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Primary water stress corrosion cracking of Alloy 600: Effects of processing parameters (open access)

Primary water stress corrosion cracking of Alloy 600: Effects of processing parameters

Correlations of stress corrosion cracking (SCC) data in deaerated water with temperature, stress, metallography, and processing for laboratory test specimens are presented. Initiation time data show that a low temperature anneal and resulting absence of grain boundary carbides result in a material having increased susceptibility to SCC. Data also show that hot worked and annealed Alloy 600 is more resistant than cold worked and annealed material, both having carbide decorated grain boundaries. In absence of grain boundary carbides, both materials are equally susceptible. Low temperature thermal treatment (1100F) reduces SCC susceptibility with or without grain boundary decoration. Weld metal data and data correlations developed from 700 double U-bends are presented. Data demonstrate the effect of increased carbon content to improve SCC resistance. The data shows that the general relation of time, temperature and strain for wrought material is followed for the weld metal. The weld process used did not affect the SCC susceptibility of EN-82 which showed a greater resistance to SCC than EN-62. Stress relief of weld deposits showed an improvement for wrought material. Heat affected zone resistance was improved if the starting material received a high temperature anneal (1850 to 2000F). Range of SCC initiation times for weld …
Date: October 22, 1993
Creator: Seman, D. J.; Webb, G. L. & Parrington, R. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hazardous waste cleanup at federal facilities: Need for an integrated policy (open access)

Hazardous waste cleanup at federal facilities: Need for an integrated policy

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has generated and disposed of large volumes of hazardous and radioactive waste as a result of 50 years of nuclear weapons production. DOE is now faced with the problem of remediating its more than 13,000 hazardous waste sites. To be effective for the good of the environment and public health, our nation`s hazardous waste policy must first address several questions: What is the level of risk at federal facilities? (Is remediation really necessary?) Can and should institutional controls be incorporated into the cleanup process? How effective are cleanup technologies? What cleanup standards should be used? What will be done with waste generated during remediation? How do we obtain appropriate stakeholder involvement? Once these questions are answered and a more reliable, predictable policy has been developed, the waste management and environmental restoration program may not be an unwanted drain on America`s pocketbook, and we may have a cleaner country as well.
Date: September 22, 1993
Creator: Travis, C. C. & Ladd, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Positron annihilation study of Sr Doping in La{sub 2-x}Sr{sub x}CuO{sub 4} (open access)

Positron annihilation study of Sr Doping in La{sub 2-x}Sr{sub x}CuO{sub 4}

We present a combined experimental and threshold study of effects of Sr doping on electronic structure of La{sub 2-x}Sr{sub x}CuO{sub 4}. Electron-positron momentum distributions have been measured to high statistical precision (> 4 {times} 10{sup 8} counts) at room temperature for samples with Sr concentrations of x = 0.0, 0.1, 0.13 and 0.2. Analysis of all four spectra reveal strong features due to electron-positron wavefunction overlap, in quantitative agreement with theoretical calculations. The Sr doped samples show discontinuities consistent with presence of a Fermi surface. The form and position of these features are in general agreement with the predictions of band theory. Correspondence between theory and experiment, as well as some differences, are revealed by a detailed study of the changes in electron-position momentum density with increasing Sr doping.
Date: April 22, 1993
Creator: Sterne, P. A.; Howell, R. H.; Fluss, M. J.; Kaiser, J. H.; Kitazawa, K. & Kojima, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crashworthiness analysis using advanced material models in DYNA3D (open access)

Crashworthiness analysis using advanced material models in DYNA3D

As part of an electric vehicle consortium, LLNL and Kaiser Aluminum are conducting experimental and numerical studies on crashworthy aluminum spaceframe designs. They have jointly explored the effect of heat treat on crush behavior and duplicated the experimental behavior with finite-element simulations. The major technical contributions to the state of the art in numerical simulation arise from the development and use of advanced material model descriptions for LLNL`s DYNA3D code. Constitutive model enhancements in both flow and failure have been employed for conventional materials such as low-carbon steels, and also for lighter weight materials such as aluminum and fiber composites being considered for future vehicles. The constitutive model enhancements are developed as extensions from LLNL`s work in anisotropic flow and multiaxial failure modeling. Analysis quality as a function of level of simplification of material behavior and mesh is explored, as well as the penalty in computation cost that must be paid for using more complex models and meshes. The lightweight material modeling technology is being used at the vehicle component level to explore the safety implications of small neighborhood electric vehicles manufactured almost exclusively from these materials.
Date: October 22, 1993
Creator: Logan, R. W.; Burger, M. J.; McMichael, L. D. & Parkinson, R. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal beam dynamics for heavy ion fusion using WARPrz (open access)

Longitudinal beam dynamics for heavy ion fusion using WARPrz

WARPrz is a 2.5 dimensional, cylindrically symmetric, electrostatic, particle-in-cell code. It is part of the WARP family of codes which has been developed to study heavy ion fusion driver issues. WARPrz is being used to study the longitudinal dynamics of heavy ion beams including a longitudinal instability that is driven by the impedance of the LINAC accelerating modules. This instability is of concern because it can enhance longitudinal momentum spread; chromatic abhoration in the lens system restricts the amount of momentum spread allowed in the beam in the final focusing system. The impedance of the modules is modeled by a continuum of resistors and capacitors in parallel in WARPrz. We discuss simulations of this instability including the effect of finite temperature and reflection of perturbations off the beam ends. We also discuss intermittency of axial confining fields (``ears`` fields) as a seed for this instability.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Callahan, D. A.; Langdon, A. B.; Friedman, A. & Haber, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geographos asteroid flyby and autonomous navigation study (open access)

Geographos asteroid flyby and autonomous navigation study

Deep Space Program Science Experiment (DSPSE), also known as Clementine, is a collection of science experiments conducted in near-earth with the goal of demonstrating Strategic Defense Initiative Office (SDIO) developed technologies. The 785 lb (fully fueled) spacecraft will be launched into low Earth orbit in February 1994 together with a Star 37 solid kick motor and interstage. After orbit circulation using Clementine`s 110 lb Delta-V thruster, the Star 37 will execute a trans-lunar injection burn that will send the spacecraft toward lunar obit. The 110-lb will then be used in a sequence of burns to insert Clementine into a trimmed, polar orbit around the moon. After a two month moon mapping mission, Clementine will execute burns to leave lunar orbit, sling-shot around Earth, and flyby the moon on a 9.4 million km journey toward the asteroid Geographos. After about three months in transit, Clementine will attempt a flyby with a closest point of approach of 100 km from the asteroid on August 31, 1994. During its approach to Geographos, Clementine will be tracked by the Deep Space Network (DSN) and receive guidance updates. The last update and correction burn will occur about one day out of the flyby. Multiple experiments …
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Ng, L. C.; Pines, D. J.; Patz, B. J. & Perron, D. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
US-NIS dialogue on nonproliferation export controls: A conference report (open access)

US-NIS dialogue on nonproliferation export controls: A conference report

None
Date: November 22, 1993
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Overview of WARP, a particle code for Heavy Ion Fusion (open access)

Overview of WARP, a particle code for Heavy Ion Fusion

The beams in a Heavy Ion beam driven inertial Fusion (HIF) accelerator must be focused onto small spots at the fusion target, and so preservation of beam quality is crucial. The nonlinear self-fields of these space-charge-dominated beams can lead to emittance growth; thus a self-consistent field description is necessary. We have developed a multi-dimensional discrete-particle simulation code, WARP, and are using it to study the behavior of HIF beams. The code`s 3d package combines features of an accelerator code and a particle-in-cell plasma simulation, and can efficiently track beams through many lattice elements and around bends. We have used the code to understand the physics of aggressive drift-compression in the MBE-4 experiment at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL). We have applied it to LBL`s planned ILSE experiments, to various ``recirculator`` configurations, and to the study of equilibria and equilibration processes. Applications of the 3d package to ESQ injectors, and of the r, z package to longitudinal stability in driver beams, are discussed in related papers.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Friedman, A.; Grote, D. P.; Callahan, D. A.; Langdon, A. B. & Haber, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
PIC space-charge emission with finite {Delta}t and {Delta}z (open access)

PIC space-charge emission with finite {Delta}t and {Delta}z

A new algorithm for space charge emission has been developed to provide the correct (to a few percent) Child-Langmuir steady-state current limits as the number of mesh points in the voltage gap drops to O(10). Further, the transient behavior of such flows compares well with idealized, analytic cases, lending confidence as we extend these algorithms into full RZ geometry with curved emitting surfaces to investigate transient characteristics of realistic injector designs.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Hewett, D. W. & Chen, Yu-Jiuan
System: The UNT Digital Library
High- and low-temperature bonding techniques for microstructures (open access)

High- and low-temperature bonding techniques for microstructures

The ability to bond together two or more silicon wafers greatly expands the variety and complexity of silicon microstructures that can be designed and fabricated. At LLNL, microstructures have been used for many years as hardware in scientific experiments. The activity has recently been expanded into other areas to include microinstruments for biomedical applications and for chemical analysis. Both high temperature (1100{degrees}C) bonding techniques have been used, depending on the application. This paper discusses these applications with emphasis on the most extensive which is the fabrication of microchannel coolers for diode arrays.
Date: June 22, 1993
Creator: Ciarlo, D. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microcomputer resource inspection/self-inspection program (open access)

Microcomputer resource inspection/self-inspection program

A Computer Security Program is more than just a concept. It is real action by real people. Under direction of DOE Orders, Martin Marietta Energy systems, Inc., personnel have developed a Microcomputer Security Program that is both effective and sensible. this program works because those involved have a sincere desire to protect DOE information and assets. The Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant is located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. This facility covers 2.25 miles in the Bear Creek area and consists of approximately 500 buildings, which are located in Protected, Exclusion, and Property Protection Areas. There are some 50 different Energy Systems organizations that comprise the Y-12 Plant. There are approximately 700 classified microcomputers and approximately 5,300 unclassified microcomputers at the site. These resources are used for many different functions including: word processing, computer Aided Design operations, database management, servers for local area networks, and terminal emulators. Most microcomputers are used in a stand-alone mode of operation.
Date: March 22, 1993
Creator: Hockett, E. L. Jr. & Marlow, K. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A concurrent, multigroup, discrete ordinates model of neutron transport (open access)

A concurrent, multigroup, discrete ordinates model of neutron transport

The authors present an algorithm for the concurrent solution of the linear system arising from a multigroup, discrete ordinates model of neutron transport. The target architectures consist of distributed memory computers ranging from workstation clusters to massively parallel computers. Based on an analysis of the memory requirement and floating point complexity of matrix-vector multiplication in the iterative solution of the linear system, the authors propose a data layout and communication strategy designed to achieve scalability with respect to all phase space variables. Numerical results are presented to demonstrate the performance of the algorithm on the nCUBE/2.
Date: October 22, 1993
Creator: Dorr, M. R. & Still, C. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adaptive optimization and control using neural networks (open access)

Adaptive optimization and control using neural networks

Recent work has demonstrated the ability of neural-network-based controllers to optimize and control machines with complex, non-linear, relatively unknown control spaces. We present a brief overview of neural networks via a taxonomy illustrating some capabilities of different kinds of neural networks. We present some successful control examples, particularly the optimization and control of a small-angle negative ion source.
Date: October 22, 1993
Creator: Mead, W. C.; Brown, S. K.; Jones, R. D.; Bowling, P. S. & Barnes, C. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design study of fiber-composite penetrator cases (open access)

Design study of fiber-composite penetrator cases

A design study was conducted to demonstrate the viability of carbon-fiber reinforced epoxy composites as structural case materials for penetrating warheads. The objective was to conduct well-instrumented experimental studies of composite-body penetrators perforating mild steel plates and quantitatively model these plate penetrations using two- and three-dimensional finite element codes over a wide range of velocities and impact conditions in order to develop predictive capability for composite design and for use in tradeoff studies with existing case materials. Understanding of the failure of composite-body penetrators would be demonstrated by a rational design iteration which significantly improved performance. Initial studies utilized existing 1-degree tapered cylindrical carbon fiber/epoxy composite cases fabricated by wet-filament winding. These sharp-tipped, steel-nose, composite penetrators were strain-gaged, piggy-backed with 57 kilograms, and impacted into steel plates in a velocity-boosted droptower at impact velocities ranging from 3 to 18 meters per second. Load, time, and position data were recorded during the impact event as well as the axial and hoop strains in the composite case. Monolithic 4340 hardened steel penetrators with both sharp- and flat-tip 3-caliber ogive noses were also impacted into mild steel plates. Data from the composite-case and steel penetrators were used to calibrate a multiaxial, rate-dependent, flow …
Date: October 22, 1993
Creator: Logan, R. W.; Groves, S. E. & Lyon, R. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scanning tunneling microscopy of the electronic structure of chemical vapor deposited diamond films (open access)

Scanning tunneling microscopy of the electronic structure of chemical vapor deposited diamond films

This article discusses scanning tunneling microscopy of the electronic structure of chemical vapor deposited diamond films.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Pérez, José M.; Lin, C.; Rivera, W.; Hyer, R. C.; Green, M.; Sharma, S. C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library