, 2008
Creator: Bissell, Mina J; Rizki, Aylin; Weaver, Valerie M.; Lee, Sun-Young; Rozenberg, Gabriela I.; Chin, Koei et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Evaluation of Savings and Measure Persistence Fromretrocommissioning of Large Commercial Buildings (open access)

An Evaluation of Savings and Measure Persistence Fromretrocommissioning of Large Commercial Buildings

Commercial building retrocommissioning activity has increased in recent years. LBNL recently conducted a study of 8 participants in Sacramento Municipal Utility District's (SMUD) retrocommissioning program. We evaluated the persistence of energy savings and measure implementation, in an effort to identify and understand factors that affect the longevity of retrocommissioning benefits. The LBNL analysis looked at whole-building energy and the retrocommissioning measure implementation status, incorporating elements from previous work by Texas A&M University and Portland Energy Conservation Inc. When possible, adjustments due to newly discovered major end uses, occupancy patterns and 2001 energy crisis responses were included in the whole-building energy analysis. The measure implementation analysis categorized each recommended measure and tracked the measures to their current operational status. Results showed a 59% implementation rate of recommended measures. The whole-building energy analysis showed an aggregate electricity savings of approximately 10.5% in the second post-retrocommissioning year, diminishing to approximately 8% in the fourth year. Results also showed the 2001 energy crisis played a significant role in the post-retrocommissioning energy use at the candidate sites. When natural gas consumption was included in the analysis, savings were reduced slightly, showing the importance in considering interactive effects between cooling and heating systems. The cost effectiveness …
Date: March 10, 2004
Creator: Bourassa, Norman J.; Piette, Mary Ann & Motegi, Naoya
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanism of GEMS formation (open access)

Mechanism of GEMS formation

GEMS (glass with embedded metal and sulfides) in interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) were examined using 200 keV analytical transmission electron microscopy. The morphologies and crystallography of embedded relict grains reveal that GEMS are pseudomorphs formed by irradiation processing of crystals free-floating in space. Some GEMS retain a compositional and morphological ''memory'' of the crystal from which they formed. Pseudomorphism rules out condensation, annealing, flash heating, or shock melting as alternative mechanisms of GEMS formation. A significant and often dominant fraction of the atoms in GEMS were sputtered deposited from other grains. Therefore, a normal (solar) isotopic composition is not a reliable indicator of whether GEMS formed in the solar system or in presolar interstellar or circumstellar environments.
Date: March 10, 2004
Creator: Bradley, J P & Dai, Z R
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Manufacture of Alumina-Forming Austenitic Steel Alloys by Conventional Casting and Hot-Working Methods (open access)

Manufacture of Alumina-Forming Austenitic Steel Alloys by Conventional Casting and Hot-Working Methods

Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and Carpenter Technology Corporation (CarTech) participated in an in-kind cost share cooperative research and development agreement (CRADA) effort under the auspices of the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Technology Maturation Program to explore the feasibility for scale up of developmental ORNL alumina-forming austenitic (AFA) stainless steels by conventional casting and rolling techniques. CarTech successfully vacuum melted 301b heats of four AFA alloy compositions in the range of Fe-(20-25)Ni-(12-14)Cr-(3-4)Al-(l-2.5)Nb wt.% base. Conventional hot/cold rolling was used to produce 0.5-inch thick plate and 0.1-inch thick sheet product. ORNL subsequently successfully rolled the 0.1-inch sheet to 4 mil thick foil. Long-term oxidation studies of the plate form material were initiated at 650, 700, and 800 C in air with 10 volume percent water vapor. Preliminary results indicated that the alloys exhibit comparable (good) oxidation resistance to ORNL laboratory scale AFA alloy arc casting previously evaluated. The sheet and foil material will be used in ongoing evaluation efforts for oxidation and creep resistance under related CRADAs with two gas turbine engine manufacturers. This work will be directed to evaluation of AFA alloys for use in gas turbine recuperators to permit higher-temperature operating conditions for improved efficiencies and reduced …
Date: March 10, 2009
Creator: Brady, M. P.; Yamamoto, Y. & Magee, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Economic Implementation and Optimization of Secondary Oil Recovery Process: St. Mary West Field, Lafayette County, Arkansas (open access)

Economic Implementation and Optimization of Secondary Oil Recovery Process: St. Mary West Field, Lafayette County, Arkansas

The purpose of this study was to investigate the economic appropriateness of several enhanced oil recovery processes that are available to a small mature oil field located in southwest Arkansas and to implement the most economic efficient process evaluated. The State of Arkansas natural resource laws require that an oilfield is to be unitized before conducting a secondary recovery project. This requires all properties that can reasonably be determined to include the oil productive reservoir must be bound together as one common lease by a legal contract that must be approved to be fair and equitable to all property owners within the proposed unit area.
Date: March 10, 2003
Creator: Brock P.E., Cary D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Orbital Angular Momentum on the Light-Front and QCD Observables (open access)

Orbital Angular Momentum on the Light-Front and QCD Observables

The light-front wavefunction formalism provides a physical, but rigorous, representation for angular momentum in a relativistic quantum field theory. Each n-particle LFWF {psi}{sub n}(x{sub i}, {rvec k}{sub {perpendicular}}i,S{sub i}{sup z}) in the Fock state expansion of a hadron in QCD is frame-independent and satisfies angular momentum conservation J{sup z} = {summation}{sub i=1}{sup n} S{sub i}{sup z} + {summation}{sub i=1}{sup n-1} L{sub i}{sup z}, summed over the n - 1 independent intrinsic orbital angular momenta L{sub i}{sup z} = -i [{rvec k}{sub i}{sup x} {partial_derivative}/{partial_derivative}k{sub i}{sup y} - {rvec k}{sub i}{sup y} {partial_derivative}/{partial_derivative}k{sub i}{sup x}]. Gluons propagate with physical polarization S{sub g}{sup z} = {+-} 1 in light-cone gauge A{sup +} = 0. All of these features are illustrated by the Fock state expansion of the electron in terms of its fermion-boson components.
Date: March 10, 2006
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Year of Birth Determination Using Radiocarbon Dating of Dental Enamel (open access)

Year of Birth Determination Using Radiocarbon Dating of Dental Enamel

Radiocarbon dating is typically an archaeological tool rather than a forensic one. Recently however, we have shown that the amount of radiocarbon present in tooth enamel, as a result of nuclear bomb testing during the cold war, is a remarkably accurate indicator of when a person is born. Enamel isolated from human teeth is processed to form graphite and carbon-14 ({sup 14}C) levels are measured using accelerator mass spectrometry. Since there is no turnover of enamel after it is formed, {sup 14}C levels in the enamel represent {sup 14}C levels in the atmosphere at the time of its formation. In this paper we describe the strategy used to determine the date of birth of an individual based on radiocarbon levels in tooth enamel, focusing on the methodology of this strategy. Year of birth information can significantly assist police investigators when the identity of a deceased individual is unknown. In such cases police will try to match particulars of the unidentified individual (which is often only gender and/or an estimate of age), with particulars from missing persons lists.
Date: March 10, 2009
Creator: Buchholz, B. A. & Spalding, K. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nonlinear Magneto-Optical Rotation via Alignment-to-Orientation Conversion (open access)

Nonlinear Magneto-Optical Rotation via Alignment-to-Orientation Conversion

Nonlinear magneto-optical rotation (NMOR) is investigated at highlight powers where the rotation is significantly modified by AC Stark shifts. These shifts are shown to change the overall sign of rotation for closed F-->F+1 transitions as light power is increased. The effect is demonstrated by measurements in rubidium and density matrix calculations. The results are important for applications of nonlinear optical rotation such as sensitive magnetometry.
Date: March 10, 2000
Creator: Budker, D.; Kimball, D. F.; Rochester, S. M. & Yashchuk, V. V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kinetics of HMX and CP Decomposition and Their Extrapolation for Lifetime Assessment (open access)

Kinetics of HMX and CP Decomposition and Their Extrapolation for Lifetime Assessment

Decomposition kinetics are determined for HMX (nitramine octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine) and CP (2-(5-cyanotetrazalato) pentaammine cobalt (III) perchlorate) separately and together. For high levels of thermal stress, the two materials decompose faster as a mixture than individually. This effect is observed both in high-temperature thermal analysis experiments and in long-term thermal aging experiments. An Arrhenius plot of the 10% level of HMX decomposition by itself from a diverse set of experiments is linear from 120 to 260 C, with an apparent activation energy of 165 kJ/mol. Similar but less extensive thermal analysis data for the mixture suggests a slightly lower activation energy for the mixture, and an analogous extrapolation is consistent with the amount of gas observed in the long-term detonator aging experiments, which is about 30 times greater than expected from HMX by itself for 50 months at 100 C. Even with this acceleration, however, it would take {approx}10,000 years to achieve 10% decomposition at {approx}30 C. Correspondingly, negligible decomposition is predicted by this kinetic model for a few decades aging at temperatures slightly above ambient. This prediction is consistent with additional sealed-tube aging experiments at 100-120 C, which are estimated to have an effective thermal dose greater than that from decades …
Date: March 10, 2005
Creator: Burnham, A K; Weese, R K & Andrzejewski, W J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Technical Report: Genetic and Molecular Analysis of a new control pathway in assimilate partitioning. (open access)

Final Technical Report: Genetic and Molecular Analysis of a new control pathway in assimilate partitioning.

Assimilate partitioning refers to the systemic distribution of photoassimilate from sites of primary assimilation (source tissue) to import-dependent tissues and organs (sinks). One of the defining questions in this area is how plants balance source productivity with sink demand. We discovered a sucrose-sensing signal transduction pathway that controls the activity of BvSUT1, a proton-sucrose symporter in sugar beet leaf tissue. Sucrose symporters are responsible for sucrose accumulation in the phloem of many plants and, therefore, they mediate the pivotal step in the long-distance transport of photoassimilate to non-photosynthetic tissues, such as roots and seed. We previously showed that sucrose transport activity is directly proportional to the transcription rate of BvSUT1 and that symporter mRNA and protein have high rates of turnover with half-lives on the order of 2 h. We further demonstrated that symporter transcription is regulated by sucrose levels in the leaf and that sucrose-dependent regulation of BvSUT1 transcription is mediated, at least in part, by a protein phosphorylation relay pathway. The goal of the experiments during this current grant were to use genetic and molecular approaches to identify essential components of this vital regulatory system. The initial objectives were to: (1) to characterize Arabidopsis mutants we've isolated that …
Date: March 10, 2009
Creator: Bush, Daniel, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coalescence of Nanometer Silver Islands on Oxides Grown by Filtered Cathodic Arc Depostion (open access)

Coalescence of Nanometer Silver Islands on Oxides Grown by Filtered Cathodic Arc Depostion

This report talks about Coalescence of Nanometer Silver Islands on Oxides Grown by Filtered Cathodic Arc Depostion
Date: March 10, 2003
Creator: Byon, Eungsun; Oates, Thomas W.H. & Anders, Andre
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Euler angles for G2 (open access)

Euler angles for G2

We provide a simple parameterization for the group G2, which is analogous to the Euler parameterization for SU(2). We show how to obtain the general element of the group in a form emphasizing the structure of the fibration of G2 with fiber SO(4) and base H, the variety of quaternionic subalgebras of octonions. In particular this allows us to obtain a simple expression for the Haar measure on G2. Moreover, as a by-product it yields a concrete realization and an Einstein metric for H.
Date: March 10, 2005
Creator: Cacciatori, Sergio; Cerchiai, Bianca Letizia; della Vedova,Alberto; Ortenzi, Giovanni & Scotti, Antonio
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Round Mountain Field, Short Radius Lateral Drilling in the Vedder Sand Round Mountain Field, California (open access)

Round Mountain Field, Short Radius Lateral Drilling in the Vedder Sand Round Mountain Field, California

A 3-D simulation model study was run using CMG's STARS thermal model, and showed that a 122 meter (400 foot) horizontal well should produce up to 64 cubic meters per day of oil (400 B/D) when the heated oil bank hits the well.
Date: March 10, 2002
Creator: Chenot P.E., David W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Growth and characterization of superconducting spinel oxide LiTi2O4 thin films (open access)

Growth and characterization of superconducting spinel oxide LiTi2O4 thin films

Epitaxial films of LiTi{sub 2}O{sub 4} on single crystalline substrates of MgAl{sub 2}O{sub 4}, MgO, and SrTiO{sub 3} provide model systems to systematically explore the effects of lattice strain and microstructural disorder on the superconducting state. Lattice strain that affects bandwidth gives rise to variations in the superconducting and normal state properties. Microstructural disorder, such as antiphase boundaries that give rise to Ti network disorder, reduces the critical temperature, and Ti network disorder combined with Mg interdiffusion lead to a much more dramatic effect on the superconducting state. Surface sensitive X-ray absorption spectroscopy has identified Ti to retain site symmetry and average valence of the bulk material regardless of film thickness.
Date: March 10, 2009
Creator: Chopdekar, R.V.; Wong, F.; Takamura, Y.; Arenholz, E. & Suzuki, Y.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated Status and Effectiveness Monitoring Program, Entiat River Status and Trend Snorkel Surveys and Rotary Smolt Trap Operations in Nason Creek, March 2007 through March 2008. (open access)

Integrated Status and Effectiveness Monitoring Program, Entiat River Status and Trend Snorkel Surveys and Rotary Smolt Trap Operations in Nason Creek, March 2007 through March 2008.

The Integrated Status and Effectiveness Monitoring Program (ISEMP-BPA project No.2003-0017) has been created as a cost effective means of developing protocols and new technologies, novel indicators, sample designs, analytical, data management and communication tools and skills, and restoration experiments that support the development of a region-wide Research, Monitoring and Evaluation (RME) program to assess the status of anadromous salmonid populations, their tributary habitat and restoration and management actions. The most straightforward approach to developing a regional-scale monitoring and evaluation program would be to increase standardization among status and trend monitoring programs. However, the diversity of species and their habitat, as well as the overwhelming uncertainty surrounding indicators, metrics, and data interpretation methods, requires the testing of multiple approaches. Thus, the approach ISEMP has adopted is to develop a broad template that may differ in the details among subbasins, but one that will ultimately lead to the formation of a unified RME process for the management of anadromous salmonid populations and habitat across the Columbia River Basin. ISEMP has been initiated in three pilot subbasins, the Wenatchee/Entiat, John Day, and Salmon. To balance replicating experimental approaches with the goal of developing monitoring and evaluation tools that apply as broadly as possible …
Date: March 10, 2008
Creator: Collins, Matthew; Jorgensen, John & Murdock, Keely
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library