Plan for the Future of Neutron Research on Condensed Matter : An Argonne National Laboratory Report Prepared in Response to the "Report of the Review Panel on Neutron Scattering" (open access)

Plan for the Future of Neutron Research on Condensed Matter : An Argonne National Laboratory Report Prepared in Response to the "Report of the Review Panel on Neutron Scattering"

The Review Panel on Neutron Scattering has recommended an expanded budget to allow systematic development of the field. An alternative plan for the future of neutron research on condensed matter is presented here, in case it is not possible to fund the expanded budget. This plan leads, in a rational and logical way, to a world-class neutron source that will ensure the vitality of the field and exploit the many benefits that state-of-the-art neutron facilities can bring to programs in the materials and biological sciences.
Date: January 27, 1981
Creator: Argonne National Laboratory
System: The UNT Digital Library
Argonne National Laboratory Chemical Engineering Division Annual Technical Report: 1980 (open access)

Argonne National Laboratory Chemical Engineering Division Annual Technical Report: 1980

Report of activities of Argonne Chemical Engineering Division, including advanced battery project, electro-chemical project management, advanced fuel cell development, utilization of coal, magnetohydrodynamics heat and seed recovery technology, solar energy, fast reactor chemistry research, nuclear fuel cycle studies, magnetic fusion energy research, and basic energy science.
Date: June 1981
Creator: Argonne National Laboratory. Chemical Engineering Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Division of Biological and Medical Research Annual Report 1980 (open access)

Division of Biological and Medical Research Annual Report 1980

The research during 1980 in the Division of Biological and Medical Research, Argonne National Laboratory, is summarized. Research related to nuclear energy includes the delineation, in the6 eagle, of the responses to continuous low level Co gamma radiation and the development of cellular indicators of preclinical phases of leukemia; comparison of lifetime effects in mice of low level neutron and Co gamma radiation.
Date: August 1981
Creator: Argonne National Laboratory. Division of Biological and Medical Research.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiological and Environmental Research Division Annual Report: Part 2, Center for Human Radiobiology, July 1979-June 1980 (open access)

Radiological and Environmental Research Division Annual Report: Part 2, Center for Human Radiobiology, July 1979-June 1980

Annual report of the Argonne National Laboratory Radiological and Environmental Research Division regarding activities related to the Center for Human Radiobiology. This report discusses an inquiry into the mechanisms and dosimetry for induction of malignancies by radium, and studies of individuals exposed to radium and thorium, as well as to other radionuclides,.
Date: May 1981
Creator: Argonne National Laboratory. Radiological and Environmental Research Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiological and Environmental Research Division Annual Report: Part 3, Ecology, January-December 1980 (open access)

Radiological and Environmental Research Division Annual Report: Part 3, Ecology, January-December 1980

Annual report of the Argonne National Laboratory Radiological and Environmental Research Division regarding activities related to ecology. This report discuses programs including a development project for microcosm screening systems, two initiatives in ecological modeling, and a program of field experiments for a national assessment of crop losses due to air pollution.
Date: July 1981
Creator: Argonne National Laboratory. Radiological and Environmental Research Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiological and Environmental Research Division Annual Report: Part 4, Atmospheric Physics, January-December 1980 (open access)

Radiological and Environmental Research Division Annual Report: Part 4, Atmospheric Physics, January-December 1980

Annual report of the Argonne National Laboratory Radiological and Environmental Research Division regarding activities related to atmospheric physics. This report discusses research activities on the transport, removal and, to a lesser extent, transformation of pollutants in the lower atmosphere.
Date: August 1981
Creator: Argonne National Laboratory. Radiological and Environmental Research Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lithium/Iron Sulfide Batteries for Electric-Vehicle Propulsion and Other Applications Progress Report for October 1979-September 1980 (open access)

Lithium/Iron Sulfide Batteries for Electric-Vehicle Propulsion and Other Applications Progress Report for October 1979-September 1980

This report covers the research, development, and management activities of the programs involving high-performance lithium-aluminum/iron sulfide batteries at Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) and at contractors' laboratories during the period October 1979 through September 1980. These batteries, which are being developed for electric-vehicle propulsion and stationary energy storage applications, consist of vertically oriented prismatic cells with one or more inner positive electrodes of FeS or FeS2 facing negative electrodes of lithium-aluminum, and molten LiCl-KCl electrolyte.
Date: February 1981
Creator: Barney, Duane L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calcium/metal Sulfide Battery Development Program. Progress Report, October 1979 - September 1980 (open access)

Calcium/metal Sulfide Battery Development Program. Progress Report, October 1979 - September 1980

A Ca-Al-Si/FeS2 cell has been developed and has exhibited reasonably stable capacity through 3200 h of operation. This system is expected to be capable of meeting the ultimate performance goals (i.e., 160 W.h/kg) of this development program. Further tests of this cell system in the coming year will better define its ultimate performance capabilities.
Date: March 1981
Creator: Barney, Duane L.; Roche, M. F.; Preto, S. K.; Ross, L. E.; Otto, N. C. & Martino, F. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Experimental Method for Reactor-Noise Measurements of Effective Beta (open access)

An Experimental Method for Reactor-Noise Measurements of Effective Beta

A variance-to-mean noise technique, modified to eliminate systematic errors from drifting of reactor power, has been used to infer integral values of effective beta for uranium and plutonium fueled fast reactor modk-ups. The measurement technique, including corrections for a finite detector-electrometer time response, is described together with preliminary beta measurement results.
Date: September 1981
Creator: Bennett, E. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the Workshop on Foundations of the Relativistic Theory of Atomic Structure : Held at Argonne National Laboratory, December 4-5, 1980 (open access)

Proceedings of the Workshop on Foundations of the Relativistic Theory of Atomic Structure : Held at Argonne National Laboratory, December 4-5, 1980

Although the Dirac theory of the hydrogen atom was proposed more than half a century ago, extension of the theory and its practical applications to complex atomic spectra took decades to mature. Development of quantum electrodynamics (QED) in its modern form, advances in high precision experimental techniques, and invention of high-speed computers have made atomic spectroscopy one of the most accurate branches of physics today, both in theory and experiment. In addition to a long-standing need to identify line-spectra coming from far and near parts of the universe, necessities such as to test QED further and to provide reliable data for ions in tokamak plasmas require an understanding of the theory of relativistic atomic structure beyond the framework of the original Dirac theory. Twenty articles from the proceedings of the workshop are presented. Contributed papers are grouped into theoretical and experimental subjects and presented after the papers for the second (atomic structure calculations) and third (experiment) sessions of the Workshop. Alphabetical listing of the authors is presented in Appendix 1, program of the Workshop in Appendix 2, and the list of the participants in Appendix 3.
Date: March 1981
Creator: Berry, H. G.; Cheng, K. T.; Johnson, W. R. & Kim, Yong-Ki
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design, Construction, and Initial Operation of the ANL Research Salt-Gradient Solar Pond (open access)

Design, Construction, and Initial Operation of the ANL Research Salt-Gradient Solar Pond

The design consideration of a 1/4 acre research salt-gradient solar pond is described. Experience learned during the construction of the solar pond is presented. Initial operation of the pond indicates that the construction of the pond is sound and no leakage has occurred. The pond began to warm up during March of 1981. The maximum pond temperature reached 63 C at the end of July and it is still rising. All signs indicate that the operation of the well instrumented pond will be a success and the performance of the pond will be as expected, if not better.
Date: 1981
Creator: Cha, Y. S.; Sha, W. T. & Hull, J. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
TCLUST1: A Computer Program for Analysis of Intersubassembly Heat Transfer in an LMFBR (open access)

TCLUST1: A Computer Program for Analysis of Intersubassembly Heat Transfer in an LMFBR

The TCLUST1 computer program was developed to study the transient thermal behavior of a subassembly of a liquid-metal fast breeder reactor (LMFBR) that is thermally coupled to its six neighboring subassemblies. Each of the seven subassemblies may be either a reflector subassembly, which contains a single solid hexagonal rod, or a pin-bundle subassembly. The TCLUST1 analytical model was developed based on conservation of energy, and the temperature distribution in the subassembly was obtained using the successive over-relaxation (SOR) technique. Measured temperatures obtained from a natural-convection flow test performed in EBR-II compare well with those predicted by TCLUST1. Appendixes describe the code input and go through a sample program.
Date: April 1981
Creator: Chang, L. K. & Feldman, E. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Estimation of Sparse Jacobian Matrices and Graph Coloring Problems (open access)

Estimation of Sparse Jacobian Matrices and Graph Coloring Problems

Given a mapping with a sparse Jacobian matrix, the problem of minimizing the number of function evaluations needed to estimate the Jacobian matrix by differences is investigated. This problem can be attacked as a graph coloring problem and this approach leads to very efficient algorithms. The behavior of these algorithms is studied and, in particular, it is proved that two of the algorithms are optimal for band graphs. Numerical evidence is presented which indicates that these two algorithms are nearly optimal on practical problems.
Date: June 1981
Creator: Coleman, Thomas F. & Moré, Jorge J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Preconditioned Conjugate Gradient Method for Solving a Class of Non-Symmetric Linear Systems (open access)

A Preconditioned Conjugate Gradient Method for Solving a Class of Non-Symmetric Linear Systems

This report describes a conjugate gradient preconditioning scheme for solving a certain system of equations which arises in the solution of a three dimensional partial differential equation. The problem involves solving systems of equations where the matrices are large, sparse, and non-symmetric.
Date: October 1981
Creator: Dongarra, J. J.; Leaf, G. K. & Minkoff, Michael
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improving the Accuracy of Computed Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors (open access)

Improving the Accuracy of Computed Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors

This paper describes a computational method for improving the accuracy of a given eigenvalue and its associated eigenvector. The method is analogous to iterative improvement for the solution of linear systems. An iterative algorithm using working precision arithmetic is applied to increase the accuracy of the eigenpair. The only extended precision computation is the residual calculation. The method is related to inverse iteration and to Newton's method applied to the eigenvalue problem.
Date: July 1981
Creator: Dongarra, J. J.; Moler, Cleve B. & Wilkinson, J. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Fuel Cell Development Progress Report: January-March 1981 (open access)

Advanced Fuel Cell Development Progress Report: January-March 1981

Quarterly report discussing fuel cell research and development work at Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). This report describes efforts directed toward (1) developing alternative concepts for components for molten carbonate fuel cells and (2) improving our understanding of component behavior.
Date: October 1981
Creator: Dusek, J. T.; Pierce, R. D. & Arons, R. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tritium-Management Requirements for D-T Fusion Reactors (ETF, INTOR, FED) (open access)

Tritium-Management Requirements for D-T Fusion Reactors (ETF, INTOR, FED)

The successful operation of D-T fusion reactors will depend on the development of safe and reliable tritium-containment and fuel-recycle systems. The tritium handling requirements for D-T reactors were analyzed. The reactor facility was then designed from the viewpoint of tritium management. Recovery scenarios after a tritium release were generated to show the relative importance of various scenarios. A fusion-reactor tritium facility was designed which would be appropriate for all types of plants from the Engineering Test Facility (ETF), the International Tokamak Reactor (INTOR), and the Fusion Engineering Device (FED) to the full-scale power plant epitomized by the STARFIRE design.
Date: October 1981
Creator: Finn, P. A.; Clemmer, Robert G. & Misra, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Monitoring at Argonne National Laboratory, Annual Report: 1980 (open access)

Environmental Monitoring at Argonne National Laboratory, Annual Report: 1980

Annual report of the environmental monitoring program at Argonne National Laboratory, discussing activities and findings of the group.
Date: March 1981
Creator: Golchert, N. W.; Duffy, T. L. & Sedlet, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
First Annual Workshop on Ice Storage for Cooling Applications : Argonne National Laboratory, June 4-5, 1981 (open access)

First Annual Workshop on Ice Storage for Cooling Applications : Argonne National Laboratory, June 4-5, 1981

The papers presented at the first annual workshop on ice storage for cooling applications by participants from the U.S. and Canada are summarized. Novel methods of preparing naturally frozen ice and storing it are described. Attention is given to technical and economic problems and related design considerations. Comparison is made with conventional air conditioning methods. Both industrial and residential applications are discussed with regard to cost.
Date: July 1981
Creator: Gorski, A. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of Additional Fission Sources or Scattering Sources to Model Inward Axial Leakages in Fast-Reactor Analysis (open access)

Use of Additional Fission Sources or Scattering Sources to Model Inward Axial Leakages in Fast-Reactor Analysis

When calculations of flux are done in less than three dimensions, bucklings are normally used to model leakages (flows) in the dimensions for which the flux is not calculated. If the net leakage for a given energy group is outward (positive), the buckling is positive, and buckling methods work well. However, if the new leakage for a given energy group is inward (negative), the buckling is negative and can lead to numerical instabilities (oscillations in the iterative flux calculation). This report discusses two equivalent non-buckling methods to model inward leakages. One method (the chi/sub g/ method) models these incoming neutrons by additional fission sources. The other method (the sigma/sub s/(1 --> g) method) models them by increased down-scatter sources. The derivation of the two methods is shown, and the flux spectra obtained by their use are compared with those obtained from two-dimensional (RZ) calculations.
Date: October 1981
Creator: Grimm, K. N. & Meneghetti, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
POLYFAIL: A Program for Identification of Multiple Fuel Failures with Gas Tagging (open access)

POLYFAIL: A Program for Identification of Multiple Fuel Failures with Gas Tagging

This report describes the development of the computer code POLYFAIL for identification of fuel failures in fast reactors or light-water reactors that use gas tagging. POLYFAIL implements a sophisticated numerical algorithm known as the method of barycentric coordinates. The code can treat problems involving up to four simultaneous tag releases in a tagging system characterized by three independent tag ratios. The sensitivity of the multiple-failure-resolution technique has been optimized by incorporation of a newly developed ratio weighting scheme. Several example problems are provided to demonstrate operation of the code under single-leaker and various postulated multiple-leaker situations.
Date: 1981
Creator: Gross, Kenny C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Costs for Solidification of High-Level Radioactive Waste Solutions: Glass Monoliths vs Metal Matrices (open access)

Comparison of Costs for Solidification of High-Level Radioactive Waste Solutions: Glass Monoliths vs Metal Matrices

A comparative economic analysis was made of four solidification processes for liquid high-level radioactive waste. Two processes produced borosilicate glass monoliths and two others produced metal matrix composites of lead and borosilicate glass beads and lead and super-calcine pellets. Within the uncertainties of the cost (1979 dollars) estimates, the cost of the four processes was about the same, with the major cost component being the cost of the primary building structure. Equipment costs and operating and maintenance costs formed only a small portion of the building structure costs for all processes.
Date: May 1981
Creator: Jardine, L. J.; Carlton, R. E. & Steindler, M. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Techniques for Ambient Sulfate Aerosols (open access)

Analytical Techniques for Ambient Sulfate Aerosols

This report describes the work done to further develop the infrared spectroscopic analytical method for the analysis of atmospheric aerosol particles, as well as some exploratory work on a new procedure for determining proton acidity in aerosol samples. Earlier work had led to the successful use of infrared (ir) spectrophotometry for the analysis of nitrate, ammonium, and neutral and acidic sulfates in aerosol samples collected by an impactor on a Mylar-film substrate. In this work, a filter-extraction method was developed to prepare filter-collected aerosol samples for ir analysis. A study was made comparing the ir analytical results on filter-collected samples with impactor-collected samples. Also, the infrared analytical technique was compared in field studies with light-scattering techniques for aerosol analysis. A highly sensitive instrument for aerosol analysis using attenuated total internal reflection (ATR) infrared spectroscopy was designed, built, and tested. This instrument provides a measurement sensitivity much greater (by a factor of 6 for SO4²⁻) than that obtainable using the KBr-pellet method. This instrument collects size- and time-resolved samples and is potentially capable of providing automated, near real-time aerosol analysis. Exploratory work on a novel approach to the determination of proton acidity in filter- or impactor-collected aerosol samples is also described. …
Date: June 1981
Creator: Johnson, S. A.; Graczyk, D. G.; Kumar, R. & Cunningham, P. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The MAP3S Aerosol Sulfate Acidity Network: A Progress Report and Data Summary, November 1981 (open access)

The MAP3S Aerosol Sulfate Acidity Network: A Progress Report and Data Summary, November 1981

Abstract: A network of five atmospheric aerosol samplers was established in the northeastern US starting in February 1977. Size-fractionated samples of the aerosol were collected continuously with four-hour time resolution until the network was dismantled in February 1980. The aerosol-loading and aerosol-chemistry data obtained over this three-year period are summarized in this report. In particular, the samples were analyzed for the sulfate acidity of the aerosol. The acidity was found to be quite high over prolonged periods of time, with the monthly averaged acidity approaching that of ammonium bisulfate at several of the sites. Monthly, seasonal, daily, and diurnal variations in aerosol particle loading and acidity, and sulfate, ammonium, and nitrate ion concentrations are presented. The aerosol-chemistry data are tabulated separately for each of the sampling sites.
Date: November 1981
Creator: Johnson, S. A.; Kumar, R.; Cunningham, P. T. & Lang, T. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library