Addressing the Federal-State-Local Interface Issues During a Catastrophic Event Such as an Anthrax Attack (open access)

Addressing the Federal-State-Local Interface Issues During a Catastrophic Event Such as an Anthrax Attack

On October 9, 2008, federal, state and local policy makers, emergency managers, and medical and public health officials convened in Seattle, Washington, for a workshop on Addressing the Federal-State-Local Interface Issues During a Catastrophic Event Such as an Anthrax Attack. The day-long symposium was aimed at generating a dialogue about recovery and restoration through a discussion of the associated challenges that impact entire communities, including people, infrastructure, and critical systems. The Principal Federal Official (PFO) provided an overview of the role of the PFO in a catastrophic event. A high-level summary of an anthrax scenario was presented. The remainder of the day was focused on interactive discussions among federal, state and local emergency management experts in the areas of: • Decision-making, prioritization, and command and control • Public health/medical services • Community resiliency and continuity of government. Key topics and issues that resulted from discussions included: • Local representation in the Joint Field Office (JFO) • JFO transition to the Long-Term Recovery Office • Process for prioritization of needs • Process for regional coordination • Prioritization - process and federal/military intervention • Allocation of limited resources • Re-entry decision and consistency • Importance of maintaining a healthy hospital system • …
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Stein, Steven L.; Lesperance, Ann M. & Upton, Jaki F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
AFIP-2 Fabrication Summary Report (open access)

AFIP-2 Fabrication Summary Report

The Advanced Test Reactor (ATR) Full-size Plate In Center Flux Trap Position (AFIP)-2 experiment was designed to evaluate the performance of monolithic fuels at a scale prototypic of research reactor fuel plates. Two qualified fueled plates were fabricated for the AFIP 2 experiment to be irradiated in the Idaho National Laboratory ATR. This report provides details of the fuel fabrication efforts, including material selection, fabrication processes, and fuel plate qualification.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Moore, Glenn
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
AFIP-4 Fabrication Summary Report (open access)

AFIP-4 Fabrication Summary Report

The AFIP-4 (ATR Full –size-plate In center flux trap Position) experiment was designed to evaluate the performance of monolithic fuels at a scale prototypic of research reactor fuel plates. Twelve qualified fueled plates were fabricated for the AFIP-4 experiment; to be irradiated in the INL Advanced Test Reactor (ATR). This report provides details of the fuel fabrication efforts; including material selection, fabrication processes, and fuel plate qualification.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Moore, Glenn A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration under uncertainty for finite element models of masonry monuments (open access)

Calibration under uncertainty for finite element models of masonry monuments

Historical unreinforced masonry buildings often include features such as load bearing unreinforced masonry vaults and their supporting framework of piers, fill, buttresses, and walls. The masonry vaults of such buildings are among the most vulnerable structural components and certainly among the most challenging to analyze. The versatility of finite element (FE) analyses in incorporating various constitutive laws, as well as practically all geometric configurations, has resulted in the widespread use of the FE method for the analysis of complex unreinforced masonry structures over the last three decades. However, an FE model is only as accurate as its input parameters, and there are two fundamental challenges while defining FE model input parameters: (1) material properties and (2) support conditions. The difficulties in defining these two aspects of the FE model arise from the lack of knowledge in the common engineering understanding of masonry behavior. As a result, engineers are unable to define these FE model input parameters with certainty, and, inevitably, uncertainties are introduced to the FE model.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Atamturktur, Sezer,; Hemez, Francois, & Unal, Cetin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coagulation chemistries for silica removal from cooling tower water. (open access)

Coagulation chemistries for silica removal from cooling tower water.

The formation of silica scale is a problem for thermoelectric power generating facilities, and this study investigated the potential for removal of silica by means of chemical coagulation from source water before it is subjected to mineral concentration in cooling towers. In Phase I, a screening of many typical as well as novel coagulants was carried out using concentrated cooling tower water, with and without flocculation aids, at concentrations typical for water purification with limited results. In Phase II, it was decided that treatment of source or make up water was more appropriate, and that higher dosing with coagulants delivered promising results. In fact, the less exotic coagulants proved to be more efficacious for reasons not yet fully determined. Some analysis was made of the molecular nature of the precipitated floc, which may aid in process improvements. In Phase III, more detailed study of process conditions for aluminum chloride coagulation was undertaken. Lime-soda water softening and the precipitation of magnesium hydroxide were shown to be too limited in terms of effectiveness, speed, and energy consumption to be considered further for the present application. In Phase IV, sodium aluminate emerged as an effective coagulant for silica, and the most attractive of …
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Nyman, May Devan; Altman, Susan Jeanne & Stewart, Tom
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commercial Lighting Solutions Webtool Peer Review Report, Office Solutions (open access)

Commercial Lighting Solutions Webtool Peer Review Report, Office Solutions

The Commercial Lighting Solutions (CLS) project directly supports the U.S. Department of Energy’s Commercial Building Energy Alliance efforts to design high performance buildings. CLS creates energy efficient best practice lighting designs for widespread use, and they are made available to users via an interactive webtool that both educates and guides the end user through the application of the Lighting Solutions. This report summarizes the peer review of the CLS webtool for offices. The methodology for the peer review process included data collection (stakeholder input), analysis of the comments, and organization of the input into categories for prioritization of the comments against a set of criteria. Based on this process, recommendations were developed for the release of version 2.0 of the webtool at the Lightfair conference in Las Vegas in May 2010. The report provides a list of the top ten most significant and relevant improvements that will be made within the webtool for version 2.0 as well as appendices containing the comments and short-term priorities in additional detail. Peer review comments that are considered high priority by the reviewers and the CLS team but cannot be completed for Version 2.0 are listed as long-term recommendations.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Beeson, Tracy A. & Jones, Carol C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Community Greening: How To Develop A Strategic Energy Plan, Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE) (Brochure) (open access)

Community Greening: How To Develop A Strategic Energy Plan, Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE) (Brochure)

This guide provides an overview of strategic electricity planning for communities, using a step-by-step approach to develop the plan. This method has a high chance of success, because it is based on stakeholder buy-in and political commitment. Not all communities will need to follow all steps, but the process is designed to incorporate all parties, maximize solution-based thinking, and develop a plan that can be carried out by community leaders.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Second Wind Triton Data with Meteorological Tower Measurements (open access)

Comparison of Second Wind Triton Data with Meteorological Tower Measurements

With the increased interest in remote sensing of wind information in recent years, it is important to determine the reliability and accuracy of new wind measurement technologies if they are to replace or supplement conventional tower-based measurements. In this study, we present the results of an analysis characterizing the measurement performance of a state-of-the-art SOund Detection And Ranging (sodar) device when compared to a high-quality tower measurement program. Second Wind Inc. (Somerville, MA, USA) provided NREL with more than six months of data from a measurement program conducted near an operating wind farm in western Texas.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Scott, G.; Elliott, D. & Schwartz, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Complete Multipartite Genome Sequence of Cupriavidus necator JMP134, a Versatile Pollutant Degrader (open access)

The Complete Multipartite Genome Sequence of Cupriavidus necator JMP134, a Versatile Pollutant Degrader

Cupriavidus necator JMP134 (formerly Ralstonia eutropha JMP134) is a Gram-negative {beta}-proteobacterium able to degrade a variety of chloroaromatic compounds and chemically-related pollutants. It was originally isolated based on its ability to use 2,4 dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) as a sole carbon and energy source [1]. In addition to 2,4-D, this strain can also grow on a variety of aromatic substrates, such as 4-chloro-2-methylphenoxyacetate (MCPA), 3-chlorobenzoic acid (3-CB) [2], 2,4,6-trichlorophenol [3], and 4-fluorobenzoate [4]. The genes necessary for 2,4-D utilization have been identified. They are located in two clusters on plasmid pPJ4: tfd{sub I} and tfd{sub II} [5,6,7,8]. The sequence and analysis of plasmid pJP4 was reported and a congruent model for bacterial adaptation to chloroaromatic pollutants was proposed [9]. According to this model, catabolic gene clusters assemble in a modular manner into broad-host-range plasmid backbones by means of repeated chromosomal capture events. Cupriavidus and related Burkholderia genomes are typically multipartite, composed of two large replicons (chromosomes) accompanied by classical plasmids. Previous work with Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 revealed a differential gene distribution with core functions preferentially encoded by the larger chromosome and secondary functions by the smaller [10]. It has been proposed that the secondary chromosomes in many bacteria originated from ancestral …
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Lykidis, Athanasios; Perez-Pantoja, Danilo; Ledger, Thomas; Mavromatis, Kostantinos; Anderson, Iain J.; Ivanova, Natalia N. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual Safety Design Report for the Remote Handled Low-Level Waste Disposal Facility (open access)

Conceptual Safety Design Report for the Remote Handled Low-Level Waste Disposal Facility

A new onsite, remote-handled LLW disposal facility has been identified as the highest ranked alternative for providing continued, uninterrupted remote-handled LLW disposal for remote-handled LLW from the Idaho National Laboratory and for spent nuclear fuel processing activities at the Naval Reactors Facility. Historically, this type of waste has been disposed of at the Radioactive Waste Management Complex. Disposal of remote-handled LLW in concrete disposal vaults at the Radioactive Waste Management Complex will continue until the facility is full or until it must be closed in preparation for final remediation of the Subsurface Disposal Area (approximately at the end of Fiscal Year 2017). This conceptual safety design report supports the design of a proposed onsite remote-handled LLW disposal facility by providing an initial nuclear facility hazard categorization, by identifying potential hazards for processes associated with onsite handling and disposal of remote-handled LLW, by evaluating consequences of postulated accidents, and by discussing the need for safety features that will become part of the facility design.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Christensen, Boyd D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CoolCab: Reducing Thermal Loads in Long-Haul Trucks (Fact Sheet) (open access)

CoolCab: Reducing Thermal Loads in Long-Haul Trucks (Fact Sheet)

This fact sheet describes how the National Renewable Energy Laboratory's CoolCab project tested and modeled the effects of several thermal-load reduction strategies applied to long-haul truck cabs. NREL partnered with two major truck manufacturers to evaluate three long-haul trucks at NREL's outdoor test facility in Golden, Colorado.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detector design for high-resolution MeV photon imaging of cargo containers using spectral information (open access)

Detector design for high-resolution MeV photon imaging of cargo containers using spectral information

Monte Carlo simulations of a pixelated detector array of inorganic scintillators for high spatial resolution imaging of 1-9 MeV photons are presented. The results suggest that a detector array of 0.5 cm x 0.5 cm x 5 cm pixels of bismuth germanate may provide sufficient efficiency and spatial resolution to permit imaging of an object with uncertainties in dimension of several mm. The cross talk between pixels is found to be in the range of a few percent when pixels are shielded by {approx} 1mm of lead or tungsten. The contrast at the edge of an object is greatly improved by rejection of events depositing less than {approx} 1 MeV. Given the relatively short decay time of BGO, the simulations suggest that such a detector may prove adequate for the purpose of rapid scanning of highly-shielded cargos for possible presence of high atomic number (including clandestine fissionable) materials when used with low current high duty factor x-ray sources.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Descalle, M A; Vetter, K; Hansen, A; Daniels, J & Prussin, S G
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct-current-like Phase Space Manipulation Using Chirped Alternating Current Fields (open access)

Direct-current-like Phase Space Manipulation Using Chirped Alternating Current Fields

Waves in plasmas can accelerate particles that are resonant with the wave. A dc electric field also accelerates particles, but without a resonance discrimination, which makes the acceleration mechanism profoundly different. Whereas wave-particle acceleration mechanisms have been widely discussed in the literature, this work discusses the direct analogy between wave acceleration and dc field acceleration in a particular parameter regime explored in previous works. Apart from the academic interest of this correspondence, there may be practical advantages in using waves to mimic dc electric fields, for example, in driving plasma current with high efficiency.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Fisch, P.F. Schmit and N.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diversity Strategies for Nuclear Power Plant Instrumentation and Control Systems (open access)

Diversity Strategies for Nuclear Power Plant Instrumentation and Control Systems

This report presents the technical basis for establishing acceptable mitigating strategies that resolve diversity and defense-in-depth (D3) assessment findings and conform to U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) requirements. The research approach employed to establish appropriate diversity strategies involves investigation of available documentation on D3 methods and experience from nuclear power and nonnuclear industries, capture of expert knowledge and lessons learned, determination of best practices, and assessment of the nature of common-cause failures (CCFs) and compensating diversity attributes. The research described in this report does not provide guidance on how to determine the need for diversity in a safety system to mitigate the consequences of potential CCFs. Rather, the scope of this report provides guidance to the staff and nuclear industry after a licensee or applicant has performed a D3 assessment per NUREG/CR-6303 and determined that diversity in a safety system is needed for mitigating the consequences of potential CCFs identified in the evaluation of the safety system design features. Succinctly, the purpose of the research described in this report was to answer the question, 'If diversity is required in a safety system to mitigate the consequences of potential CCFs, how much diversity is enough?' The principal results of this research …
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Wood, Richard Thomas; Belles, Randy; Cetiner, Mustafa Sacit; Holcomb, David Eugene; Korsah, Kofi; Loebl, Andy et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

DOE 2009 Geothermal Risk Analysis: Methodology and Results

This presentation summarizes the methodology and results for a probabilistic risk analysis of research, development, and demonstration work-primarily for enhanced geothermal systems (EGS)-sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy Geothermal Technologies Program.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Young, K. R.; Augustine, C. & Anderson, A.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
DOE Request for Information (RFI) DE-FOA-0000153 PV Manufacturing Initiative: Summary Report, February 2010 (open access)

DOE Request for Information (RFI) DE-FOA-0000153 PV Manufacturing Initiative: Summary Report, February 2010

This document sums up results of the PV Manufacturing Request for Information (RFI), DE-FOA-0000153, which supports the PV Manufacturing Initiative, launched by DOE Solar Energy Technologies Program.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

DOE Updated U.S. Geothermal: Supply Curve

This presentation summarizes the approach used to update the U.S. geothermal supply curve.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Augustine, C.; Young, K. R. & Anderson, A.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic load test of Arquin-designed CMU wall. (open access)

Dynamic load test of Arquin-designed CMU wall.

The Arquin Corporation has developed a new method of constructing CMU (concrete masonry unit) walls. This new method uses polymer spacers connected to steel wires that serve as reinforcing as well as a means of accurately placing the spacers so that the concrete block can be dry stacked. The hollows of the concrete block are then filled with grout. As part of a New Mexico Small Business Assistance Program (NMSBA), Sandia National Laboratories conducted a series of tests that dynamically loaded wall segments to compare the performance of walls constructed using the Arquin method to a more traditional method of constructing CMU walls. A total of four walls were built, two with traditional methods and two with the Arquin method. Two of the walls, one traditional and one Arquin, had every third cell filled with grout. The remaining two walls, one traditional and one Arquin, had every cell filled with grout. The walls were dynamically loaded with explosive forces. No significant difference was noted between the performance of the walls constructed by the Arquin method when compared to the walls constructed by the traditional method.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Jensen, Richard Pearson
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Forging Strain Rate and Deformation Temperature on the Mechanical Properties of Warm-Worked 304L Stainless Steel (open access)

Effect of Forging Strain Rate and Deformation Temperature on the Mechanical Properties of Warm-Worked 304L Stainless Steel

Stainless steel 304L forgings were produced with four different types of production forging equipment – hydraulic press, mechanical press, screw press, and high-energy rate forging (HERF). Each machine imparted a different nominal strain rate during the deformation. The final forgings were done at the warm working (low hot working) temperatures of 816 ◦C, 843 ◦C, and 871 ◦C. The objectives of the study were to characterize and understand the effect of industrial strain rates (i.e. processing equipment), and deformation temperature on the mechanical properties for the final component. Some of the components were produced with an anneal prior to the final forging while others were deformed without the anneal. The results indicate that lower strain rates produced lower strength and higher ductility components, but the lower strain rate processes were more sensitive to deformation temperature variation and resulted in more within-part property variation. The highest strain rate process, HERF, resulted in slightly lower yield strength due to internal heating. Lower processing temperatures increased strength, decreased ductility but decreased within-part property variation. The anneal prior to the final forging produced a decrease in strength, a small increase in ductility, and a small decrease of within-part property variation.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Switzner, Nathan T
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Innovations: Science & Technology at NREL, Winter 2010 (Brochure) (open access)

Energy Innovations: Science & Technology at NREL, Winter 2010 (Brochure)

The Energy Innovations newsletter serves as a key outreach tool for NREL to tout the lab's accomplishments, progress, and activities to key stakeholders who can impact the lab's level of funding and potential resources. Audiences include VIP visitors to NREL, current and potential partners in our work, and key decision makers who want to know about NREL's R&D directions and the quality and significance of our results.
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Beam Dynamics, Parameters and Physics to be learned (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Beam Dynamics, Parameters and Physics to be learned

N/A
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: D., Kayran
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: G5 Test and Commissioning Plan (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: G5 Test and Commissioning Plan

N/A
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: E., Pozdeyev & Kayran, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: High Power RF Systems (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: High Power RF Systems

N/A
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: Zaltsman, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Recovery Linac: Low Level RF (open access)

Energy Recovery Linac: Low Level RF

N/A
Date: February 1, 2010
Creator: K., Smith
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library