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Methods for measuring the surface tritium inside TFTR using beta decay (open access)

Methods for measuring the surface tritium inside TFTR using beta decay

Three potential methods for measuring the surface tritium content of the TFTR vacuum vessel are described, each based on a different technique for measuring the in situ beta emission from tritium. These methods should be able to provide both a local and a global assessment of the tritium content within the top [approx] 1[mu]m of the inner wall surface.
Date: January 1, 1994
Creator: Zweben, S. J.; Johnson, D. & Hill, K. (Princeton Univ., NJ (United States). Plasma Physics Lab.) (and others)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Long-term sealing analyses for US Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) caverns (open access)

Long-term sealing analyses for US Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) caverns

It is inevitable that sealing and abandonment will someday occur in a SPR cavern or caverns. To gain insight into the long-term behavior of a typical SPR cavern following sealing and abandonment, a suite of mechanical finite-element calculations was performed. The initial analyses predict how quickly and to what extent a cavern pressurizes after it is plugged. The analyses also examine the stability of the cavern as it changes shape due to the excessive pressures generated as the salt creeps and the brine in the cavern thermally expands. These large-scale analyses do not include the details of the plug but assume a good seal is established in the cavern wells. In another series of analyses, the potential for forming a leak at the plug is evaluated. A cement plug, emplaced in the casing seat of a cavern well, is loaded using the predicted brine pressures from the cavern analyses. The plugged casing analyses examine the potential for forming a leak path in and along the interfaces of salt, casing, and cement plug. In the last set of analysis, the dimensional scale of the problem is further reduced to examine a preexisting crack along a casing/salt interface. The cracked interface is …
Date: February 1, 1994
Creator: Ehgartner, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of Desiccant Dehumidification Technology (open access)

Review of Desiccant Dehumidification Technology

This paper overviews applications of desiccant technology for dehumidifying commercial and institutional buildings. Because of various market, policy, and regulatory factors, this technology is especially attractive for dehumidification applications in the I990s.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Pesaran, A. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Willow Creek Habitat Evaluation (open access)

Willow Creek Habitat Evaluation

The Willow Creek site is one of the most significant remaining areas of typical native Willamette Valley habitats, with a variety of wetlands, grasslands, and woodlands. A diverse array of native flora and fauna, with significant wildlife habitats, is present on the site. Wildlife diversity is high, and includes species of mammals, songbirds, raptors, reptiles, amphibians, and one rare invertebrate. Over 200 species of native plants have been identified (including populations of six rare, threatened, or endangered species), along with significant remnants of native plant communities. Willow Creek is located in Lane County, Oregon, on the western edge of the City of Eugene (see Figure 1). The city limit of Eugene passes through the site, and the site is entirely within the Eugene Urban Growth Boundary (UGB). At present, only lands to the east and northeast of the site are developed to full urban densities. Low density rural residential and agricultural land uses predominate on lands to the northwest and south. A partially completed light industrial/research office park is located to the northwest. Several informal trails lead south from West 18th at various points into the site. The area encompasses a total of approximately 349 acres under several ownerships, in …
Date: September 1994
Creator: Beilke, Susan
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Notes from a Workshop on Gas Supersatuation and its Research Needs in the Columbia River, April 19-20, 1994 at the Coliseum Red Lion, Portland, Oregon. (open access)

Notes from a Workshop on Gas Supersatuation and its Research Needs in the Columbia River, April 19-20, 1994 at the Coliseum Red Lion, Portland, Oregon.

None
Date: April 1, 1994
Creator: Bouck, Gerald R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Design Method for Multiple Tube Gas-Cooled Electrical Leads forthe g-2 Superconducting Magnets (open access)

A Design Method for Multiple Tube Gas-Cooled Electrical Leads forthe g-2 Superconducting Magnets

None
Date: December 15, 1994
Creator: Green, M. A.; Jia, L. X.; Addessi, L. J.; Cullen, J. R.; Esper, A. J. & and Meier, R. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Umatilla River Basin Anadromus Fish Habitat Enhancement Project : 1994 Annual Report. (open access)

Umatilla River Basin Anadromus Fish Habitat Enhancement Project : 1994 Annual Report.

The Umatilla Basin Anadromous Fish Habitat Enhancement Project is funded under the Northwest Power Planning Council's Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program, Section 7.6-7.8 and targets the improvement of water quality and restoration of riparian areas, holding, spawning and rearing habitats of steelhead, spring and fall chinook and coho salmon. The project focused on implementing cooperative instream and riparian habitat improvements on private lands on the Umatilla Indian Reservation (hereafter referred to as Reservation) from April 1, 1988 to March 31, 1992. These efforts resulted in enhancement of the lower l/4 mile of Boston Canyon Creek, the lower 4 river miles of Meacham Creek and 3.2 river miles of the Umatilla River in the vicinity of Gibbon, Oregon. In 1993, the project shifted emphasis to a comprehensive watershed approach, consistent with other basin efforts, and began to identify upland and riparian watershed-wide causative factors impacting fisheries habitat and natural fisheries production capabilities throughout the Umatilla River Watershed. During the 1994-95 project period, a one river mile demonstration project was implemented on two privately owned properties on Wildhorse Creek. This was the first watershed improvement project to be implemented by the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) off …
Date: May 1, 1994
Creator: Shaw, R. Todd
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discovery of the Most Distant Supernovae and the Quest for Omega (open access)

Discovery of the Most Distant Supernovae and the Quest for Omega

A search for cosmological supernovae has discovered a number of a type la supernovae. In particular, one at z = 0.458 is the most distant supernova yet observed. There is strong evidence from measurements of nearby type Ia supernovae that they can be considered as 'standard candles'. We plan to use these supernovae to measure the deceleration in the general expansion of the universe. The aim of our experiment is to try and observe and measure about 30 such distant supernovae in order to obtain a measurement of the deceleration parameter q{sub 0} which is related to {Omega}. Here {Omega} is the ratio of the density of the universe to the critical density, and we expect a measurement with an accuracy of about 30%.
Date: May 1, 1994
Creator: Goldhaber, G.; Boyle, B.; Bunclark, P.; Carter, D.; Ellis, R.; Gabi, S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Resources of Selected Areas of Hawaii: Groundwater in the Puna District of the Island of Hawaii (DRAFT) (open access)

Environmental Resources of Selected Areas of Hawaii: Groundwater in the Puna District of the Island of Hawaii (DRAFT)

This report has been prepared to make available and archive the background scientific data and related information collected on groundwater during the preparation of the environmental impact statement (EIS) for Phases 3 and 4 of the Hawaii Geothermal Project (HGP) as defined by the state of Hawaii in its April 1989 proposal to Congress. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) published a notice in the Federal Register on May 17,1994 (Fed Regis. 5925638), withdrawing its notice of intent (Fed. Regis. 575433) of February 14,1992, to prepare the HGP-EIS. Since the state of Hawaii is no longer pursuing or planning to pursue the HGP, DOE considers the project to be terminated. The background scientific data and related information presented in this report were collected for the geothermal resource subzones in the Puna District on the island of Hawaii. The scientific background data and related information is being made available for use by others in conducting future scientific research in these areas. This report describes the environmental resources present in the areas studied (i.e., the affected environment) and does not represent an assessment of environmental impacts. This paper summarizes the current state of knowledge with respect to groundwater in the Puna District …
Date: June 1, 1994
Creator: Staub, W.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Resources of Selected Areas of Hawaii: Geological Hazards (DRAFT) (open access)

Environmental Resources of Selected Areas of Hawaii: Geological Hazards (DRAFT)

This report has been prepared to make available and archive the background scientific data and related information collected on geologic hazards during the preparation of the environmental impact statement (EIS) for Phases 3 and 4 of the Hawaii Geothermal Project (HGP) as defined by the state of Hawaii in its April 1989 proposal to Congress. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) published a notice in the Federal Register on May 17, 1994 (Fed Regis. 5925638) withdrawing its Notice of Intent (Fed Regis. 575433) of February 14, 1992, to prepare the HGP-EIS. Since the state of Hawaii is no longer pursuing or planning to pursue the HGP, DOE considers the project to be terminated This report presents a review of current information on geologic hazards in the Hawaiian Islands. Interrelationships among these hazards are discussed. Probabilities of occurrence of given geologic hazards are provided in various regions where sufficient geologic or historical data are available. Most of the information contained herein is compiled from recent U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) publications and open-file reports. This report describes the natural geologic hazards present in the area and does not represent an assessment of environmental impacts. Geologic hazards originate both onshore and offshore. Onshore …
Date: June 1, 1994
Creator: Staub, W.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Resources of Selected Areas of Hawaii: Ecological Resources (DRAFT) (open access)

Environmental Resources of Selected Areas of Hawaii: Ecological Resources (DRAFT)

This report has been prepared to make available and archive the background scientific data and related information collected on ecological resources during the preparation of the environmental impact statement (EIS) for Phases 3 and 4 of the Hawaii Geothermal Project (HGP) as defined by the state of Hawaii in its April 1989 proposal to Congress. The U.S. Department of Energy (COE) published a notice in the Federal Register on May 17, 1994 (Fed. Regist. 5925638) withdrawing its Notice of Intent (Fed. Regst. 575433) of February 14, 1992, to prepare the HGP-EIS. Since the state of Hawaii is no longer pursuing or planning to pursue the HGP, DOE considers the project to be terminated. The background scientific data and related information presented in this report focus on several areas of Hawaii County, including the southeastern coast, a potential development corridor along the Saddle Road between Hilo and the North Kohala District on the northwestern coast, and on the southeastern coast of Maui. In this report, reference is made to these areas as study areas rather than as areas where proposed or alternative facilities of the HGP would be located. The resource areas addressed herein include terrestrial ecology, aquatic ecology, and marine …
Date: June 1, 1994
Creator: Trettin, C.C.; Tolbert, V.R.; Jones, A.T.; Smith, C.R. & Kalmijn, A.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Steady Winds on Radon-222 Entry from soil into houses (open access)

The Effect of Steady Winds on Radon-222 Entry from soil into houses

Wind affects the radon-222 entry rate from soil into buildings and the resulting indoor concentrations. To investigate this phenomenon, we employ a previously tested three-dimensional numerical model of soil-gas Bow around houses, a commercial computational fluid dynamics code, an established model for determining ventilation rates in the presence of wind, and new wind tunnel results for the ground-surface pressure field caused by wind. These tools and data, applied under steady-state conditions to a prototypical residential building, allow us (1) to determine the complex soil-gas flow patterns that result from the presence of wind-generated ground-surface pressures, (2) to evaluate the effect of these flows on the radon concentration in the soil, and (3) to calculate the effect of wind on the radon entry rate and indoor concentration. For a broad range of soil permeabilities, two wind speeds, and two wind directions, we quantify the"flushing" effect of wind on the radon in the soil surrounding a house, and the consequent sharp decrease in radon entry rates. Experimental measurements of the time-dependent radon concentration in soil gas beneath houses confirm the existence of wind-induced flushing. Comparisons are made to modeling predictions obtained while ignoring the effect of the wind-generated ground-surface pressures. These investigations …
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Riley, W. J.; Gadgil, A. J.; Bonnefous, Y. C. & Nazaroff, W. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of Sound for Fish Protection at Power Facilities : A Historical Perspective of the State of the Art : Phase 1 Final Report. (open access)

Use of Sound for Fish Protection at Power Facilities : A Historical Perspective of the State of the Art : Phase 1 Final Report.

This paper summarizes the current state of the knowledge of fish hearing, i.e., what is known about fish response to sound, and provides a starting place for investigation into the use of sonic behavior modification to help solve pressing problems in the maintenance and recovery of anadromous and resident fish stocks of the Columbia River Basin. The challenge for scientists and engineers is to understand (1) how and what fish hear, and (2) how to use this knowledge to influence fish behavior or to factor fish sensory systems and behavior into the design of fish protection devices at power-production and water-control facilities. The sections that follow are a studied response to this challenge. In many respects, the search for effective and economical ways to modify fish behavior without physical intervention is one of the grails of fish management, particularly (although not exclusively), relative to electric power production. Within the Columbia River Basin and elsewhere, water is put to many uses not conducive to the health of indigenous fish. Irrigation, impoundment, and hydropower production frequently modify the riverine environment to the detriment of indigenous stocks while creating productive environments for competing or predatory species. The mechanisms of impact are numerous. Water …
Date: November 1, 1994
Creator: Carlson, Thomas J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Low-Energy State ofCirculating Stored Ion Beams: Crystalline Beams (open access)

The Low-Energy State ofCirculating Stored Ion Beams: Crystalline Beams

Molecular dynamics is employed to study the low energy states of a beam of charged particles subject to circumferentially varying guiding and focusing forces and with Coulomb forces between the particles. In a constant gradient ring, the lowest energy state is never ordered, but in an alternating gradient structure, operating below the transition energy, the lowest state is ordered. The nature and characteristics of the ground state depends upon the beam density and the ring parameters. For zero temperature the crystal remains intact for a very long time, but at nonzero temperatures it gains energy from the lattice. A critical temperature exists above which the crystal melts rapidly.
Date: March 10, 1994
Creator: Wei, J.; Li, X. P. & Sessler, Andrew M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
TREATMENT TESTS FOR EX SITU REMOVAL OF CHROMATE & NITRATE & URANIUM (VI) FROM HANFORD (100-HR-3) GROUNDWATER FINAL REPORT (open access)

TREATMENT TESTS FOR EX SITU REMOVAL OF CHROMATE & NITRATE & URANIUM (VI) FROM HANFORD (100-HR-3) GROUNDWATER FINAL REPORT

This report describes batch and ion exchange column laboratory scale studies investigating ex situ methods to remove chromate (chromium [VI]), nitrate (NO{sub 3}{sup -}) and uranium (present as uranium [VI]) from contaminated Hanford site groundwaters. The technologies investigated include: chemical precipitation or coprecipitation to remove chromate and uranium; and anion exchange to remove chromate, uranium and nitrate. The technologies investigated were specified in the 100-HR-3 Groundwater Treatability Test Plan. The method suggested for future study is anion exchange.
Date: January 3, 1994
Creator: MA, BECK & JB, DUNCAN
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three Dimensional Laser Cooling of Stored and Circulating Ion Beams by Means of a Coupling Cavity (open access)

Three Dimensional Laser Cooling of Stored and Circulating Ion Beams by Means of a Coupling Cavity

It is shown, theoretically, that a coupling cavity; namely an rf cavity operating in the TM{sup 210} mode, when inserted in a storage ring will enhance the coupling between longitudinal and transverse degrees of freedom. As a result, it is shown that the demonstrated very effective laser cooling of the longitudinal motion, can now be extended to transverse motion; i.e., employed to cool a beam in all three directions.
Date: February 1, 1994
Creator: Okamoto, H.; Sessler, Andrew M. & Mohl, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sulfur removal in advanced two stage pressurized fluidized bed combustion. Technical report, September 1--November 30, 1994 (open access)

Sulfur removal in advanced two stage pressurized fluidized bed combustion. Technical report, September 1--November 30, 1994

The objective of this study is to obtain data on the rates and the extent of sulfation reactions involving partially sulfided calcium-based sorbents, and oxygen as well as sulfur dioxide, at operating conditions closely simulating those prevailing in the second stage (combustor) of Advanced Two-Stage Pressurized Fluidized-Bed Combustors (PFBC). In these systems the CO{sub 2} partial pressure generally exceeds the equilibrium value for calcium carbonate decomposition. Therefore, calcium sulfate is produced through the reactions between SO{sub 2} and calcium carbonate as well as the reaction between calcium sulfide and oxygen. To achieve this objective, the rates of reaction involving SO{sub 2} and oxygen (gaseous reactant); and calcium sulfide and calcium carbonate (solid reactants), will be determined by conducting tests in a pressurized thermogravimetric analyzer (HPTGA) unit. The effects of sorbent type, sorbent particle size, reactor temperature and pressure; and O{sub 2} as well as SO{sub 2} partial pressures on the sulfation reactions rate will be determined. During this quarter, samples of the selected limestone and dolomite were sulfided in the fluidized-bed reactor. These tests were conducted in both calcining and non-calcining operating conditions to produce partially-sulfided sorbents containing calcium oxide and calcium carbonate, respectively. These samples which represent the carbonizer …
Date: December 31, 1994
Creator: Abbasian, Javad; Hill, Andy; Wangerow, James R. & Honea, Franklin I.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Search for top quark at CDF (open access)

Search for top quark at CDF

There is a vast theoretical and experimental support for idea that op quark as a weak isospin partner to b-quark should exist. Production cross section is steeply falling function of top quark mass. Therefore realistically at present only Tevatron p[anti p] collider at FNAL, with total energy 1.8 TeV in CMS system, still has a chance of top quark discovery. Dominant production mechanism for top quarks at Tevatron is pair production of t[anti t]. With almost 100% probability t ([anti t]) decays in mode t [yields] W[sup +]b. Distinct features of this decay provide very good signatures of top quark production which helps to reduce otherwise very high level of background. Based on simple combinatorial arguments one can show that W should decay in 1/9 cases into W [yields] l + [nu] where l stands for lepton (e,[mu],[tau]). Very clean signature represents case when both W's from t and [anti t] decay into e ([mu]) + [nu]. In this case experimental observation will be two isolated leptons characterized by large transverse momentum, large missing transverse energy E[sub T] and 2 b quark jets. Jets originated from b quarks can be quite frequently recognized by presence of secondary vertices associated with …
Date: November 1, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Manuel Lujan Jr. Neutron Scattering Center (open access)

The Manuel Lujan Jr. Neutron Scattering Center

High in the northcentral mountains of Los Alamos, New Mexico, is the Manuel Lujan Jr. Neutron Scattering Center (LANSCE), a pulsed-spallation neutron source located at Los Alamos National Laboratory. At LANSCE, neutrons are produced by spallation when a pulsed 800-MeV proton beam impinges on a tungsten target. The proton pulses are provided by a linear accelerator and an associated Proton Storage Ring (PSR), which alters the intensity, time structure, and repetition rate of the pulses. In October 1986, LANSCE was designated a national user facility, with a formal user program initiated in 1988. In July 1989, the LANSCE facility was dedicated as the Manuel Lujan Jr. Neutron Scattering Center in honor of the long-term Congressman from New Mexico. At present, the PSR operates with a proton pulse width of 0.27 [mu]s at 20 Hz and 80 [mu]A, attaining the highest peak neutron flux in the world and close to its goal of 100 [mu]A, which would yield a peak thermal neutron flux of 10[sup 16] n/cm[sup [minus]2]s[sup [minus]1]. This paper discusses the target/moderator/reflector shield system, the LANSCE instruments, the facility improvement projects, and user programs.
Date: January 1, 1994
Creator: Goldstone, J.A. (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (United States). Manuel Lujan Jr. Neutron Scattering Center)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A debris free, electron beam driven, lithography source at 130 [angstrom] (open access)

A debris free, electron beam driven, lithography source at 130 [angstrom]

Los Alamos and Grumman are cooperatively investigating a debris free source for EUV lithography. This source utilizes the predicted anomalous energy loss of a short pulse electron beam in a preformed plasma to heat and ionize the ions to a charge state where efficient radiation at 130[angstrom] occurs. Accelerators developed for the free electron laser program at Los Alamos are used as the electron bunch source. These accelerators use a laser driven photocathode to produce 15 psec electron bunches containing 4 nC of charge with an energy of 15.5 MeV. These micropulses are produced at a repetition rate of 108 MHz and continue for the length of the rf macropulse energizing the accelerator cavities, typically 1--10 [mu]sec. The weakly ionized preformed plasma is created by purely classical collisional ionization caused by the initial few electron micropulses within the macropulse. When a critical electron density is reached, n[sub e] [approx equal] 1.6 [times] 10[sup 15]/[tau][sup 2] cm[sup [minus]3], where [tau] is the FWHM, in psec, of the electron bunch, the plasma responds collectively to the electron micropulse generating a large amplitude plasma wave. The plasma wave efficiently slows the high energy electron beam while heating the background plasma electrons. The initial …
Date: January 1, 1994
Creator: Fulton, R. D.; Abdallah, J.; Goldstein, J. C.; Jones, M. E.; Kilcrease, D. P.; Kinross-Wright, J. M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Flow Reactor for the Flow Supercritical Water Oxidation of Wastes to Mitigate the Reactor Corrosion Problem (open access)

A Flow Reactor for the Flow Supercritical Water Oxidation of Wastes to Mitigate the Reactor Corrosion Problem

We have designed a flow tube reactor for supercritical water oxidation of wastes that confines the oxidation reaction to the vicinity of the axis of the tube. This prevents high temperatures and reactants as well as reaction products from coming in intimate contact with reactor walls. This implies a lessening of corrosion of the walls of the reactor. We display numerical simulations for a vertical reactor with conservative design parameters that illustrate our concept. We performed our calculations for the destruction of sodium nitrate by ammonium hydroxide In the presence of supercritical water, where the production of sodium hydroxide causes corrosion. We have compared these results with that for a horizontal set-up where the sodium hydroxide created during the reaction ends up on the floor of the tube, implying a higher probability of corrosion.
Date: 1994~
Creator: Chitanvis, S. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Safety Vulnerability Working Group Report (open access)

Chemical Safety Vulnerability Working Group Report

This report marks the culmination of a 4-month review conducted to identify chemical safety vulnerabilities existing at DOE facilities. This review is an integral part of DOE's efforts to raise its commitment to chemical safety to the same level as that for nuclear safety.
Date: September 1, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Disilene Addition to C{sub 70} (open access)

Disilene Addition to C{sub 70}

Semiempirical and ab initio Hartree Fock computational results indicate that the highly reactive dienophile tetramethyldisilene, Me{sub 2}Si=SiMe{sub 2}, is an excellent candidate for a novel functionalization of the equator of C{sub 70} via a [2+4] cycloaddition to the 21, 22, 23, 42 carbons. Thermal or photochemical generation of tetramethyldisilene in the presence of C{sub 70} results in similar complex mixtures in which the major product appears to be that of [2+2] cycloaddition to the 7,8 carbons of C{sub 70}. A minor product clearly results from [2+2] cycloaddition to the 1,9 carbons. Both of these products are hydrolytically unstable and are converted nonspecifically to mixtures of 1,9- and 7,8-C{sub 70}H{sub 2} which are also present in HPLC traces of the reaction mixtures.
Date: December 31, 1994
Creator: Jacobs, S. J.; Cahill, P. A. & Rohlfing, C. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
UEDGE and DEGAS modeling of the DIII-D scrape-off layer plasma. Revision 1 (open access)

UEDGE and DEGAS modeling of the DIII-D scrape-off layer plasma. Revision 1

This paper presents work to develop benchmarked theoretical models of scrape-off-layer (SOL) characteristics in diverted tokamaks by comparing shot simulations using the UEDGE plasma fluid and DEGAS neutral transport codes to measurements of the DIII-D SOL plasma. The experimental data include the radial profiles of n{sub e} T{sub e}, and T{sub i}, the divertor exhaust power, the intensity of H{sub {alpha}} emission, and profiles of the radiated power. A very simple model of the anomalous perpendicular transport rates produces consistency between the calculated and measured radial profiles of the divertor power, and of the midplane densities and temperatures. Experimentally, the measured exhaust power is now 80--90% of the input power. The simulated peak power on the outer leg of the divertor floor is now within 20% of the measured power. Various sensitivities of these comparisons to model assumptions are described. Finally, these benchmarked models have been used to examine the effects of various baffle configurations for the Radiative Divertor Upgrade in DIII-D.
Date: May 1, 1994
Creator: Fenstermacher, M. E.; Porter, G. D.; Rensink, M. E.; Rognlien, T. D.; Allen, S. L.; Hill, D. N. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library