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Absorbed dose from 7-GeV bremsstrahlung in a PMMA phantom. (open access)

Absorbed dose from 7-GeV bremsstrahlung in a PMMA phantom.

Electron storage rings generate energetic bremsstrahlung photons through radiative interaction of the particle beam with the residual gas molecules and other components inside the storage ring. At the Advanced Photon Source (APS), where the stored beam energy is 7 GeV, bremsstrahlung generated in the straight sections of the insertion devices comes down through the beamlines. The resulting absorbed dose distributions by, this radiation in a 300 mm x 300 mm x 300 mm tissue substitute phantom were measured with LiF:Mg,Ti (TLD-700) thermoluminescent dosimeters. The average normalized absorbed dose, in a cross sectional area of 100 mm{sup 2} at a depth of 150 mm of the PMMA phantom, was measured as 3.3 x 10{sup 6} mGy h{sup {minus}1}W{sup {minus}1} for a 7-GeV bremsstrahhmg spectrum.
Date: August 4, 1999
Creator: Job, P. K.; Pisharody, M. & Semones, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accident Sequence Precursor Program Large Early Release Frequency Model Development (open access)

Accident Sequence Precursor Program Large Early Release Frequency Model Development

The objectives for the ASP large early release frequency (LERF) model development work is to build a Level 2 containment response model that would capture all of the events necessary to define LERF as outlined in Regulatory Guide 1.174, can be directly interfaced with the existing Level 1 models, is technically correct, can be readily modified to incorporate new information or to represent another plant, and can be executed in SAPHIRE. The ASP LERF models being developed will meet these objectives while providing the NRC with the capability to independently assess the risk impact of plant-specific changes proposed by the utilities that change the nuclear power plants' licensing basis. Together with the ASP Level 1 models, the ASP LERF models provide the NRC with the capability of performing equipment and event assessments to determine their impact on a plant's LERF for internal events during power operation. In addition, the ASP LERF models are capable of being updated to reflect changes in information regarding the system operations and phenomenological events, and of being updated to assess the potential for early fatalities for each LERF sequence. As the ASP Level 1 models evolve to include more analysis capabilities, the LERF models will …
Date: January 4, 1999
Creator: Brownson, Douglas A.; Brown, Thomas D.; Duran, Felicia A.; Gregory, Julie J. & Rodrick, Edward G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adaptive Mesh Refinement in CTH (open access)

Adaptive Mesh Refinement in CTH

This paper reports progress on implementing a new capability of adaptive mesh refinement into the Eulerian multimaterial shock- physics code CTH. The adaptivity is block-based with refinement and unrefinement occurring in an isotropic 2:1 manner. The code is designed to run on serial, multiprocessor and massive parallel platforms. An approximate factor of three in memory and performance improvements over comparable resolution non-adaptive calculations has-been demonstrated for a number of problems.
Date: May 4, 1999
Creator: Crawford, David
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam motions near separatrix (open access)

Beam motions near separatrix

Experimental data on particle motion near the separatrix of the one dimensional (1-D) fourth-integer islands are an-alyzed. When the beam bunch is initially kicked to the separatrix orbit, we observed a strong decoherence in the coherent betatron motion. We find that, through intensive particle tracking simulation analysis, the decoherence has resulted from the beam being split into beamlets in the beta-tron phase space. However, we also observe an unexpected recoherence of coherence signal, which may result form a modulated closed orbit or the homoclinic structure near the separatrix.
Date: May 4, 1999
Creator: al., M. Ball et
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam test of a superconducting cavity for the Fermilab high-brightness electron photo-injector (open access)

Beam test of a superconducting cavity for the Fermilab high-brightness electron photo-injector

An electron photo-injector facility has been constructed at Fermilab for the purpose of providing a 14�18 MeV elec-tron beam with high charge per bunch (8 nC), short bunch length (1 mm RMS), and small transverse emittance [1]. The facility was used to commission a second-generation photo-cathode RF gun for the TeSLA Test Facility (TTF) Linac at DESY [2, 3]; in the future, the Fermilab electron beam will be used for R & D in bunch length compres-sion, beam diagnostics, and new acceleration techniques. Acceleration beyond 4 MeV is provided by a 9-cell super-conducting cavity (see Figure 1). The cavity also provides a longitudinal position-momentum correlation for subse-quent bunch length compression. We report on the RF tests and a first beam test of this cavity.
Date: May 4, 1999
Creator: W. Hartung, J.P. Carneiro, M. Champion, H. Edwards, J. Fuest, K. Koepke and M. Kuchnir
System: The UNT Digital Library
BUSFET - A Novel Radiation-Hardened SOI Transistor (open access)

BUSFET - A Novel Radiation-Hardened SOI Transistor

A partially-depleted SOI transistor structure has been designed that does not require the use of specially-processed hardened buried oxides for total-dose hardness and maintains the intrinsic SEU and dose rate hardness advantages of SOI technology.
Date: February 4, 1999
Creator: Dodd, P.E.; Draper, B.L.; Schwank, J.R. & Shaneyfelt, M.R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cesium Removal from the Fuel Storage Water at the Savannah River Site R-Building Disassembly Basin Using 3M Empore(r)-Membrane Filter Technology (open access)

Cesium Removal from the Fuel Storage Water at the Savannah River Site R-Building Disassembly Basin Using 3M Empore(r)-Membrane Filter Technology

This report describes results from a seven-day demonstration of the use of 3M Empore(r) membrane filter loaded with ion exchange material potassium cobalt hexacynoferrate (CoHex) for cesium uptake from the R-Disassembly Basin at the Savannah River Site.
Date: October 4, 1999
Creator: Oji, L.N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparing robust and physics-based sea surface temperature retrievals for high resolution, multi-spectral thermal sensors using one or multiple looks (open access)

Comparing robust and physics-based sea surface temperature retrievals for high resolution, multi-spectral thermal sensors using one or multiple looks

With the advent of multi-spectral thermal imagers such as EOS's ASTER high spatial resolution thermal imagery of the Earth's surface will soon be a reality. Previous high resolution sensors such as Landsat 5 had only one spectral channel in the thermal infrared and its utility to determine absolute sea surface temperatures was limited to 6-8 K for water warmer than 25 deg C. This inaccuracy resulted from insufficient knowledge of the atmospheric temperature and water vapor, inaccurate sensor calibration, and cooling effects of thin high cirrus clouds. The authors will present two studies of algorithms and compare their performance. The first algorithm they call robust since it retrieves sea surface temperatures accurately over a fairly wide range of atmospheric conditions using linear combinations of nadir and off-nadir brightness temperatures. The second they call physics-based because it relies on physics-based models of the atmosphere. It attempts to come up with a unique sea surface temperature which fits one set of atmospheric parameters.
Date: April 4, 1999
Creator: Borel, C. C.; Clodius, W. B.; Szymanski, J. J. & Theiler, J. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contamination of the Northern Oceans from Releases of Radioactivity from the Former Soviet Union (open access)

Contamination of the Northern Oceans from Releases of Radioactivity from the Former Soviet Union

During the Cold War the handling of Soviet military nuclear wastes was a classified topic--kept secret to hide the status and readiness of Soviet military forces. Following the end of the Cold War information about the handling of nuclear wastes by agencies of the Former Soviet Union (FSU) became available. The US Government response to the disclosure of disposal of radioactive wastes into the Arctic Ocean and into rivers that drain into the Arctic Ocean was the finding of the Arctic Nuclear Waste Assessment Program (ANWAP) in the Office of Naval Research (ONR). Projects were aided by ANWAP to study the behavior, transport, and fate of radionuclides in the Arctic Ocean. One of the research teams, the Risk Assessment Integration Group (RAIG) assessed the potential risks to humans and to the environment, particularly in the US Alaskan Arctic.
Date: June 4, 1999
Creator: Gomez, Leo S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cyclization Phenomena in the Sol-Gel Polymerization of a,w-Bis(triethoxysilyl)alkanes and Incorporation of the Cyclic Structures into Network Silsesquioxane Polymers (open access)

Cyclization Phenomena in the Sol-Gel Polymerization of a,w-Bis(triethoxysilyl)alkanes and Incorporation of the Cyclic Structures into Network Silsesquioxane Polymers

Intramolecular cyclizations during acid-catalyzed, sol-gel polymerizations of ct,co- bis(tietioxysilyl)aWmes substintidly lengtien gelties formonomers witietiylene- (l), propylene- (2), and butylene-(3)-bridging groups. These cyclizations reactions were found, using mass spectrometry and %i NMR spectroscopy, to lead preferentially to monomeric and dimeric products based on six and seven membered disilsesquioxane rings. 1,2- Bis(triethoxysilyl)ethane (1) reacts under acidic conditions to give a bicyclic drier (5) that is composed of two annelated seven membered rings. Under the same conditions, 1,3- bis(triethoxysilyl)propane (2), 1,4-bis(triethoxysilyl)butane (3), and z-1,4- bis(triethoxysilyl)but-2-ene (10) undergo an intramolecular condensation reaction to give the six membemd and seven membered cyclic disilsesquioxanes 6, 7, and 11. Subsequently, these cyclic monomers slowly react to form the tricyclic dirners 8,9 and 12. With NaOH as polymerization catalyst these cyclic silsesquioxanes readily ~aeted to afford gels that were shown by CP MAS z%i NMR and infr=d spectroscopes to retain some cyclic structures. Comparison of the porosity and microstructwe of xerogels prepared from the cyclic monomers 6 and 7 with gels prepared directly from their acyclic precursors 2 and 3, indicate that the final pore structure of the xerogels is markedly dependent on the nature of the precursor. In addition, despite the fact that the monomeric cyclic disilsesquioxane …
Date: January 4, 1999
Creator: Alam, T.M.; Carpenter, J.P.; Dorhout, P.K.; Greaves, J.; Loy, D.A.; Shaltout, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deep Level Defect Studies in MOCVD-Grown In(x)Ga(1-x)As(1-y)N(y) Films Lattice-Matched to GaAs (open access)

Deep Level Defect Studies in MOCVD-Grown In(x)Ga(1-x)As(1-y)N(y) Films Lattice-Matched to GaAs

Deep level defects in MOCVD-grown, unintentionally doped p-type InGaAsN films lattice matched to GaAs were investigated using deep level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) measurements. As-grown p-InGaAsN showed broad DLTS spectra suggesting that there exists a broad distribution of defect states within the band-gap. Moreover, the trap densities exceeded 10{sup 15} cm{sup {minus}3}. Cross sectional transmission electron microscopy (TEM) measurements showed no evidence for threading dislocations within the TEM resolution limit of 10{sup 7} cm{sup {minus}2}. A set of samples was annealed after growth for 1800 seconds at 650 C to investigate the thermal stability of the traps. The DLTS spectra of the annealed samples simplified considerably, revealing three distinct hole trap levels with energy levels of 0.10 eV, 0.23 eV, and 0.48 eV above the valence band edge with trap concentrations of 3.5 x 10{sup 14} cm{sup {minus}3}, 3.8 x 10{sup 14} cm {sup {minus}3}, and 8.2 x 10{sup 14} cm{sup {minus}3}, respectively. Comparison of as-grown and annealed DLTS spectra showed that post-growth annealing effectively reduced the total trap concentration by an order of magnitude across the bandgap. However, the concentration of a trap with an energy level of 0.48 eV was not affected by annealing indicating a higher thermal stability …
Date: March 4, 1999
Creator: Allerman, A. A.; Boeckl, J. J.; Jones, E. D.; Kaplar, R. J.; Kurtz, S. R.; Kwon, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deformation mechanisms in crystalline solids and Newtonian viscous behavior (open access)

Deformation mechanisms in crystalline solids and Newtonian viscous behavior

The three principal mechanisms of plastic flow in crystalline solids at elevated temperature are crystal slip, grain boundary sliding, and diffusional flow. All three mechanisms involve the diffusion of atoms as the rate-controlling process, either in the lattice or in the grain boundary. Under the correct conditions of microstructure, temperature, and stress, each mechanism can lead to Newtonian-viscous behavior. That is, the strain rate increases linearly with the applied stress. In the case of crystal slip, Newtonian-viscous behavior is observed at very � low stresses and, in pure metals, is known as Harper-Dom (H-D) creep. This Newtonian behavior can also be observed in anisotropic crystalline solids that are deformed under thermal cycling conditions. The dislocation density and the stacking fault energy are important structural factors that contribute to crystal slip-controlled Newtonian flow. In the case of grain boundary sliding, Newtonian-viscous behavior is observed in fine-grained, solid solution alloys under conditions where grain-boundary sliding is accommodated by dislocation glide controlled by the diffusion of solute atoms. In the case of diffusional creep, which is rigorously described by the Nabarro-Herring (N-H) theory, the creep rate is controlled by grain size and by the rate of atom diffusion in the lattice and in …
Date: November 4, 1999
Creator: Ruano, O A; Sherby, O D & Wadsworth, J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Degradation Reactions in SONY-Type Li-Ion Batteries (open access)

Degradation Reactions in SONY-Type Li-Ion Batteries

Thermal instabilities were identified in SONY-type lithium-ion cells and correlated with interactions of cell constituents and reaction products. Three temperature regions of interaction were identified and associated with the state of charge (degree of Li intercalation) of the cell. Anodes were shown to undergo exothermic reactions as low as 100&deg;C involving the solid electrolyte interface (SEI) layer and the LiPF<sub>6</sub> salt in the electrolyte (EC: PC: DEC/LiPF<sub>6</sub>). These reactions could account for the thermal runaway observed in these cells beginning at 100&deg;C. Exothermic reactions were also observed in the 200&deg;C-300&deg;C region between the intercalated lithium anodes, the LiPF<sub>6</sub> salt and the PVDF. These reactions were followed by a high- temperature reaction region, 300&deg;C-400&deg;C, also involving the PVDF binder and the intercalated lithium anodes. The solvent was not directly involved in these reactions but served as a moderator and transport medhun. Cathode exotherrnic reactions with the PVDF binder were observed above 200oC and increased with the state of charge (decreasing Li content). This offers an explanation for the observed lower thermal runaway temperatures for charged cells.
Date: May 4, 1999
Creator: Nagasubramanian, G. & Roth, E. Peter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determining Two-Port S-Parameters from a One-Port Measurement Using a Novel Impedance-State Test Chip (open access)

Determining Two-Port S-Parameters from a One-Port Measurement Using a Novel Impedance-State Test Chip

A novel custom high-speed test chip and data reduction technique that allows for the accurate determination of the two-port S-parameters of a passive network from a set of one-port measurements is presented. A typical application for this technique is high-speed integrated circuit package characterization where one-port is of a microelectronic size scale and inside the package. The test chip is designed to operate up to 20 GHz.
Date: March 4, 1999
Creator: Hietala, V.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Composite Honeycomb and Solid Laminate Reference Standards to Aid Aircraft Inspections (open access)

Development of Composite Honeycomb and Solid Laminate Reference Standards to Aid Aircraft Inspections

The rapidly increasing use of composites on commercial airplanes coupled with the potential for economic savings associated with their use in aircraft structures means that the demand for composite materials technology will continue to increase. Inspecting these composite structures is a critical element in assuring their continued airworthiness. The FAA's Airworthiness Assurance NDI Validation Center, in conjunction with the Commercial Aircraft Composite Repair Committee (CACRC), is developing a set of composite reference standards to be used in NDT equipment calibration for accomplishment of damage assessment and post-repair inspection of all commercial aircraft composites. In this program, a series of NDI tests on a matrix of composite aircraft structures and prototype reference standards were completed in order to minimize the number of standards needed to carry out composite inspections on aircraft. Two tasks, related to composite laminates and non-metallic composite honeycomb configurations, were addressed. A suite of 64 honeycomb panels, representing the bounding conditions of honeycomb construction on aircraft, were inspected using a wide array of NDI techniques. An analysis of the resulting data determined the variables that play a key role in setting up NDT equipment. This has resulted in a prototype set of minimum honeycomb reference standards that include …
Date: March 4, 1999
Creator: Dorrell, L. & Roach, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Materials Parameters and Design Details on the Fatigue of Composite Materials for Wind Turbine Blades (open access)

Effects of Materials Parameters and Design Details on the Fatigue of Composite Materials for Wind Turbine Blades

This paper presents an analysis of the results of nine years of fatigue testing represented in the USDOE/Montana State University (DOE/MSU) Composite Materials Fatigue Database. The focus of the program has been to explore a broad range of glass-fiber-based materials parameters encompassing over 4500 data points for 130 materials systems. Significant trends and transitions in fatigue resistance are shown as the fiber content and fabric architecture are varied. The effects of structural details including ply drops, bonded stiffeners, and other geometries that produce local variations in fiber packing and geometry are also described. Fatigue tests on composite beam structures are then discussed; these show generally good correlation with coupon fatigue data in the database. Goodman diagrams for fatigue design are presented, and their application to predicting the service lifetime of blades is described.
Date: March 4, 1999
Creator: Mandell, J.F.; Samborsky, D.D. & Sutherland, H.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Aerogel Materials for High-Temperature Batteries (open access)

Evaluation of Aerogel Materials for High-Temperature Batteries

Siiica aerogels have 1/3 the thermal conductivity of the best commercial composite insulations, or ~13 mW/m-K at 25&deg;C. However, aerogels are transparent in the near IR region of 4-7 &micro;m, which is where the radiation peak from a thermal-battery stack occurs. Titania and carbon- black powders were examined as thermal opacifiers, to reduce radiation at temperatures between 300&deg;C and 600&deg;C, which spans the range of operating temperature for most thermal batteries. The effectiveness of the various opacifiers depended on the loading, with the best overall results being obtained using aerogels filled with carbon black. Fabrication and strength issues still remain, however.
Date: May 4, 1999
Creator: Ashley, Carol S.; Guidotti, Ronald A.; Reed, Scott T. & Reinhardt, Frederick W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Human Performance Issues for Fire Risk (open access)

Evaluation of Human Performance Issues for Fire Risk

This paper summarizes the current status of the treatment of human reliability in fire risk analyses for nuclear power plants and identifies areas that need to be addressed. A new approach is suggested to improve the modeling.
Date: May 4, 1999
Creator: Bley, Dennis C.; Cooper, Susan E.; Forester, John A.; Kolaczkowski, Alan M.; Ramey-Smith, Ann; Thompson, Catherine M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fabrication of a simple materials system for study of Hg in a stainless steel. (open access)

Fabrication of a simple materials system for study of Hg in a stainless steel.

The Spallation Neutron Source (SNS), currently under construction at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is expected to employ a Hg target encased in a stainless steel. Little is known about the metallurgical behavior of this materials engineering system, which will occur in a service environment involving elevated temperatures and intense radiation. Under normal equilibrium conditions, however, Hg is known to be insoluble in and non-reactive with solid Fe and Cr but to form one or more intermetallics with Ni. Hg has been implanted into alloy 304L. For implantations at 400 and 500 C to a fluence of 3 x 10{sup 16} cm{sup {minus}2} sub-micron sized precipitates of Hg are formed, as judged, for example, from their solidification behavior on cooling during TEM observation. The formation of such a system of microtargets and possible studies employing them as in situ TEM specimens are discussed, which can provide useful empirical information in conjunction with SNS target development.
Date: January 4, 1999
Creator: Allen, C. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finite Element Modeling of Suspended Particle Migration in Non-Newtonian Fluids (open access)

Finite Element Modeling of Suspended Particle Migration in Non-Newtonian Fluids

Shear-induced migration of particles is studied during the slow flow of suspensions of spheres (particle volume fraction {phi} = 0.50) in an inelastic but shear-thinning, suspending fluid in flow between counterrotating concentric cylinders, The conditions are such that nonhydrodynamic effects are negligible. The movement of particles away from the high shear rate region is more pronounced than in a Newtonian suspending liquid. We test a continuum constitutive model for the evolution of particle concentration in a flowing suspension proposed by Phillips et al. (1992) by using shear-thinning, suspending fluids. The fluid constitutive equation is Carreau-like in its shear-thinning behavior but also varies with the local particle concentration. The model is compared with the experimental data gathered with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging.
Date: March 4, 1999
Creator: Altobelli, S.; Baer, T.; Mondy, L.; Rao, R. & Stephens, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Gas-Phase Kinetics of Reactions of Alkali Metal Atoms with Nitric Oxide (open access)

The Gas-Phase Kinetics of Reactions of Alkali Metal Atoms with Nitric Oxide

Article on the gas-phase kinetics of reactions of alkali metal atoms with nitric oxide.
Date: November 4, 1999
Creator: Goumri, Abdellatif; Rocha, John-David Ray; Misra, Ashutosh & Marshall, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Geologic and Hydrogeologic Setting of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (open access)

The Geologic and Hydrogeologic Setting of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant

The Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) is a mined repository constructed by the US Department of Energy for the permanent disposal of transuranic wastes generated since 1970 by activities related to national defense. The WIPP is located 42 km east of Carlsbad, New Mexico, in bedded salt (primarily halite) of the Late Permian (approximately 255 million years old) Salado Formation 655 m below the land surface. Characterization of the site began in the mid-1970s. Construction of the underground disposal facilities began in the early 1980s, and the facility received final certification from the US Environmental Protection Agency in May 1998. Disposal operations are planned to begin following receipt of a final permit from the State of New Mexico and resolution of legal issues. Like other proposed geologic repositories for radioactive waste, the WIPP relies on a combination of engineered and natural barriers to isolate the waste from the biosphere. Engineered barriers at the WIPP, including the seals that will be emplaced in the access shafts when the facility is decommissioned, are discussed in the context of facility design elsewhere in this volume. Physical properties of the natural barriers that contribute to the isolation of radionuclides are discussed here in the …
Date: March 4, 1999
Creator: Swift, Peter N. & Corbet, Thomas F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A GIS approach for predicting prehistoric site locations. (open access)

A GIS approach for predicting prehistoric site locations.

Use of geographic information system (GIS)-based predictive mapping to locate areas of high potential for prehistoric archaeological sites is becoming increasingly popular among archaeologists. Knowledge of the environmental variables influencing activities of original inhabitants is used to produce GIS layers representing the spatial distribution of those variables. The GIS layers are then analyzed to identify locations where combinations of environmental variables match patterns observed at known prehistoric sites. Presented are the results of a study to locate high-potential areas for prehistoric sites in a largely unsurveyed area of 39,000 acres in the Upper Chesapeake Bay region, including details of the analysis process. The project used environmental data from over 500 known sites in other parts of the region and the results corresponded well with known sites in the study area.
Date: August 4, 1999
Creator: Kuiper, J. A. & Wescott, K. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
GIS-Based Population Model Applied to Nevada Transportation Routes (open access)

GIS-Based Population Model Applied to Nevada Transportation Routes

Recently, a model based on geographic information system (GIS) processing of US Census Block data has made high-resolution population analysis for transportation risk analysis technically and economically feasible. Population density bordering each kilometer of a route may be tabulated with specific route sections falling into each of three categories (Rural, Suburban or Urban) identified for separate risk analysis. In addition to the improvement in resolution of Urban areas along a route, the model provides a statistically-based correction to population densities in Rural and Suburban areas where Census Block dimensions may greatly exceed the 800-meter scale of interest. A semi-automated application of the GIS model to a subset of routes in Nevada (related to the Yucca Mountain project) are presented, and the results compared to previous models including a model based on published Census and other data. These comparisons demonstrate that meaningful improvement in accuracy and specificity of transportation risk analyses is dependent on correspondingly accurate and geographically-specific population density data.
Date: March 4, 1999
Creator: Mills, G.S. & Neuhauser, K.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library