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Economics definitions, methods, models, and analysis procedures for Homeland Security applications. (open access)

Economics definitions, methods, models, and analysis procedures for Homeland Security applications.

This report gives an overview of the types of economic methodologies and models used by Sandia economists in their consequence analysis work for the National Infrastructure Simulation&Analysis Center and other DHS programs. It describes the three primary resolutions at which analysis is conducted (microeconomic, mesoeconomic, and macroeconomic), the tools used at these three levels (from data analysis to internally developed and publicly available tools), and how they are used individually and in concert with each other and other infrastructure tools.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Ehlen, Mark Andrew; Loose, Verne William; Vargas, Vanessa N.; Smith, Braeton J.; Warren, Drake E.; Downes, Paula Sue et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Machine Protection System (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Machine Protection System

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Z., Altinbas
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Photocathode Deposition and Transport System (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Photocathode Deposition and Transport System

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Pate, D.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Rao, T.; Burrill, A.; Todd, R.; Smedley, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
R&D ERL: Diagnostics (open access)

R&D ERL: Diagnostics

The Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) prototype project is currently under development at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. The ERL is expected to demonstrate energy recovery of high intensity beams with a current of up to a few hundred milliamps, while preserving the emittance of bunches with a charge of a few nanocoulombs produced by a high current SRF gun. To successfully accomplish this task the machine will include beam diagnostics that will be used for accurate characterization of the three dimensional beam phase space at the injection and recirculation energies, transverse and longitudinal beam matching, orbit alignment, beam current measurement, and machine protection. This report outlines requirements on the ERL diagnostics and describes its setup and modes of operation. The BNL Prototype ERL is an R&D effort aimed at reducing risks and costs associated with the proposed RHIC II electron cooler and eRHIC collider. The ERL will serve as a test bed for developing and testing instrumentation and studying physics and technological issues relevant to very high current ERL's. The prototype ERL, mated to a high current SRF gun, is expected to demonstrate production and energy recovery of high intensity, low emittance beams with a current of up to a few …
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Gassner, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
R&D ERL: Power Supplies (open access)

R&D ERL: Power Supplies

A magnet power supply system has been developed to meet the field requirements of the ERL in a compact and cost effective fashion.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Lambiase, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: 5 Cell 704 MHz SRF Cavity (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: 5 Cell 704 MHz SRF Cavity

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: A., Burrill
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Controls System (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Controls System

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: L., Hoff & Jamilkowski, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
R&D ERL: Controls System (open access)

R&D ERL: Controls System

This paper examines the equipment and software from which the controls system interface for the Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) will be implemented at the Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Hoff, L. & Jamilkowski, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Tank Farms Waste Certification Flow Loop Test Plan (open access)

Hanford Tank Farms Waste Certification Flow Loop Test Plan

A future requirement of Hanford Tank Farm operations will involve transfer of wastes from double shell tanks to the Waste Treatment Plant. As the U.S. Department of Energy contractor for Tank Farm Operations, Washington River Protection Solutions anticipates the need to certify that waste transfers comply with contractual requirements. This test plan describes the approach for evaluating several instruments that have potential to detect the onset of flow stratification and critical suspension velocity. The testing will be conducted in an existing pipe loop in Pacific Northwest National Laboratory’s facility that is being modified to accommodate the testing of instruments over a range of simulated waste properties and flow conditions. The testing phases, test matrix and types of simulants needed and the range of testing conditions required to evaluate the instruments are described
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Bamberger, Judith A.; Meyer, Perry A.; Scott, Paul A.; Adkins, Harold E.; Wells, Beric E.; Blanchard, Jeremy et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
R&D ERL: HTS Solenoid (open access)

R&D ERL: HTS Solenoid

An innovative feature of the ERL project is the use of a solenoid made with High Temperature Superconductor (HTS) with the Superconducting RF cavity. The HTS solenoid design offers many advantages because of several unique design features. Typically the solenoid is placed outside the cryostat which means that the beam gets significantly defused before a focusing element starts. In the current design, the solenoid is placed inside the cryostat which provides an early focusing structure and thus a significant reduction in the emittance of the electron beam. In addition, taking full advantage of the high critical temperature of HTS, the solenoid has been designed to reach the required field at {approx}77 K, which can be obtained with liquid nitrogen. This significantly reduces the cost of testing and allows a variety of critical pre-tests which would have been prohibitively expensive at 4 K in liquid helium because of the additional requirements of cryostat and associated facilities.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Gupta, R.; Muratore, J. & Plate, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Second Line of Defense Megaports Initiative Operational Testing and Evaluation Plan Colon Container Terminal (CCT) Panama (open access)

Second Line of Defense Megaports Initiative Operational Testing and Evaluation Plan Colon Container Terminal (CCT) Panama

Report on the Operational Testing and Evaluation to validate and baseline an operable system that meets the Second Line of Defense (SLD) mission requirements. An SLD system is defined as the detection technology and associated equipment, the system operators from the host country, the standard operating procedures (SOPs), and other elements such as training and maintenance which support long-term system sustainment. To this end, the activities conducted during the OT&E phase must demonstrate that the Megaports System can be operated effectively in real-time by Panama Direccion General de Aduanas (DGA Panama Customs) personnel to the standards of the U.S. Department of Energy/National Nuclear Security Administration (DOE/NNSA).
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Newhouse, Robert N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
R&D ERL: HOM Absorbers (open access)

R&D ERL: HOM Absorbers

Several future accelerator projects at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) are based on Energy Recovery Linacs (ERL) with high-charge high-current electron beams. Their stable operation mandates effective higher-order-mode (HOM) damping. The development of HOM dampers for these projects is pursued actively at this laboratory. A strong HOM damping was experimentally demonstrated both at room- and at superconducting- (SC) temperatures in a prototype R&D five-cell niobium SRF cavity with ferrite dampers. A novel type of ferrite damper over a ceramic break for a R&D SRF electron gun also was developed. For future SRF linacs longer cryomodules comprising of multiple superconducting cavities with reasonably short transitions between them are planned. In such a configuration, the dampers, located closer to the cavities, will be at cryogenic temperatures; this will impose additional constraints and complications. Two room-temperature mock-up five-cell copper cavities were used to study various damper configurations. This paper presents results of simulations and measurements for several configurations.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Hahn, H.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Calaga, R.; Hammons, L.; Litvinenko, V. N. & Xu, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Magnetic Measurement of the ERL Magnets (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Magnetic Measurement of the ERL Magnets

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: A., Jain
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Cryogenic System (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Cryogenic System

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: R., Than
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Halogen-Mercury Reactions in Flue Gas (open access)

Analysis of Halogen-Mercury Reactions in Flue Gas

Oxidized mercury species may be formed in combustion systems through gas-phase reactions between elemental mercury and halogens, such as chorine or bromine. This study examines how bromine species affect mercury oxidation in the gas phase and examines the effects of mixtures of bromine and chlorine on extents of oxidation. Experiments were conducted in a bench-scale, laminar flow, methane-fired (300 W), quartz-lined reactor in which gas composition (HCl, HBr, NO{sub x}, SO{sub 2}) and temperature profile were varied. In the experiments, the post-combustion gases were quenched from flame temperatures to about 350 C, and then speciated mercury was measured using a wet conditioning system and continuous emissions monitor (CEM). Supporting kinetic calculations were performed and compared with measured levels of oxidation. A significant portion of this report is devoted to sample conditioning as part of the mercury analysis system. In combustion systems with significant amounts of Br{sub 2} in the flue gas, the impinger solutions used to speciate mercury may be biased and care must be taken in interpreting mercury oxidation results. The stannous chloride solution used in the CEM conditioning system to convert all mercury to total mercury did not provide complete conversion of oxidized mercury to elemental, when bromine …
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Buitrago, Paula; Silcox, Geoffrey; Senior, Constance & Otten, Brydger Van
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced I/O for large-scale scientific applications. (open access)

Advanced I/O for large-scale scientific applications.

As scientific simulations scale to use petascale machines and beyond, the data volumes generated pose a dual problem. First, with increasing machine sizes, the careful tuning of IO routines becomes more and more important to keep the time spent in IO acceptable. It is not uncommon, for instance, to have 20% of an application's runtime spent performing IO in a 'tuned' system. Careful management of the IO routines can move that to 5% or even less in some cases. Second, the data volumes are so large, on the order of 10s to 100s of TB, that trying to discover the scientifically valid contributions requires assistance at runtime to both organize and annotate the data. Waiting for offline processing is not feasible due both to the impact on the IO system and the time required. To reduce this load and improve the ability of scientists to use the large amounts of data being produced, new techniques for data management are required. First, there is a need for techniques for efficient movement of data from the compute space to storage. These techniques should understand the underlying system infrastructure and adapt to changing system conditions. Technologies include aggregation networks, data staging nodes for …
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Klasky, Scott (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN); Schwan, Karsten (Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA); Oldfield, Ron A. & Lofstead, Gerald F., II (Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Second Line of Defense Virtual Private Network Guidance for Deployed and New CAS Systems (open access)

Second Line of Defense Virtual Private Network Guidance for Deployed and New CAS Systems

This paper discusses the importance of remote access via virtual private network (VPN) for the Second Line of Defense (SLD) Central Alarm System (CAS) sites, the requirements for maintaining secure channels while using VPN and implementation requirements for current and future sites.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Singh, Surya V. & Thronas, Aaron I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Diagnostics (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Diagnostics

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Gassner, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Vacuum (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Vacuum

N/A
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: M., Mapes; Smart, L.; Weiss, D.; Steszyn, A.; Todd, R. & Mapes, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gatling gun: high average polarized current injector for eRHIC (open access)

Gatling gun: high average polarized current injector for eRHIC

This idea was originally developed in 2001 for, at that time, an ERL-based (and later recirculating-ring) electron-ion collider at JLab. Naturally the same idea is applicable for any gun requiring current exceeding capability of a single cathode. ERL-based eRHIC is one of such cases. This note related to eRHIC was prepared at Duke University in February 2003. In many case photo-injectors can have a limited average current - it is especially true about polarized photo-guns. It is know that e-RHIC requires average polarized electron current well above currently demonstrated by photo-injectors - hence combining currents from multiple guns is can be useful option for eRHIC.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Litvinenko, V. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
R&D ERL: Cryogenic System (open access)

R&D ERL: Cryogenic System

The ERL cryogenic system will supply cooling to a super-conducting RF (SCRF) gun and the 5-cell super-conducting RF cavity system that need to be held cold at 2K. The engineering of the cavity cryomodules were carried out by AES in collaboration with BNL. The 2K superfluid bath is produced by pumping on the bath using a sub-atmospheric warm compression system. The cryogenic system makes use of mainly existing equipment relocated from other facilities: a 300W 4.5K coldbox, an 45 g/s screw compressor, a 3800 liter liquid helium storage dewar, a 170 m{sup 3} warm gas storage tank, and a 40,000 liter vertical low pressure liquid nitrogen storage dewar. An existing wet expander obtained from another facility has been added to increase the plant capacity. In order to deliver the required 3 to 4 bar helium to the cryomodules while using up stored liquid capacity at low pressure, a new subcooler will be installed to function as the capacity transfer device. A 2K to 4K recovery heat exchanger is also implemented for each cryomodule to recover refrigeration below 4K, thus maximizing 2K cooling capacity with the given sub-atmospheric pump. No 4K-300K refrigeration recovery is implemented at this time of the returning …
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Than, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Value of Information Analysis Project Gnome Site, New Mexico (open access)

Value of Information Analysis Project Gnome Site, New Mexico

The Project Gnome site in southeastern New Mexico was the location of an underground nuclear detonation in 1961 and a hydrologic tracer test using radionuclides in 1963. The tracer test is recognized as having greater radionuclide migration potential than the nuclear test because the tracer test radionuclides (tritium, 90Sr, 131I, and 137Cs) are in direct contact with the Culebra Dolomite aquifer, whereas the nuclear test is within a bedded salt formation. The tracer test is the topic here. Recognizing previous analyses of the fate of the Gnome tracer test contaminants (Pohll and Pohlmann, 1996; Pohlmann and Andricevic, 1994), and the existence of a large body of relevant investigations and analyses associated with the nearby Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) site (summarized in US DOE, 2009), the Gnome Site Characterization Work Plan (U.S. DOE, 2002) called for a Data Decision Analysis to determine whether or not additional characterization data are needed prior to evaluating existing subsurface intrusion restrictions and determining long-term monitoring for the tracer test. Specifically, the Work Plan called for the analysis to weigh the potential reduction in uncertainty from additional data collection against the cost of such field efforts.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Pohll, Greg & Chapman, Jenny
System: The UNT Digital Library
R&D ERL: Machine Protection System (open access)

R&D ERL: Machine Protection System

The Machine Protection System (MPS) is a device-safety system that is designed to prevent damage to hardware by generating interlocks, based upon the state of input signals generated by selected sub-system. It exists to protect key machinery such as the 50 kW and 1 MW RF Systems. When a fault state occurs, the MPS is capable of responding with an interlock signal within several microseconds. The Machine Protection System inputs are designed to be fail-safe. In addition, all fault conditions are latched and time-stamped. The ERL MPS is based on a National Instruments hardware platform, and is programmed by utilizing National Instruments development environment for a visual programming language.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Altinbas, Z.
System: The UNT Digital Library
VME Data Acquisition Modules for MINERvA Experiment (open access)

VME Data Acquisition Modules for MINERvA Experiment

This document describes two VME modules developed for MINERvA experiment at Fermilab. The Chain ReadOut Controller (CROC) module has four serial data channels and can interface with up to 48 front-ends using standard CAT5e networking cable. The data transmission rate of each channel is 160 Mbit/s. The maximum data transmission rate via VME bus is {approx}18 MB/s. The Chain Readout Interface Module (CRIM) is designed to provide various interface functions for the CROC module. It is compatible with MINOS MTM timing module and can be used to distribute timing signals to four CROC modules. The CRIM module also has a data port compatible with the CROC serial data interface. The data port can be used for diagnostic purpose and can generate triggers from front-end events. The CRIM module is a standard D08(O) interrupter module.
Date: January 1, 2010
Creator: Baldin, B. & /fermilab
System: The UNT Digital Library