Fire protection countermeasures for containment ventilation systems (open access)

Fire protection countermeasures for containment ventilation systems

The goal of this project is to find countermeasures to protect High Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) filters, in exit ventilation ducts, from the heat and smoke generated by fire. Initially, methods were developed to cool fire-heated air by fine water spray upstream of the filters. It was recognized that smoke aerosol exposure to HEPA filters could also cause disruption of the containment system. Through testing and analysis, several methods to partially mitigate the smoke exposure to the HEPA filters were identified. A continuous, movable, high-efficiency prefilter using modified commercial equipment was designed. The technique is capable of protecting HEPA filters over the total time duration of the test fires. The reason for success involved the modification of the prefiltration media. Commercially available filter media has particle sorption efficiency that is inversely proportional to media strength. To achieve properties of both efficiency and strength, rolling filter media were laminated with the desired properties. The approach was Edisonian, but truncation in short order to a combination of prefilters was effective. The application of this technique was qualified, since it is of use only to protect HEPA filters from fire-generated smoke aerosols. It is not believed that this technique is cost effective in …
Date: August 25, 1980
Creator: Alvares, N.; Beason, D.; Bergman, V.; Creighton, J.; Ford, H. & Lipska, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hybrid charged-particle guide for studying (n, charged particle) reactions (open access)

Hybrid charged-particle guide for studying (n, charged particle) reactions

Charged-particle transport systems consisting of magnetic quadrupole lenses have been employed in recent years in the study of (n, charged particle) reactions. We have completed a new transport system that is based both on magnetic lenses as well as electrostatic fields. The magnetic focusing of this charged-particle guide is provided by six magnetic quadrupole lenses arranged in a CDCCDC sequence (in the vertical plane). The electrostatic field is produced by a wire at high voltage which stretches the length of the guide and is physically at the center of the magnetic axis. The magnetic lenses are used for charged particles above 5 MeV; the electrostatic guide is used for lower energies. This hybrid system possesses the excellent focusing and background rejection properties of other magnetic systems. For low energy charged-particles, the electrostatic transport avoids the narrow band-passes in charged-particle energy which are a problem with purely magnetic transport systems. This system is installed at the LLNL Cyclograaff facility for the study of (n, charged particle) reactions at neutron energies up to 35 MeV.
Date: August 25, 1982
Creator: Haight, R. C.; White, R. M. & Zinkle, S. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supernovae, compact stars and nuclear physics (open access)

Supernovae, compact stars and nuclear physics

We briefly review the current understanding of supernova. We investigate the implications of rapid rotation corresponding to the frequency of the new pulsar reported in the supernovae remnant SN1987A. It places very stringent conditions on the equation of state if the star is assumed to be bound by gravity alone. We find that the central energy density of the star must be greater than 12 times that of nuclear density to be stable against the most optimistic estimate of general relativistic instabilities. This is too high for the matter to plausibly consist of individual hadrons. We conclude that the newly discovered pulsar, if its half-millisecond signals are attributable to rotation, cannot be a neutron star. We show that it can be a strange quark star, and that the entire family of strange stars can sustain high rotation under appropriate conditions. We discuss the conversion of a neutron star to strange star, the possible existence of a crust of heavy ions held in suspension by centrifugal and electric forces, the cooling and other features. 39 refs., 8 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: August 25, 1989
Creator: Glendenning, N.K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mirror theory applied to toroidal systems (open access)

Mirror theory applied to toroidal systems

Central features of a mirror plasma are strong departures from Maxwellian distribution functions, ambipolar potentials and densities which vary along a field line, and losses, and the mirror field itself. To examine these features, mirror theorists have developed analytical and numerical techniques to solve the Fokker-Planck equation, evaluate the potentials consistent with the resulting distribution functions, and assess the microstability of these distributions. Various combinations of mirror-plasma fetures are present and important in toroidal plasmas as well, particularly in the edge region and in plasmas with strong r.f. heating. In this paper we survey problems in toroidal plasmas where mirror theory and computational techniques are applicable, and discuss in more detail three specific examples: calculation of the toroidal generalization of the Spitzer-Haerm distribution function (from which trapped-particle effects on current drive can be calculated), evaluation of the nonuniform potential and density set up by pulsed electron-cyclotron heating, and calculation of steady-state distribution functions in the presence of strong r.f. heating and collisions. 37 refs., 3 figs.
Date: August 25, 1987
Creator: Cohen, R.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measured resolutions of the Arc and Linac BPM systems (open access)

Measured resolutions of the Arc and Linac BPM systems

The 6'' long final focus beam position monitors (short FF BPM's are longer, thus deliver more signal after a 15 nanosecond filter, than either the Linac or Arc monitors. The purpose of this note is to compare the resolution of the Arc vs Linac electronics when applied to a short FF 2'' diameter BPM. A method of calibrating the Arc modules is also tested and briefly discussed. The range of each DAC setting to minimize digitization error is also calculated.
Date: August 25, 1986
Creator: Pappas, D. & Tentindo, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion chamber gamma burst detector (open access)

Ion chamber gamma burst detector

A gamma ray burst detector of x-ray photons 2 to 10 keV is designed to maximize area, 100 m/sup 2/, and sensitivity, 10/sup -10/ ergs cm/sup -2/ s/sup 1/2/ modest directionality, 2 x 10/sup -4/ sr, and minimize thickness, 3 mg cm/sup -2/, as a plastic space balloon ion chamber. If the log N - log S curve for gamma bursts extends as the -3/2 power, the sensitivity is limited by gamma-burst peak overlap in time so that the question of the size spectrum and isotropy is maximally tested. Supernova type I prompt x-ray bursts of congruent to 3-ms duration should be detected at a rate of several per day from supernova at a distance greater than 100 Mpc.
Date: August 25, 1981
Creator: Colgate, S. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nitrogen oxide abatement by distributed fuel addition (open access)

Nitrogen oxide abatement by distributed fuel addition

The performance of the new combustor was tested. Experiments showed that this combustor has superior insulating quality than the previous one. Measured radial concentrations indicated uniform distribution of the primary fuel (coal) inside the fire tube resulting in reasonably flat concentration profiles. However, measured radial concentrations after the addition of the reburn fuel showed uneven distribution of the fuel resulting in parabolic concentration profiles, an indication of insufficient mixing in the reburn zone. In order to study mechanisms of nitrogenous species destruction in the reburn zone, it is necessary to achieve adequate mixing if the assumption of one dimensional plug flow behavior is to be valid. Thus, it became necessary to modify the injector design and the injection mode of the reburn fuel to achieve an adequate level of mixing which is the focus of this report. The results show that a minimum reburn fuel jet velocity of 15 m/s (standard conditions) was required which is about 80 times the velocity of the primary effluent. The use of nitrogen gas as a transport medium for the reburn fuel was necessary to achieve the desired jet velocities.
Date: August 25, 1989
Creator: Wendt, J. O. L. & Mereb, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Build-up of tritium in a liquid-lithium breeding blanket for an inertial-confinement-fusion chamber (open access)

Build-up of tritium in a liquid-lithium breeding blanket for an inertial-confinement-fusion chamber

The build-up of tritium in a liquid lithium breeding blanket for an ICF chamber has been examined. The break-even time is found to decrease both the increasing tritium breeding ratio and increasing values of ..cap alpha.., the fraction of unburned tritium absorbed in lithium. The break-even inventory also decreased with increasing breeding ratio but increases with increasing values ..cap alpha... For a molten-salt extraction process, the steady-state tritium inventory in lithium is inversely proportional to lithium flow rate through the extraction system. The lithium flow rate through the tritium extraction system required to maintain a given tritium concentration increases with increasing values of ..cap alpha...
Date: August 25, 1981
Creator: Meier, W. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mirror theory applied to toroidal systems (open access)

Mirror theory applied to toroidal systems

Central features of a mirror plasma are strong departures from Maxwellian distribution functions, ambipolar potentials and densities which vary along a field line, end losses, and the mirror field itself. To examine these features, mirror theorists have developed analytical and numerical techniques to solve the Fokker-Planck equation, evaluate the potentials consistent with the resulting distribution functions, and assess the microstability of these distributions. Various combinations of mirror-plasma features are present and important in toroidal plasmas as well, particularly in the edge region and in plasmas with strong rf heating. In this paper we survey problems in toroidal plasmas where mirror theory and computational techniques are applicable, and discuss in more detail three specific examples: calculation of the toroidal generalization of the Spitzer-Haerm distribution function (from which trapped-particle effects on current drive can be calculated), evaluation of the nonuniform potential and density set up by pulsed electron-cyclotron heating, and calculation of steady-state distribution functions in the presence of strong rf heating and collisions. 37 refs.
Date: August 25, 1987
Creator: Cohen, R.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Disposal costs for SRP high-level wastes in borosilicate glass and crystalline ceramic waste forms (open access)

Disposal costs for SRP high-level wastes in borosilicate glass and crystalline ceramic waste forms

Purpose of this document is to compare and contrast the overall burial costs of the glass and ceramic waste forms, including processing, storage, transportation, packaging, and emplacement in a repository. Amount of waste will require approximately 10,300 standard (24 in. i.d. x 9-5/6 ft length) canisters of waste glass, each containing about 3260 lb of waste at 28% waste loading. The ceramic waste form requires about one-third the above number of standard canisters. Approximately $2.5 billion is required to process and dispose of this waste, and the total cost is independent of waste form (glass or ceramic). The major cost items (about 80% of the total cost) for all cases are capital and operating expenses. The capital and 20-year operating costs for the processing facility are the same order of magnitude, and their sum ranges from about one-half of the total for the reference glass case to two-thirds of the total for the ceramic cases.
Date: August 25, 1982
Creator: Rozsa, R.B. & Campbell, J.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of intense-ion-beam propagation with a view toward measuring ion energy (open access)

Review of intense-ion-beam propagation with a view toward measuring ion energy

The subject of this review is intense ion beam propagation and the possibilities of measuring time dependent ion energy in the beam. Propagation effects discussed include charge separation, charge and current autoneutralization, electron thermalization and current neutralization decay. The interaction of a plasma beam with material obstacles, like collimators, and with transverse magnetic fields is also described. Depending on beam energy, density and pulse length, these interactions can include material ablation with plasmadynamic flow and undeflected propagation across transverse magnetic fields by a polarization drift. On the basis of this review I conclude that three diagnostics: a single floating potential probe, net current probes (Faraday cups) and a Rutherford scattering spectrometer appear capable of giving prompt, time dependent ion energy measurements.
Date: August 25, 1982
Creator: Garcia, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Nature of the Distortion of a GPHS Fueled Capsule Impacted on Various Media at Various Velocities and Under Various Boundary Conditions; Appendix F: Response of the GPHS Module to LH(Sub-2)-LO(Sub-2) Overpressure in Various Shielded and Unshielded Geometries (open access)

On the Nature of the Distortion of a GPHS Fueled Capsule Impacted on Various Media at Various Velocities and Under Various Boundary Conditions; Appendix F: Response of the GPHS Module to LH(Sub-2)-LO(Sub-2) Overpressure in Various Shielded and Unshielded Geometries

This body of work represents the parametric investigation of conditions of impact for a GPHS fueled capsule.
Date: August 25, 1987
Creator: Eck, Marshall B & Mukunda, Meera
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Current to Pressure Transducers for the Argon & Nitrogen Dewars (open access)

Current to Pressure Transducers for the Argon & Nitrogen Dewars

A current to pressure (I/P) transducer will be used in the D-Zero piping system. The transducer is necessary to precisely control the control valve positioners located at the argon and nitrogen dewars. A 4-20 rnA signal will come from the PLC function of the TI565. This electric signal must be converted by the transducer to a pneumatic signal of 3-15 psi which will position the actuator. By doing this, the valve can be opened or closed to any adjusted amount from the control room or a remote I/P controller. A total of 9 transducers will be used at the dewars. The nitrogen dewar will have 3 that are located outside and will have to be weatherproof. The argon dewar will have 6, located inside, that will have to be explosion proof or intrinsically safe.
Date: August 25, 1988
Creator: Serges, T. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurements of Neutrons in Enclosures and Outside of Shielding at the Tevatron (open access)

Measurements of Neutrons in Enclosures and Outside of Shielding at the Tevatron

The characteristics of the spectra of neutrons produced by the losses of accelerated proton beams both within accelerator enclosures and outside of shielding has been determined from measurements at various locations around the Fermilab Tevatron and its associated experimental areas. The measurements were performed with a multisphere spectrometer consisting of either /sup 6/LiI scintillators or /sup 6,7/LiF TLD's placed at the centers of moderating polyethylene spheres with diameters ranging from 5.08 to 45.7 cm. The fluence and dose equivalent energy distributions and average quality factors obtained from spectrum unfolding calculations are summarized for this accelerator environment. 22 refs., 8 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: August 25, 1988
Creator: Cossairt, J. D.; Elwyn, A. J.; Freeman, W. S.; Salsbury, W. C. & Yurista, P. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nitrogen oxide abatement by distributed fuel addition. Quarterly report No. 8, May 1, 1989--July 31, 1989 (open access)

Nitrogen oxide abatement by distributed fuel addition. Quarterly report No. 8, May 1, 1989--July 31, 1989

The performance of the new combustor was tested. Experiments showed that this combustor has superior insulating quality than the previous one. Measured radial concentrations indicated uniform distribution of the primary fuel (coal) inside the fire tube resulting in reasonably flat concentration profiles. However, measured radial concentrations after the addition of the reburn fuel showed uneven distribution of the fuel resulting in parabolic concentration profiles, an indication of insufficient mixing in the reburn zone. In order to study mechanisms of nitrogenous species destruction in the reburn zone, it is necessary to achieve adequate mixing if the assumption of one dimensional plug flow behavior is to be valid. Thus, it became necessary to modify the injector design and the injection mode of the reburn fuel to achieve an adequate level of mixing which is the focus of this report. The results show that a minimum reburn fuel jet velocity of 15 m/s (standard conditions) was required which is about 80 times the velocity of the primary effluent. The use of nitrogen gas as a transport medium for the reburn fuel was necessary to achieve the desired jet velocities.
Date: August 25, 1989
Creator: Wendt, J. O. L. & Mereb, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mars Rover RTG Study (open access)

Mars Rover RTG Study

This report summarizes the results of a Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator (RTG) design study conducted by Fairchild Space Company at the direction of the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of SpecialApplications, in suppport of the Mars Rover and Sample Return mission under investigation at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The report is a rearranged, updated, and significantly expanded amalgam of three interrelated papers presented at the 24th Intersocity Energy Conversion Engineering Conference (IECEC) at Arlington, Virginia, on August 10, 1989.
Date: August 25, 1989
Creator: Schock, Alfred
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal resources of the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming (open access)

Geothermal resources of the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming

Separate abstracts were prepared for two papers. (MHR)
Date: August 25, 1985
Creator: Heasler, H.P. & Hinckley, B.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commercial oxide paints as coatings for SiGe thermoelectric materials (open access)

Commercial oxide paints as coatings for SiGe thermoelectric materials

Silicon-germanium alloys are used as thermoelectric materials for radioisotope thermoelectric generators. One problem is the loss of the alloy by sublimation. In the Unicouple, sublimation was minimized by a Si/sub 3/N/sub 4/ coating. In the Multicouple design the application of Si/sub 3/N/sub 4/ coatings which is done at high temperature is not practical. Suppression of sublimation in the Multicouple design is presently accomplished by applying glass coatings. The difficulties encountered with the glass coatings are associated with the poor adherence of the coatings. In the present study, commercial oxide points (mainly ZrO/sub 2/) which have low thermal expansion coefficients are used as coating materials. No spalling from the surface of the coated sample occurred in 1506 hours at 1080/sup 0/C in vacuum, and sublimation was reduced significantly. Zirconium silicate was observed on the surface by x-ray diffraction.
Date: August 25, 1986
Creator: Amano, T.; Beaudry, B. J. & Gschneidner, K. A., Jr.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report of the task force on quench protection and power supply operation (open access)

Report of the task force on quench protection and power supply operation

This report presents the results of discussions during and work subsequent to a Workshop on Quench Analysis and Power Supply Operation held at the SSC-CDG on April 1-4, 1985. The major portion of this volume addresses quenches in the Design C and D magnets, as described in detail in Appendices A through H. Some work has been carried out on the power supply operation and the appropriate control philosophy as described in Appendices I through K. Further work will be required for a complete understanding of the quenches and of power supply operation, in particular of the response under transient conditions. A list of participants is included as Appendix L. The results of the appendices are presented in the main test of the report along with enough of the figures to verify the conclusions. Some of the effort on power supply operation can be found in the Commissioning and Operations Workshop report, SSC-SR-1005.
Date: August 25, 1985
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library