THE CALCINATION IN AIR OF BERYLLIUM OXALATE TRIHYDRATE TO BERYLLIUM OXIDE (open access)

THE CALCINATION IN AIR OF BERYLLIUM OXALATE TRIHYDRATE TO BERYLLIUM OXIDE

None
Date: October 19, 1961
Creator: Hamner, R.L. & Harris, L.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
EXTRACTION OF NEPTUNIUM FROM ACIDIC SOLUTIONS BY ORGANIC NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS COMPOUNDS (open access)

EXTRACTION OF NEPTUNIUM FROM ACIDIC SOLUTIONS BY ORGANIC NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS COMPOUNDS

Neptunium distribution coefficients from acid nitrate, chloride, and sulfate solutions by several organic nitiogen and phosphorus compounds were measured as functions of several extraction variables, including neptunium valence, acid and salt concentration, and reagent concentration. Extractability by all the reagents varied in the order Np(IV)> Np(VI)>> Np(V). Except for primary amines, all reagents extracted Np(IV) much more strongly from nitrate than sulfate solutions. Among organonitrogen compounds the order of extractability of Np(IV) was: quaternary> tertiary> primary and secondary from nitrate solutions but primary>> secondary> tertiary from sulfate solutions. Neptunium(IV) nitrate extractions with the different extractants passed through maxima at widely different acid concentrations. In most cases, extraction increased when nitric acid was replaced by nitrate salt. Extraction was usually approximately proportional to the square of the reagent concentration. (auth)
Date: October 19, 1961
Creator: Weaver, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
INFLUENCE OF RADIATION FROM AN UNSHIELDED REACTOR ON A NATURAL MICROFLORA (open access)

INFLUENCE OF RADIATION FROM AN UNSHIELDED REACTOR ON A NATURAL MICROFLORA

The soil microflora and its respiratory activity were measured in soil cores collected at different distances from an unshielded reactor. No direct correlation was found between dose received and microbial counts or respiration. Indication of a correlation between dose and microbial respiration was obtained after eliminating the overriding influence of moisture. Radiation probably affected the soil microflora through damage to the phanerogam vegetation rather than directly. This preliminary study indicates the need to have undisturbed sampling areas close to the ORNL fast burst reactor. Extensive dosimetry, both in and above the soil, in these areas, and a program of long-term ecological descriptibn, should be started before the reactor becomes operational. (auth)
Date: October 19, 1961
Creator: Witkamp, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
PLUTONIUM OXALATE DISK FILTER AND FILTER MEDIA STUDIES (open access)

PLUTONIUM OXALATE DISK FILTER AND FILTER MEDIA STUDIES

for filtration of plutonium oxalate slurries. A scalpel produces a slit in the filter precoat, leading to increased filtration in this slit, and the oxalate is removed by a doctor knife; this technique results in prolonged blowback cycles and more uniform delivery of filtered oxalate to subsequent processing steps. Several types of filter media were tested, and rigid porous aluminum oxide was found to be the best one. (D.L.C.)
Date: October 19, 1959
Creator: Rey, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pagosa Springs geothermal project. Final technical report (open access)

Pagosa Springs geothermal project. Final technical report

This booklet discusses some ideas and methods for using Colorado geothermal energy. A project installed in Pagosa Springs, which consists of a pipeline laid down 8th street with service to residences retrofitted to geothermal space heating, is described. (ACR)
Date: October 19, 1984
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of the pipe stemming load (open access)

Determination of the pipe stemming load

A mechanical model for the emplacement pipe system is developed. The model is then employed to determine the force applied to the surface collar of the emplacement pipe, the pipe-stemming load, and the stress along the emplacement pipe as a function of stemming height. These results are presented as integrals and a method for their numerical integration is given.
Date: October 19, 1979
Creator: Cowin, S. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
LCLS soft x-ray imager mirrors and their performance (open access)

LCLS soft x-ray imager mirrors and their performance

Soft X-ray imager mirrors have been designed, calibrated and fabricated at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and characterized at the Advanced Light Source for their performance between 200 and 1300 eV. The mirrors are coated with a multilayer coating consisting of 70 bilayers of W/ SiC. The mirrors are to reflect at 22.5 deg from grazing angle at 1.50 nm wavelength and the width of the reflectivity peak should be at least 1.3%. Also, the mirrors should be non-reflective elsewhere. Our multilayer design was optimized to satisfy these requirements. The coating is very challenging since the individual layer thicknesses need to be less than 1 nm thick and reproducibility from layer to layer is crucial. To minimize the second harmonic peak we designed a multilayer with {Gamma} = 0.5 (W and SiC layer thicknesses are the same). This way we end up with a mirror that has only the 1st and 3rd harmonic peak as shown in Figure 1. To suppress reflectivity outside the first peak we used our novel approach, an antireflective coating. Modeling predicted substantial reduction in reflectivity, especially for lower energies as shown in Figure 1. The experimental results of the soft x-ray imager mirror as measured at …
Date: October 19, 2007
Creator: Bajt, S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Remaining Sites Verification Package for the 1607-F7, 141-M Building Septic Tank, Waste Site Reclassification Form 2006-040 (open access)

Remaining Sites Verification Package for the 1607-F7, 141-M Building Septic Tank, Waste Site Reclassification Form 2006-040

The 1607-F7, 141-M Building Septic Tank waste site was a septic tank and drain field that received sanitary sewage from the former 141-M Building. Remedial action was performed in August and November 2005. The results of verification sampling demonstrate that residual contaminant concentrations support future unrestricted land uses that can be represented by a rural-residential scenario. These results also show that residual concentrations support unrestricted future use of shallow zone soil and that contaminant levels remaining in the soil are protective of groundwater and the Columbia River.
Date: October 19, 2006
Creator: Dittmer, L. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Capstone Depleted Uranium Aerosols: Generation and Characterization (open access)

Capstone Depleted Uranium Aerosols: Generation and Characterization

In a study designed to provide an improved scientific basis for assessing possible health effects from inhaling depleted uranium (DU) aerosols, a series of DU penetrators was fired at an Abrams tank and a Bradley fighting vehicle. A robust sampling system was designed to collect aerosols in this difficult environment and continuously monitor the sampler flow rates. Aerosols collected were analyzed for uranium concentration and particle size distribution as a function of time. They were also analyzed for uranium oxide phases, particle morphology, and dissolution in vitro. The resulting data provide input useful in human health risk assessments.
Date: October 19, 2004
Creator: Parkhurst, MaryAnn; Szrom, Fran; Guilmette, Ray; Holmes, Tom; Cheng, Yung-Sung; Kenoyer, Judson L. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies on Neutral Beam Injection into the SSPX Spheromak Plasma (open access)

Studies on Neutral Beam Injection into the SSPX Spheromak Plasma

In the Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment, (SSPX) ['Improved operation of the SSPX spheromak', R.D. Wood, D.N. Hill, E.B. Hooper, S. Woodruff1, H.S. McLean and B.W. Stallard, Nucl. Fusion 45 1582-1588 (2005)], plasmas with core electron temperatures reaching up to 500 eV at densities of 10{sup 20}/m{sup 3} have been sustained for several milliseconds, making them suitable as targets for neutral beam injection. High performance and further progress in understanding Spheromak plasma physics are expected if neutral beams are injected into the plasma. This paper presents the results of numerical 1.5 D modeling of the plasma to calculate neutral beam current drive and ion and electron heating. The results are presented for varying initial conditions of density, temperatures and profiles and beam energy, injection angle and power. Current drive efficiency (Ampere/Watt of absorbed power) of up to 0.08 can be achieved with best performance SSPX shots as target. Analyses of neutral beam heating indicate that ion temperatures of up to 1.5 keV and electron temperatures of up to 750 eV can be obtained with injection of about 1 MW of neutral beam for 5-10 ms and with diffusivities typically observed in SSPX. Injection targeting near the magnetic axis appears to be …
Date: October 19, 2007
Creator: Jayakumar, R; Pearlstein, L D; Casper, T A; Fowler, T K; Hill, D N; Hudson, B et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Energy Density Science at the Linac Coherent Light Source (open access)

High Energy Density Science at the Linac Coherent Light Source

High energy density science (HEDS), as a discipline that has developed in the United States from National Nuclear Security Agency (NNSA)-sponsored laboratory research programs, is, and will remain, a major component of the NNSA science and technology strategy. Its scientific borders are not restricted to NNSA. 'Frontiers in High Energy Density Physics: The X-Games of Contemporary Science' identified numerous exciting scientific opportunities in this field, while pointing to the need for a overarching interagency plan for its evolution. Meanwhile, construction of the first x-ray free-electron laser, the Office-of-Science-funded Linear Coherent Light Source-LCLS: the world's first free electron x-ray laser, with 100-fsec time resolution, tunable x-ray energies, a high rep rate, and a 10 order-of-magnitude increase in brightness over any other x-ray source--led to the realization that the scientific needs of NNSA and the broader scientific community could be well served by an LCLS HEDS endstation employing both short-pulse and high-energy optical lasers. Development of this concept has been well received in the community. NNSA requested a workshop on the applicability of LCLS to its needs. 'High Energy Density Science at the LCLS: NNSA Defense Programs Mission Need' was held in December 2006. The workshop provided strong support for the relevance …
Date: October 19, 2007
Creator: Lee, R W
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE ORIGIN OF LIFE ON EARTH AND ELSEWHERE. II (open access)

THE ORIGIN OF LIFE ON EARTH AND ELSEWHERE. II

The synthesis of relatively complex organic molecules by ionizing and radical mechanisms (induced by high energy radiations, ultraviolet and electric discharge) from methane, ammonia, water, and hydrogen is described, both theoretically and experimentally. It is shown that the molecules which tend to be formed under such random conditions are the very ones which today are the common building blocks in the biological reconstruction of organic material. Such molecules are the amino acids, the simple carboxylic and hydroxy acids, purines, pyrimidines, etc. The appearance of order among such random molecules is induced by two forces, namely, autocatalysis and crystallization. The latter is particularly important in the appearance of highly efficient macromolecular structures and arrangements which are so characteristic of present-day living organisms. Points of contact of these theories with experiment are indicated, and where confirmation has been obtained it is described, and the areas of ignorance, requiring further experimentation, are defined. A first step in a possible test of these prebiotic organic syntheses on other astral bodies has been made by examining the organic material found in meteorites. The nature of the structures appearing therein is indicated.
Date: October 19, 1960
Creator: Calvin, Melvin
System: The UNT Digital Library
Single-charge craters excavated during subsurface high-explosive experiments at Big Black Test Site, Mississippi (open access)

Single-charge craters excavated during subsurface high-explosive experiments at Big Black Test Site, Mississippi

Single-charge and row-charge subsurface cratering experiments were performed to learn how close-spacing enhances single-crater dimensions. Our first experimental phase established cratering curves for 60-lb charges of the chemical explosive. For the second phase, to be described in a subsequent report, the Row-cratering experiments were designed and executed. This data report contains excavated dimensions and auxiliary data for the single-charge cratering experiments. The dimensions for the row-charge experiments will be in the other report. Significant changes in the soil's water content appeared to cause a variability in the excavated dimensions. This variability clouded the interpretation and application of the cratering curves obtained.
Date: October 19, 1978
Creator: Woodruff, W. R. & Bryan, J. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the chemical explosion of an ion exchange resin column and resulting americium contamination of personnel in the 242-Z building, August 30, 1976 (open access)

Investigation of the chemical explosion of an ion exchange resin column and resulting americium contamination of personnel in the 242-Z building, August 30, 1976

As a result of an explosion in the Waste Treatment Facility, 242-Z Building, 200 West Area of the Hanford Reservation on August 30, 1976, the Manager of the Richland Operations Office (RL), Energy Research and Development Administration (ERDA), appointed an ERDA Committee to conduct a formal investigation and to prepare a report on their findings of this occurrence. The Committee was instructed to conduct the investigation in accordance with ERDAMC 0502, insofar as circumstances would permit, to cover and explain technical elements of the casual sequence(s) of the occurrence, and to describe management systems which should have or could have prevented the occurrence. This report is the result of the investigation and presents the conclusions of the review.
Date: October 19, 1976
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Double-exposure collector system. Final technical report (open access)

Double-exposure collector system. Final technical report

A retrofit solar water-heating system has been operating for the past two years in a three-story apartment building at Drexel University. The system employs two conventional collector banks (9 PPG collectors) mounted at the latitude angle for Philadelphia of 40 deg from the horizontal and two double-exposure collectors (DEC's) mounted vertically in mirrored enclosures. The relative performance of the conventional and double-exposure collectors has been monitored with an instrumentation system which was developed and installed in the basement of the apartment building. The DEC units have been found to provide from two to four times as much useful heat output per panel area than the PPG collectors. The higher relative performance values occur on clear winter days whereas lower relative performance values are found on clear summer days and generally overcast days. A cost analysis for a DEC unit relative to a conventional collector has also been performed. In the Philadelphia area the DEC units with their mirror enclosures would cost approximately 1.7 times as much per panel area as conventional collectors. Since the DEC units provide two to four times as much useful heat output, they are a cost-effective choice for flat or gently sloping roofs for which they …
Date: October 19, 1979
Creator: Larson, D. C. & Savery, C. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Follow-up inspection of the Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial-Action Program (open access)

Follow-up inspection of the Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial-Action Program

Corrective actions had been taken in four of the six areas of concern that were addressed in the 1982 report. The remaining two areas are summarized as follows: Certification of Remedial Actions. We found, in the initial inspection, that FUSRAP properties were not being certified as decontaminated in a timely manner following remedial action. This problem has not yet been resolved. The Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Energy acknowledged that the certification process is lengthy but maintained that progress was being made. The Assistant Secretary stated that attempts will be made to speed up the process; and Permanent Waste Disposal. The lack of permanent repositories for FUSRAP wastes continues to be a major issue. The Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Energy indicated to us that meetings are being held with state and congressional representatives to impress on them the need for locating disposal sites for FUSRAP wastes in their states.
Date: October 19, 1983
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discharge Forecast Modeling project FY87 progress report, October 1, 1986--September 30, 1987 (open access)

Discharge Forecast Modeling project FY87 progress report, October 1, 1986--September 30, 1987

This project originated as a result of the Strontium-90 Action Plan, a response to the abnormal release of radionuclides that occurred from White Oak Creek (WOC) during late November and early December 1985. Several notable problems became obvious during ORNL's response to this release: (1) no predetermined criteria existed for the operation of White Oak Dam (WOD) in response to spills, (2) the hydrodynamics of contaminant transport and dispersion within the WOC watershed and downstream were not adequately understood to support requests for modified reservoir releases, and (3) real-time data on streamflow, precipitation, and water quality within the watershed were not readily available in sufficient quantity and usable format. The modeling study was initiated to help address these problems. This report describes FY 87 accomplishments, including: improvements in data acquisition and evaluation; implementation and calibration of a model to forecast discharges of water and contaminants from the WOC watershed; implementation, documentation, and checking of a model to forecast concentrations of contaminants from WOC in the Clinch River; and three field studies that provide essential calibration data. Data from the field studies and user documentation of the Clinch River model are included as appendices to this report.
Date: October 19, 1987
Creator: Borders, D.M.; Hyndman, D.W. & Railsback, S.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report of the New Rings Study Group (open access)

Report of the New Rings Study Group

We have taken the approach here of trying to understand both the feasibility and practicality of varied options for new rings at Fermilab, rather than trying to produce a single detailed design. In other words, this document is not a design report and should not be construed as such. Our perception of the potential needs for new rings (in order of priority) is as follows: Antiproton Storage and/or Recovery: A facility for storing up to 4 x 10/sup 12/ antiprotons is needed. Recovery of antiprotons from the collider becomes a viable option if the luminosity is indeed dominated by emittance dilution rather than beam loss. New or Post-Booster: The goal here would be to inject into the existing Main Ring above transition. Improved performance of the Main Ring would be anticipated. New Main Ring: Advantages would include better emittance preservation, a faster cycle time for antiproton production, and the removal of interference/backgrounds at the B0 and D0 detectors. We discuss in this paper various scenarios based on one or more combinations of the above possibilities. 14 figs., 10 tabs.
Date: October 19, 1987
Creator: Holmes, S.D.; Dugan, G. & Marriner, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inertia and friction welding of aluminum alloy 1100 to type 316 stainless steel (open access)

Inertia and friction welding of aluminum alloy 1100 to type 316 stainless steel

The inertia and friction-welding processes were evaluated for joining aluminum alloy 1100-H14 and Type 316 vacuum-induction melted, vacuum-arc remelted (VIM VAR) stainless steel. While both processes consistently produced joints in which the strength exceeded the strength of the aluminum base metal, 100 percent bonding was not reliably achieved with inertia welding. The deficiency points out the need for development of nondestructive testing techniques for this type of joint. Additionally, solid-state volume diffusion did not appear to be a satisfactory explanation for the inertia and friction-welding bonding mechanism.
Date: October 19, 1979
Creator: Perkins, M.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
(Terminology standardization) (open access)

(Terminology standardization)

Terminological requirements in information management was but one of the principal themes of the 2nd Congress on Terminology and Knowledge Engineering. The traveler represented the American Society for Testing and Materials' Committee on Terminology, of which he is the Chair. The traveler's invited workshop emphasized terminology standardization requirements in databases of material properties as well as practical terminology standardizing methods. The congress included six workshops in addition to approximately 82 lectures and papers from terminologists, artificial intelligence practitioners, and subject specialists from 18 countries. There were approximately 292 registrants from 33 countries who participated in the congress. The congress topics were broad. Examples were the increasing use of International Standards Organization (ISO) Standards in legislated systems such as the USSR Automated Data Bank of Standardized Terminology, the enhanced Physics Training Program based on terminology standardization in Physics in the Chinese province of Inner Mongolia, and the technical concept dictionary being developed at the Japan Electronic Dictionary Research Institute, which is considered to be the key to advanced artificial intelligence applications. The more usual roles of terminology work in the areas of machine translation. indexing protocols, knowledge theory, and data transfer in several subject specialties were also addressed, along with numerous …
Date: October 19, 1990
Creator: Strehlow, R.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Genetic recombination in mammalian cells in culture. Progress report, May 1977--April 1978 (open access)

Genetic recombination in mammalian cells in culture. Progress report, May 1977--April 1978

Two approaches were made to studies on genetic recombination in Chinese hamster cells: cytogenetics and the synthesis of a hybrid cell line containing two noncomplementing nutritional mutants, presumably in the same cistron, that can be used to detect crossing over to produce nutritional independence. The cytogenetic approach was used to characterize existing mutants and to study new mutants. It is also being used to characterize the parents of the hybrids and the hybrids themselves with a view that prototrophic recombinants selected biochemically will also show recombination cytologically. (HLW)
Date: October 19, 1978
Creator: Morse, M. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary studies of an infrared free-electron laser oscillator at the ATF(BNL) (open access)

Preliminary studies of an infrared free-electron laser oscillator at the ATF(BNL)

In this report, I present results of a theoretical 1-D model discussed by G. Dattoli, A. Reniere and myself. The validity of a steady-state analysis is discussed and some estimates are given of the effects introduced by the ''lethargy'' of the laser pulse due to the finite length of the e/sup /minus// pulse. Also, I present analytical expressions for the laser pulse in terms of supermodes (wave-packets of cavity modes), their evolution, physical width as well as the associated frequency spectrum. Next, I present results obtained with a 3-D code for the single pass, small-signal gain. In the appendix, I summarize the symbols used in this report. 2 refs., 6 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: October 19, 1988
Creator: Gallardo, J.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
UF/sub 6//sup -/ production from surface reactions of uranium and fluorine (open access)

UF/sub 6//sup -/ production from surface reactions of uranium and fluorine

The production of UF/sub 6//sup -/ by reaction of a collimated stream of fluorine gas with a resistively heated uranium wire was studied at temperatures from 870 to 1020/sup 0/C and pressures less than 10/sup -3/ torr. At these temperatures below the uranium melting point, the formation of UF/sub 3/ intermediate on the uranium surface resulted in low UF/sub 6//sup -/ yields. The kinetic energy of the UF/sub 6//sup -/ ion was on the order of thermal energies. The work function of uranium was measured to be 4.20 +- 0.14 eV.
Date: October 19, 1978
Creator: McLean, J. E.; Dillon, J. J. & Talbert, C. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
3-D numerical analysis of a high-gain free-electron laser (open access)

3-D numerical analysis of a high-gain free-electron laser

We present a novel approach to the 3-dimensional high-gain free- electron laser amplifier problem. The method allows us to write the laser field as an integral equation which can be efficiently and accurately evaluated on a small computer. The model is general enough to allow the inclusion of various initial electron beam distributions to study the gain reduction mechanism and its dependence on the physical parameters. 16 refs., 8 figs., 1 tab.
Date: October 19, 1988
Creator: Gallardo, J.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library