Identification and Prioritization of Analysis Cases for Marine and Hydrokinetic Energy Risk Screening (open access)

Identification and Prioritization of Analysis Cases for Marine and Hydrokinetic Energy Risk Screening

In this report we describe the development of the Environmental Risk Evaluation System (ERES), a risk-informed analytical process for estimating the environmental risks associated with the construction and operation of marine and hydrokinetic energy generation projects. The development process consists of two main phases of analysis. In the first phase, preliminary risk analyses will take the form of screening studies in which key environmental impacts and the uncertainties that create risk are identified, leading to a better-focused characterization of the relevant environmental effects. Existence of critical data gaps will suggest areas in which specific modeling and/or data collection activities should take place. In the second phase, more detailed quantitative risk analyses will be conducted, with residual uncertainties providing the basis for recommending risk mitigation and monitoring activities. We also describe the process used for selecting three cases for fiscal year 2010 risk screening analysis using the ERES. A case is defined as a specific technology deployed in a particular location involving certain environmental receptors specific to that location. The three cases selected satisfy a number of desirable criteria: 1) they correspond to real projects whose deployment is likely to take place in the foreseeable future; 2) the technology developers are …
Date: June 16, 2010
Creator: Anderson, Richard M.; Unwin, Stephen D. & Van Cleve, Frances B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
PLANTS AS BIO-MONITORS FOR 137CS, 238PU, 239, 240PU AND 40K AT THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE (open access)

PLANTS AS BIO-MONITORS FOR 137CS, 238PU, 239, 240PU AND 40K AT THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE

The nuclear fuel cycle generates a considerable amount of radioactive waste, which often includes nuclear fission products, such as strontium-90 ({sup 90}Sr) and cesium-137 ({sup 137}Cs), and actinides such as uranium (U) and plutonium (Pu). When released into the environment, large quantities of these radionuclides can present considerable problems to man and biota due to their radioactive nature and, in some cases as with the actinides, their chemical toxicity. Radionuclides are expected to decay at a known rate. Yet, research has shown the rate of elimination from an ecosystem to differ from the decay rate due to physical, chemical and biological processes that remove the contaminant or reduce its biological availability. Knowledge regarding the rate by which a contaminant is eliminated from an ecosystem (ecological half-life) is important for evaluating the duration and potential severity of risk. To better understand a contaminants impact on an environment, consideration should be given to plants. As primary producers, they represent an important mode of contamination transfer from sediments and soils into the food chain. Contaminants that are chemically and/or physically sequestered in a media are less likely to be bio-available to plants and therefore an ecosystem.
Date: December 16, 2010
Creator: Caldwell, E.; Duff, M. & Ferguson, C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library

In silico discovery of the dormancy regulons in a number of Actinobacteria genomes

Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a dangerous Actinobacteria infecting nearly one third of the human population. It becomes dormant and phenotypically drug resistant in response to stresses. An important feature of the M. tuberculosis pathogenesis is the prevalence of latent infection without disease, making understanding of the mechanisms used by the bacteria to exist in this state and to switch to metabolically active infectious form a vital problem to consider. M. tuberculosis dormancy is regulated by the three-component regulatory system of two kinases (DosT and DevS) and transcriprional regulator (DevR). DevR activates transcription of a set of genes, which allow the bacteria to survive long periods of anaerobiosis, and may be important for long-term survival within the host during latent infection. The DevR-regulon is studied experimentally in M. tuberculosis and few other phylogenetically close Mycobacteria spp. As many other two-component systems, the devRS operon is autoregulated. However, the mechanism of the dormancy is not completely clear even for these bacteria and there is no data describing the dormancy regulons in other species.
Date: November 16, 2010
Creator: Gerasimova, Anna; Dubchak, Inna; Arkin, Adam & Gelfand, Mikhail
Object Type: Poster
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Energy Density Physics Experiments With Intense Heavy Ion Beams (open access)

High Energy Density Physics Experiments With Intense Heavy Ion Beams

The US heavy ion fusion science program has developed techniques for heating ion-beam-driven warm dense matter (WDM) targets. The WDM conditions are to be achieved by combined longitudinal and transverse space-charge neutralized drift compression of the ion beam to provide a hot spot on the target with a beam spot size of about 1 mm, and pulse length about 1-2 ns. As a technique for heating volumetric samples of matter to high energy density, intense beams of heavy ions are capable of delivering precise and uniform beam energy deposition dE/dx, in a relatively large sample size, and the ability to heat any solid-phase target material. Initial experiments use a 0.3 MeV K+ beam (below the Bragg peak) from the NDCX-I accelerator. Future plans include target experiments using the NDCX-II accelerator, which is designed to heat targets at the Bragg peak using a 3-6 MeV lithium ion beam. The range of the beams in solid matter targets is about 1 micron, which can be lengthened by using porous targets at reduced density. We have completed the fabrication of a new experimental target chamber facility for WDM experiments, and implemented initial target diagnostics to be used for the first target experiments in …
Date: March 16, 2010
Creator: Henestroza, E.; Leitner, M.; Logan, B. G.; More, R. M.; Roy, P. K.; Ni, P. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE ON MITOCHONDRIA & CHLOROPLASTS, LUCCA, ITALY, JULY 11-16, 2010 (open access)

2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE ON MITOCHONDRIA & CHLOROPLASTS, LUCCA, ITALY, JULY 11-16, 2010

The 2010 GRC on Mitochondria & Chloroplasts will assemble an international group of molecular, structural and cellular biologists, biochemists and geneticists investigating a broad spectrum of fundamental problems related to the biology of these organelles in animal, plant and fungal cells. This field has witnessed an extraordinary expansion in recent years, fueled by the discovery of the role of mitochondria in human disease and ageing, and of the synergy of chloroplasts and mitochondria in energetic output, the identification of novel factors involved in organelle division, movement, signaling and acclimation to changing environmental conditions, and by the powerful tools of organelle proteomics. The 2010 GRC will highlight advances in the elucidation of molecular mechanisms of organelle biogenesis including regulation of genome structure, evolution and expression, organellar protein import, assembly and turnover of respiratory and photosynthetic complexes, bidirectional signaling between organelles and nucleus, organelle morphology and dynamics, and the integration of cellular metabolism. We will also explore progress in mechanisms of disease and ageing/ senescence in animals and plants. The organellar field has forged new fronts toward a global and comprehensive understanding of mitochondrial and chloroplast biology at the molecular level. Many of the molecules under study in model organisms are responsible …
Date: July 16, 2010
Creator: Barkan, Alice
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic SU(2) structure from seven-branes (open access)

Dynamic SU(2) structure from seven-branes

We obtain a family of supersymmetric solutions of type IIB supergravity with dynamic SU(2) structure, which describe the local geometry near a stack of four D7-branes and one O7-plane wrapping a rigid four-cycle. The deformation to a generalized complex geometry is interpreted as a consequence of nonperturbative effects in the seven-brane gauge theory. We formulate the problem for seven-branes wrapping the base of an appropriate del Pezzo cone, and in the near-stack limit in which the four-cycle is flat, we obtain an exact solution in closed form. Our solutions serve to characterize the local geometry of nonperturbatively-stabilized flux compactifications.
Date: December 16, 2010
Creator: Heidenreich, Ben; McAllister, Liam; /Cornell U., Phys. Dept.; Torroba, Gonzalo & /SLAC /Stanford U., Phys. Dept.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gratings for Increasing Solid-State Laser Gain and Efficiency (open access)

Gratings for Increasing Solid-State Laser Gain and Efficiency

We introduce new concepts for increasing the efficiency of solid state lasers by using gratings deposited on laser slabs or disks. The gratings improve efficiency in two ways: (1) by coupling out of the slab deleterious amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) and (2) by increasing the absorption efficiency of pump light. The gratings also serve as antireflective coatings for the extracting laser beam. To evaluate the potential for such coatings to improve laser performance, we calculated optical properties of a 2500 groove/mm, tantala-silica grating on a 1cm x 4cm x 8cm titanium-doped sapphire slab and performed ray-trace calculations for ASE and pump light. Our calculations show substantial improvements in efficiency due to grating ASE-coupling properties. For example, the gratings reduce pump energy required to produce a 0.6/cm gain coefficient by 9%, 20% and 35% for pump pulse durations of 0.5 {micro}s, 1{micro}s and 3{micro}s, respectively. Gratings also increase 532-nm pump-light absorption efficiency, particularly when the product slab overall absorption is small. For example, when the single-pass absorption is 1 neper, absorption efficiency increases from 66%, without gratings, to 86%, when gratings are used.
Date: April 16, 2010
Creator: Erlandson, A C; Britten, J A & Bonlie, J D
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modifications and Applications of the HERMES model: June - October 2010 (open access)

Modifications and Applications of the HERMES model: June - October 2010

The HERMES (High Explosive Response to MEchanical Stimulus) model has been developed to describe the response of energetic materials to low-velocity mechanical stimulus, referred to as HEVR (High Explosive Violent Response) or BVR (Burn to Violent Reaction). For tests performed with an HMX-based UK explosive, at sample sizes less than 200 g, the response was sometimes an explosion, but was not observed to be a detonation. The distinction between explosion and detonation can be important in assessing the effects of the HE response on nearby structures. A detonation proceeds as a supersonic shock wave supported by the release of energy that accompanies the transition from solid to high-pressure gas. For military high explosives, the shock wave velocity generally exceeds 7 km/s, and the pressure behind the shock wave generally exceeds 30 GPa. A kilogram of explosive would be converted to gas in 10 to 15 microseconds. An HEVR explosion proceeds much more slowly. Much of the explosive remains unreacted after the event. Peak pressures have been measured and calculated at less than 1 GPa, and the time for the portion of the solid that does react to form gas is about a millisecond. The explosion will, however, launch the confinement …
Date: November 16, 2010
Creator: Reaugh, J E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbon Capture and Sequestration (via Enhanced Oil Recovery) from a Hydrogen Production Facility in an Oil Refinery (open access)

Carbon Capture and Sequestration (via Enhanced Oil Recovery) from a Hydrogen Production Facility in an Oil Refinery

The project proposed a commercial demonstration of advanced technologies that would capture and sequester CO2 emissions from an existing hydrogen production facility in an oil refinery into underground formations in combination with Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR). The project is led by Praxair, Inc., with other project participants: BP Products North America Inc., Denbury Onshore, LLC (Denbury), and Gulf Coast Carbon Center (GCCC) at the Bureau of Economic Geology of The University of Texas at Austin. The project is located at the BP Refinery at Texas City, Texas. Praxair owns and operates a large hydrogen production facility within the refinery. As part of the project, Praxair would construct a CO2 capture and compression facility. The project aimed at demonstrating a novel vacuum pressure swing adsorption (VPSA) based technology to remove CO2 from the Steam Methane Reformers (SMR) process gas. The captured CO2 would be purified using refrigerated partial condensation separation (i.e., cold box). Denbury would purchase the CO2 from the project and inject the CO2 as part of its independent commercial EOR projects. The Gulf Coast Carbon Center at the Bureau of Economic Geology, a unit of University of Texas at Austin, would manage the research monitoring, verification and accounting (MVA) …
Date: June 16, 2010
Creator: Mehlman, Stewart
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE AFFECTS OF HALIDE MODIFIERS ON THE SORPTION KINETICS OF THE LI-MG-N-H SYSTEM (open access)

THE AFFECTS OF HALIDE MODIFIERS ON THE SORPTION KINETICS OF THE LI-MG-N-H SYSTEM

In this present work, the affects of different transition metal halides (TiCl{sub 3}, VCl{sub 3}, ScCl{sub 3} and NiCl{sub 2}) on the sorption properties of the 1:1 molar ratio of LiNH{sub 2} to MgH{sub 2} are investigated. The modified mixtures were found to contain LiNH{sub 2}, MgH{sub 2} and LiCl. TGA results showed that the hydrogen desorption temperature was reduced with the modifier addition in this order: TiCl{sub 3}>ScCl{sub 3}>VCl{sub 3}>NiCl{sub 2}. Ammonia release was not significantly reduced resulting in a weight loss greater than the theoretical hydrogen storage capacity of the material. The isothermal sorption kinetics of the modified systems showed little improvement after the first dehydrogenation cycle over the unmodified system but showed drastic improvement in rehydrogenation cycles. XRD and Raman spectroscopy identified the cycled material to be composed of LiH, MgH{sub 2}, Mg(NH{sub 2}){sub 2} and Mg{sub 3}N{sub 2}.
Date: December 16, 2010
Creator: Erdy, C.; Gray, J.; Lascola, R. & Anton, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
LIQUID AIR INTERFACE CORROSION TESTING FOR FY2010 (open access)

LIQUID AIR INTERFACE CORROSION TESTING FOR FY2010

An experimental study was undertaken to investigate the corrosivity to carbon steel of the liquid-air interface of dilute simulated radioactive waste solutions. Open-circuit potentials were measured on ASTM A537 carbon steel specimens located slightly above, at, and below the liquid-air interface of simulated waste solutions. The 0.12-inch-diameter specimens used in the study were sized to respond to the assumed distinctive chemical environment of the liquid-air interface, where localized corrosion in poorly inhibited solutions may frequently be observed. The practical inhibition of such localized corrosion in liquid radioactive waste storage tanks is based on empirical testing and a model of a liquid-air interface environment that is made more corrosive than the underlying bulk liquid due to chemical changes brought about by absorbed atmospheric carbon dioxide. The chemical changes were assumed to create a more corrosive open-circuit potential in carbon in contact with the liquid-air interface. Arrays of 4 small specimens spaced about 0.3 in. apart were partially immersed so that one specimen contacted the top of the meniscus of the test solution. Two specimens contacted the bulk liquid below the meniscus and one specimen was positioned in the vapor space above the meniscus. Measurements were carried out for up to 16 …
Date: December 16, 2010
Creator: Zapp, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the B -> D(*)D(*)K Branching Fractions (open access)

Measurement of the B -> D(*)D(*)K Branching Fractions

The authors present a measurement of the branching fractions of the 22 decay channels of the B{sup 0} and B{sup +} mesons to {bar D}{sup (*)}D{sup (*)}K, where the D{sup (*)} and {bar D}{sup (*)} mesons are fully reconstructed. Summing the 10 neutral modes and the 12 charged modes, the branching fractions are found to be {Beta}(B{sup 0} {yields} {bar D}{sup (*)}D{sup (*)}K) = (3.68 {+-} 0.10 {+-} 0.24)% and {Beta}(B{sup +} {yields} {bar D}{sup (*)}D{sup (*)}K) = (4.05 {+-} 0.11 {+-} 0.28)%, where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second systematic. The results are based on 429 fb{sup -1} of data containing 471 x 10{sup 6} B{bar B} pairs collected at the {Upsilon}(4S) resonance with the BABAR detector at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
Date: December 16, 2010
Creator: Sanchez, P.del Amo
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of LLNL BSL-3 Maximum Credible Event Potential Consequence to the General Population and Surrounding Environment (open access)

Evaluation of LLNL BSL-3 Maximum Credible Event Potential Consequence to the General Population and Surrounding Environment

None
Date: August 16, 2010
Creator: Johnson, M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of upstream Te profiles with divertor heat flux and its implications on parallel and perpendicular transport in the SOL of DIII-D H-mode plasmas (open access)

Comparison of upstream Te profiles with divertor heat flux and its implications on parallel and perpendicular transport in the SOL of DIII-D H-mode plasmas

None
Date: June 16, 2010
Creator: Makowski, M A; Lasnier, C. J.; Porter, G. D.; Leonard, A. W.; Boedo, J. A.; Watkins, J. G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A digital lock-in upgrade of the motional Stark effect diagnostic on DIII-D (open access)

A digital lock-in upgrade of the motional Stark effect diagnostic on DIII-D

None
Date: July 16, 2010
Creator: King, J D; Makowski, M A; Holcomb, C T; Allen, S L; Geer, R; Meyer, W H et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of High Performance Vacuum Power Flow Interface For Explosive Magnetic Flux Compression Generator Experiments (open access)

Development of High Performance Vacuum Power Flow Interface For Explosive Magnetic Flux Compression Generator Experiments

None
Date: June 16, 2010
Creator: Goerz, D A; Javedani, J B; Vogtlin, G E; Houck, T L; Perkins, M P & Reisman, D B
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiation multigroup diffusion for refractive, lossy media in ALE3D (U) (open access)

Radiation multigroup diffusion for refractive, lossy media in ALE3D (U)

None
Date: December 16, 2010
Creator: Shestakov, A I
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Earth System Grid Center for Enabling Technologies: Building a Global Infrastructure for Climate Change Research (open access)

Earth System Grid Center for Enabling Technologies: Building a Global Infrastructure for Climate Change Research

None
Date: August 16, 2010
Creator: Williams, D. N.; Ahrens, J.; Ananthakrishnan, R.; Bell, G.; Bharathi, S.; Brown, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detection of Anomalous Reactor Activity Using Antineutrino Count Evolution Over the Course of a Reactor Cycle (open access)

Detection of Anomalous Reactor Activity Using Antineutrino Count Evolution Over the Course of a Reactor Cycle

None
Date: August 16, 2010
Creator: Bulayevskaya, V & Bernstein, A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low Strain Rate Measurements on Explosives Using DIC (open access)

Low Strain Rate Measurements on Explosives Using DIC

None
Date: March 16, 2010
Creator: Cunningham, B J; Gagliardi, F J & Ferranti, L
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics Design of the NSTX Upgrade (open access)

Physics Design of the NSTX Upgrade

None
Date: June 16, 2010
Creator: Menard, J; Canik, J; Covele, B; Kaye, S; Kessel, C; Kotschentreuther, M et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Leading Parallel NAS File Systems on Commodity Hardware (open access)

Comparison of Leading Parallel NAS File Systems on Commodity Hardware

None
Date: September 16, 2010
Creator: Fitzgerald, K; Gary, M; Hedges, R M & Stearman, D M
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Unfolding the fission prompt gamma-ray energy and multiplicity distribution measured by DANCE (open access)

Unfolding the fission prompt gamma-ray energy and multiplicity distribution measured by DANCE

The nearly energy independence of the {gamma}-ray efficiency and multiplicity response for the DANCE array, the unusual characteristic elucidated in our early technical report (LLNL-TR-452298), gives one a unique opportunity to derive the true prompt {gamma}-ray energy and multiplicity distribution in fission from the measurement. This unfolding procedure for the experimental data will be described in details and examples will be given to demonstrate the feasibility of reconstruction of the true distribution.
Date: October 16, 2010
Creator: Chyzh, A.; Wu, C. Y.; Bredeweg, T.; Couture, A.; Jandel, M.; Ullmann, J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Random Number Generation for Petascale Quantum Monte Carlo (open access)

Random Number Generation for Petascale Quantum Monte Carlo

The quality of random number generators can affect the results of Monte Carlo computations, especially when a large number of random numbers are consumed. Furthermore, correlations present between different random number streams in a parallel computation can further affect the results. The SPRNG software, which the author had developed earlier, has pseudo-random number generators (PRNGs) capable of producing large numbers of streams with large periods. However, they had been empirically tested on only thousand streams earlier. In the work summarized here, we tested the SPRNG generators with over a hundred thousand streams, involving over 10^14 random numbers per test, on some tests. We also tested the popular Mersenne Twister. We believe that these are the largest tests of PRNGs, both in terms of the numbers of streams tested and the number of random numbers tested. We observed defects in some of these generators, including the Mersenne Twister, while a few generators appeared to perform well. We also corrected an error in the implementation of one of the SPRNG generators.
Date: March 16, 2010
Creator: Srinivasan, Ashok
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library