Analysis of historical gross gamma logging data from BY tank farm (open access)

Analysis of historical gross gamma logging data from BY tank farm

Gross gamma ray logs, recorded from January 1975 through mid-year 1994 as part of the Single-Shell Tank Farm Dry Well Surveillance Program, have been reanalyzed for the BY tank farm to locate the presence of mobile radionuclides in the subsurface. This report presents the BY tank farm gross gamma ray data in such a way as to assist others in their study of vadose zone mechanisms.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Myers, D. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
EMPLACEMENT DRIFT SHIELDING CALCULATION (open access)

EMPLACEMENT DRIFT SHIELDING CALCULATION

The purpose of this analysis is to determine the structural response of a TRIGA Department of Energy (DOE) spent nuclear fuel (SNF) codisposal canister placed in a 5-Defense High Level Waste (DHLW) waste package (WP) and subjected to a tipover design basis event (DBE) dynamic load; the results will be reported in terms of displacements and stress magnitudes. This activity is associated with the WP design.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Nielsen, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hazard Analysis Database Report (open access)

Hazard Analysis Database Report

The Hazard Analysis Database was developed in conjunction with the hazard analysis activities conducted in accordance with DOE-STD-3009-94, Preparation Guide for US Department of Energy Nonreactor Nuclear Facility Safety Analysis Reports, for the Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) Final Safety Analysis Report (FSAR). The FSAR is part of the approved TWRS Authorization Basis (AB). This document describes, identifies, and defines the contents and structure of the TWRS FSAR Hazard Analysis Database and documents the configuration control changes made to the database. The TWRS Hazard Analysis Database contains the collection of information generated during the initial hazard evaluations and the subsequent hazard and accident analysis activities. The database supports the preparation of Chapters 3,4, and 5 of the TWRS FSAR and the USQ process and consists of two major, interrelated data sets: (1) Hazard Evaluation Database--Data from the results of the hazard evaluations; and (2) Hazard Topography Database--Data from the system familiarization and hazard identification.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: GAULT, G.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
HIGH RESOLUTION PHOTOEMISSION STUDIES OF COMPLEX MATERIALS. (open access)

HIGH RESOLUTION PHOTOEMISSION STUDIES OF COMPLEX MATERIALS.

Recent instrumentation developments in photoemission are providing new insights into the physics of complex materials. With increased energy and momentum resolution, it has become possible to examine in detail different contributions to the self-energy or inverse lifetime of the photohole created in the photoexcitation process, Employing momentum distribution and energy distribution curves, a detailed study of the optimally doped cuprate, Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub g+{delta}}, shows that the material behaves like a non-Fermi liquid with no evidence for the quasi-particles characteristic of a Fermi liquid.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: JOHNSON,P.D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Resolution Photoemission Studies of Complex Materials (open access)

High Resolution Photoemission Studies of Complex Materials

Recent instrumentation developments in photoemission are providing new insights into the physics of complex materials. With increased energy and momentum resolution, it has become possible to examine in detail different contributions to the self-energy or inverse lifetime of the photohole created in the photoexcitation process. Employing momentum distribution and energy distribution curves, a detailed study of the optimally doped cuprate, Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub 8+{delta}}, shows that the material behaves like a non-Fermi liquid with no evidence for the quasi-particles characteristic of a Fermi liquid.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Johnson, P. D.; Valla, T.; Fedorov, A.; Reisfeld, G. & Hulbert, S. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inertial Confinement Fusion quarterly report October - December 1998, volume 9, number 1 (open access)

Inertial Confinement Fusion quarterly report October - December 1998, volume 9, number 1

The injection laser system (ILS), or front end, is the portion of the National Ignition Facility (NIF) where a single pulse is produced, modulated, and shaped, then amplified and multiplexed to feed the 192 main amplifier chains in the NIF. The ILS's three major subsystems are summarized in the overview, then described in detail in their own sections. In many cases, the subsystems have been developed and are in an engineering prototype phase in which we work with outside vendors to produce hardware. We have also connected two of the subsystems, the master oscillator room (MOR) and preamplifier module (PAM) development labs, to perform integrated performance measurements on a combined system.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Powell, H
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A JAVA User Interface for the Virtual Human (open access)

A JAVA User Interface for the Virtual Human

A human simulation environment, the Virtual Human (VH), is under development at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). Virtual Human connects three-dimensional (3D) anatomical models of the body with dynamic physiological models to investigate a wide range of human biological and physical responses to stimuli. We have utilized the Java programming language to develop a flexible user interface to the VH. The Java prototype interface has been designed to display dynamic results from selected physiological models, with user control of the initial model parameters and ability to steer the simulation as it is proceeding. Taking advantage of Java�s Remote Method Invocation (RMI) features, the interface runs as a Java client that connects to a Java RMI server process running on a remote server machine. The RMI server can couple to physiological models written in Java, or in other programming languages, including C and FORTRAN. Future versions of the interface will be linked to 3D anatomical models of the human body to complete the development of the VH.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Easterly, C. E.; Strickler, D. J.; Tolliver, J. S. & Ward, R. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Model-Based Engineering and Manufacturing CAD/CAM Benchmark. (open access)

Model-Based Engineering and Manufacturing CAD/CAM Benchmark.

The Benchmark Project was created from a desire to identify best practices and improve the overall efficiency and performance of the Y-12 Plant's systems and personnel supporting the manufacturing mission. The mission of the benchmark team was to search out industry leaders in manufacturing and evaluate their engineering practices and processes to determine direction and focus for Y-12 modernization efforts. The companies visited included several large established companies and a new, small, high-tech machining firm. As a result of this effort, changes are recommended that will enable Y-12 to become a more modern, responsive, cost-effective manufacturing facility capable of supporting the needs of the Nuclear Weapons Complex (NWC) into the 21st century. The benchmark team identified key areas of interest, both focused and general. The focus areas included Human Resources, Information Management, Manufacturing Software Tools, and Standards/Policies and Practices. Areas of general interest included Infrastructure, Computer Platforms and Networking, and Organizational Structure. The results of this benchmark showed that all companies are moving in the direction of model-based engineering and manufacturing. There was evidence that many companies are trying to grasp how to manage current and legacy data. In terms of engineering design software tools, the companies contacted were somewhere …
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Domm, T.C. & Underwood, R.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Point-spread function in depleted and partially depleted CCDs (open access)

Point-spread function in depleted and partially depleted CCDs

The point spread function obtainable in an astronomical instrument using CCD readout is limited by a number of factors, among them the lateral diffusion of charge before it is collected in the potential wells. They study this problem both theoretically and experimentally, with emphasis on the thick CCDs on high-resistivity n-type substrates being developed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Groom, D. E.; Eberhard, P. H.; Holland, S. E.; Levi, M. E.; Palaio, N. P.; Perlmutter, S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE REVITALIZED NSLS VUV RING. (open access)

THE REVITALIZED NSLS VUV RING.

A status report on the revitalization of the NSLS VUV ring will be presented, concentrating on three areas: (1) the four infrared ports (U2A/B, U4IR, U10A/B, and U12IR), (2) conversion of out-of-date toroidal grating monochromators to spherical grating type (U4A, U7A, and U12A), and (3) new insertion device beamlines (U5UA and U13UB). All of these beamlines were designed (new ones) or upgraded (old ones) to serve a specific scientific need represented by the PRTs (both NSLS and non-NSLS based) involved. Therefore, an overview of the scientific programs served by these new beamlines will be given, as well as a summary of the beamline optical designs and operating performance.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: HULBERT,S.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The revitalized NSLS VUV ring (open access)

The revitalized NSLS VUV ring

A status report on the revitalization of the NSLS VUV ring will be presented, concentrating on three areas: (1) the four infrared ports (U2A/B, U4IR, U10A/B, and U12IR), (2) conversion of out-of-date toroidal grating monochromators to spherical grating type (U4A, U7A, and U12A), and (3) new insertion device beamlines (U5UA and U13UB). All of these beamlines were designed (new ones) or upgraded (old ones) to serve a specific scientific need represented by the PRTs (both NSLS and non-NSLS based) involved. Therefore, an overview of the scientific programs served by these new beamlines will be given, as well as a summary of the beamline optical designs and operating performance.
Date: October 13, 1999
Creator: Hulbert, S.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Definition of the Radionuclide Inventory for the DOE Spent Nuclear Fuel Used in the TSPA-VA Base Case (open access)

Definition of the Radionuclide Inventory for the DOE Spent Nuclear Fuel Used in the TSPA-VA Base Case

The purpose of this document is to present the details of the calculations used to define the radionuclide inventory for the Department of Energy (DOE) spent nuclear fuel (SNF) used in the TSPA-VA calculations.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Smith, A. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drying damaged K West fuel elements (Summary of whole element furnace runs 1 through 8) (open access)

Drying damaged K West fuel elements (Summary of whole element furnace runs 1 through 8)

N Reactor fuel elements stored in the Hanford K Basins were subjected to high temperatures and vacuum conditions to remove water. Results of the first series of whole element furnace tests i.e., Runs 1 through 8 were collected in this summary report. The report focuses on the six tests with breached fuel from the K West Basin which ranged from a simple fracture at the approximate mid-point to severe damage with cladding breaches at the top and bottom ends with axial breaches and fuel loss. Results of the tests are summarized and compared for moisture released during cold vacuum drying, moisture remaining after drying, effects of drying on the fuel element condition, and hydrogen and fission product release.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: LAWRENCE, L.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
EUVE spectroscopy of polars (open access)

EUVE spectroscopy of polars

An admittedly pedantic but hopefully useful and informative analysis is presented of the <I>EUVE</I> 70-180 Å spectra of nine polars. These spectra are fit with three different models - a blackbody, a pure-H stellar atmosphere, and a solar abundance stellar atmosphere|to reveal the presence of spectral features such as absorption lines and edges, and to investigate the sensitivity of the derived (<i>kT, N</i><sub>H</sub>, solid angle) and inferred (fractional emitting area, bolometric luminosity) parameters to the model assumptions. Among the models tested, the blackbody model best describes the observed spectra, although the untested irradiated solar abundance stellar atmosphere model is likely a better overall description of the EUV/soft X-ray spectra
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Mauche, C W
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Speed, High-Resolution Analog Waveform Sampling in VLSI Technology (open access)

High-Speed, High-Resolution Analog Waveform Sampling in VLSI Technology

Switched-capacitor analog memories are well-suited to a number of applications where a continuous digitization of analog signals is not needed. In data acquisition systems based on the use of an analog memory, the input waveforms are sampled and stored at a high rate for a limited period of time, and the analog samples are then retrieved at a lower rate and digitized with a slow ADC before new waveforms are acquired. The advantages of using an analog memory are lower overall power dissipation and cost, higher density and reliability, and potentially superior performance. The analog memory essentially exploits the fact that the sampling and storage of samples in a bank of analog memory cells can be accomplished at a higher rate and with a greater precision than direct digital conversion. This dissertation examines the important components of an analog memory in detail and investigates their use in a number of architectures. The research has led to the design of an analog memory that can acquire analog waveforms at sampling rates of several hundred MHz with a dynamic range and linearity of more than 12 bits, without the need for elaborate calibration and correction procedures. This is accomplished by means of …
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Haller, Gunther
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Massively Parallel Linear Stability Analysis with P_ARPACK for 3D Fluid Flow Modeled with MPSalsa (open access)

Massively Parallel Linear Stability Analysis with P_ARPACK for 3D Fluid Flow Modeled with MPSalsa

We are interested in the stability of three-dimensional fluid flows to small dkturbances. One computational approach is to solve a sequence of large sparse generalized eigenvalue problems for the leading modes that arise from discretizating the differential equations modeling the flow. The modes of interest are the eigenvalues of largest real part and their associated eigenvectors. We discuss our work to develop an effi- cient and reliable eigensolver for use by the massively parallel simulation code MPSalsa. MPSalsa allows simulation of complex 3D fluid flow, heat transfer, and mass transfer with detailed bulk fluid and surface chemical reaction kinetics.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Lehoucq, R. B. & Salinger, A. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quantum Suppression of beamstrahlung for future e+e- linear collider: an evaluation of QED backgrounds (open access)

Quantum Suppression of beamstrahlung for future e+e- linear collider: an evaluation of QED backgrounds

Beamstrahlung at interaction point may present severe limitations on linear collider performance. The approach to reduce this effect adopted for all current designs at 0.5 TeV range in center-of-mass energy will become more difficult and less effective at higher energy. We discuss the feasibility of an alternative approach, based on an effect known as quantum suppression of beamstrahlung, for future linear colliders at multi-TeV energy.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Xie, Ming
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ship-Track Clouds, Aerosol, and Ship Dynamic Effects; A Climate Perspective from Ship-Based Measurements (open access)

Ship-Track Clouds, Aerosol, and Ship Dynamic Effects; A Climate Perspective from Ship-Based Measurements

Ship-track clouds are marine boundary layer clouds that form behind ocean ships and are observed from satellites in the visible and near infrared. Ship-track clouds provide a rare opportunity to connect aerosol cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) emissions and observable changes in marine stratiform clouds. A very small change in the reflectivity of these eastern Pacific and Atlantic clouds (about 4%) provides a climate feedback of similar magnitude to doubling CO{sub 2} (increasing cloud reflectivity corresponds to global cooling). The Department of Energy sponsored research from 1991 to 1995 to study ship-track clouds including two ocean-based experiments in the summers of 1991 and 1994. These experiments showed that ship-track cloud properties were often more complex those related to a reduction of droplet size with an increase in number associated with increasing CCN from the ship's plume. The clouds showed evidence of morphological changes more likely to be associated with cloud dynamic effects either initiated by the increased CCN or directly by the ship's heat output or turbulent air wake. The fact that marine stratiform clouds, that are susceptible to ship track formation, are starved for both CCN and convective turbulence complicates the separation of the two effects.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Porch, W.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test report for PAS-1 cask certification for shipping payload B (open access)

Test report for PAS-1 cask certification for shipping payload B

This test report documents the successful inspection and testing to certify two NuPac PAS-1 casks in accordance with US Department of Energy Certificate of Compliance (CoC) USA/9184/B(U). The primary and secondary containment vessels of each cask met the acceptance criteria defined in the CoC and the test plan.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: MERCADO, J.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tethered Chains in Poor Solvent Conditions: An Experimental Study Involving Langmuir Diblock Copolymer Monolayers (open access)

Tethered Chains in Poor Solvent Conditions: An Experimental Study Involving Langmuir Diblock Copolymer Monolayers

We have employed Langmuir monolayer of highly asymmetric polydimethylsiloxane- polystyrene (PDMS-PS) diblock copolymers on dioctyl phthalate (DOP) at temperatures ranging from 22 "C to -35 `C as a model system for tethered chains in poor solvent conditions. The thicknesses of the tethered PS layers extending into the DOP subphase, measured by neutron reflection, decrease with decreasing temperature (T) over this entire r~ge. However, the v~iation with T becomes weak below -20 "C. At the ]owest T, the layer thicknesses are contracted 55 % -75 `% of their values at the theta condition (T8 = 22 "C), but are still quite swollen compared to the fully collapsed, nonsolvent limit. The contraction of the layer with decreasing T is determined as a function of surface density and molecular weight. These data are compared to universal scaling forms. The PS segments are depleted from the air surface over the entire T range, the thickness of the depletion layer increasing slightly with decreasing T. The free energy of the surface layer is probed by surface tension measurements. Negative surface pressures are observed at low coverages for both PDMS-PS and PDMS monolayer, indicating metastability toward lateral phase separation. Evidence for a trruisition from a dispersed …
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Kent, M. S.; Lee, L. T.; Majewski, J.; Satija, S. & Smith, G. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Use of X-Ray Microbeams in Materials Science (open access)

The Use of X-Ray Microbeams in Materials Science

Most materials are heterogeneous on mesoscopic length scales (tenths-to-tens of microns), and materials properties depend critically on mesoscopic structures such as grain sizes, texture, and impurities. The recent availability of intense, focused x-ray microbeams at synchrotron facilities has enabled new techniques for mesoscale materials characterization. We describe instrumentation and experiments on the MHATT-CAT and UNICAT undulator beamlines at the Advanced Photon Source which use micron and submicron-size x-ray beams to investigate the grain orientation, local strain and defect content in a variety of materials of technological interest. Results from a combinatorial study on epitaxial growth of oxide films on textured metal substrates will be described to illustrate x-ray microbeam capabilities.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Budai, J. D.; Chung, J.-S.; Ice, G. E.; Larson, B. C.; Lowe, W. P.; Norton, D. P. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Vector potential remap for 2d MHD (open access)

Vector potential remap for 2d MHD

This report describes an algorithm to remap (rezone) the magnetic vector potential in 2D MHD calculations. This extends a previously described Lagrangian scheme [1] for use with ALE grids, when combined with a suitable remap capability for the hydrodynamic variables. In this scheme, the magnetic field <b>B</b> is a zone quantity derived from the node based vector potential <b>A</b> (<i>B</i><sub>x</sub>, <i>B</i><sub>y</sub>, and <i>A</i><sub>z</sub> in Cartesian geometry, (<i>B</i><sub>z</sub>, <i>B</i><sub>r</sub>, and <i>A</i><sub>(small phi)</sub> in cylindrical geometry). The scheme outlined here is closely related to a flux conserving remap of the magnetic field. Because <b>B</b> is derived from the updated vector potential, however, flux conservation and vanishing divergence are guaranteed; only accuracy is a concern. This is in contrast to schemes based directly on <b>B</b>, which require the additional constraint of preserving zero divergence [2, 3]. Beginning with Cartesian geometry, a straight forward development of the algorithm is first presented; an alternative view is then considered which makes clear the relationship to a flux conservative remapping of the zonal magnetic field. Examples comparing first and second order algorithms are shown, and the issue of energy conservation is discussed. Finally, the generalization to cylindrical geometry is given.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Rambo, P W
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
W and WSi(x) Ohmic Contacts on p- And n-Type GaN (open access)

W and WSi(x) Ohmic Contacts on p- And n-Type GaN

W and WSi ohmic contacts on both p- and n-type GaN have been annealed at temperatures from 300-1000 *C. There is minimal reaction (< 100 ~ broadening of the metal/GaN interface) even at 1000 *C. Specific contact resistances in the 10-5 f2-cm2 range are obtained for WSiX on Si-implanted GaN with a peak doping concentration of- 5 x 1020 cm-3, after annealing at 950 `C. On p-GaN, leaky Schottky diode behavior is observed for W, WSiX and Ni/Au contacts at room temperature, but true ohmic characteristics are obtained at 250 - 300 *C, where the specific contact resistances are typically in the 10-2 K2-cm2 range. The best contacts for W and WSiX are obtained after 700 *C annealing for periods of 30- 120 sees. The formation of &WzN interracial phases appear to be important in determining the contact quality.
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Abernathy, C. R.; Cao, X. A.; Eizenberg, M.; Han, J.; Lothian, J. R.; Pearton, S. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Z-Pinch Drivers for Shock Physics Research (open access)

Z-Pinch Drivers for Shock Physics Research

The recent development of Z pinch drivers for producing intense radiation envkomn~ enables study of physical and mechanical properties of condensed materials in regimes previously inaccessible in the Mm-am-y. With Z pinch radiation sources, it is possible fo subject mm-sized sampies to pianar compressions of a fe w Mbar. Tie-resolved velocity interferometry was used to perform the first shock loading and unloading profiles in Al and Be for ablatively driven shock$s to 3 Mbar and the first iseritropic loading of iron specimens to 300 War. A principai goai of our shock physics program is to establish a capability to make accurats eqwion of state measurements on the Z pulsed radiation source. The Z accelerator is a source of intense radntion, which can be used to drive ablative shocks for E(X$ studies. With this source, ablative muki-Mbar shocks can be produced to study materials over the range of interest to both weapons and ICF physics programs. In developing the capability to diagnose these types of studies on Z, techniques commonly used in conventional impact generated experiments were implemented. The primary diagnostic presently being used for this work is ve"!ocity interferoinetry, VL%4R, [2] which not only provides Hugoniot particle velocity measurements, but …
Date: October 13, 1998
Creator: Asay, J.; Bernard, M.; Clark, B.; Fleming, K.; Hall, C.; Holland, K. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library