Asian Summer Monsoon Diagnostics for CAM5.1 (open access)

Asian Summer Monsoon Diagnostics for CAM5.1

None
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Sperber, K R & Wehner, M F
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development and Testing of a 212Pb/212Bi Peptide for Targeting Metastatic Melanoma (open access)

Development and Testing of a 212Pb/212Bi Peptide for Targeting Metastatic Melanoma

The purpose of this project is to develop a new radiolabeled peptide for imaging and treating metastatic melanoma. The immunoconjugate consists of a receptor-specific peptide that targets melanoma cells. The beta-emitter lead-212 (half-life = 10.4 hours) is linked by coordination chemistry to the peptide. After injection, the peptide targets melanoma receptors on the surfaces of melanoma cells. Lead-212 decays to the alpha-emitter bismuth-212 (half-life = 60 minutes). Alpha-particles that hit melanoma cell nuclei are likely to kill the melanoma cell. For cancer cell imaging, the lead-212 is replaced by lead-203 (half-life = 52 hours). Lead-203 emits 279 keV photons (80.1% abundance) that can be imaged and measured for biodistribution analysis, cancer imaging, and quantitative dosimetry.
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Fisher, Darrell R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Hydrogen Corrosion of Uranium: Identification of Underlying Causes and Proposed Mitigation Strategies (open access)

The Hydrogen Corrosion of Uranium: Identification of Underlying Causes and Proposed Mitigation Strategies

None
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Loui, A
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling Dynamic Behavior in Large Evolving Graphs (open access)

Modeling Dynamic Behavior in Large Evolving Graphs

None
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Rossi, R. A.; Gallagher, B.; Neville, J. & Henderson, K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reliable, Lightweight Transmissions For Off-Shore, Utility Scale Wind Turbines (open access)

Reliable, Lightweight Transmissions For Off-Shore, Utility Scale Wind Turbines

The objective of this project was to reduce the technical risk for a hydrostatic transmission based drivetrain for high-power utility-size wind turbines. A theoretical study has been performed to validate the reduction of cost of energy (CoE) for the wind turbine, identify risk mitigation strategies for the drive system and critical components, namely the pump, shaft connection and hydrostatic transmission (HST) controls and address additional benefits such as reduced deployment costs, improved torque density and improved mean time between repairs (MTBR).
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Ossyra, Jean-Claude
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Results Of Routine Strip Effluent Hold Tank, Decontaminated Salt Solution Hold Tank, And Caustic Wash Tank Samples From Modular Caustic-Side Solvent Extraction Unit During Macrobatch 4 Operations (open access)

Results Of Routine Strip Effluent Hold Tank, Decontaminated Salt Solution Hold Tank, And Caustic Wash Tank Samples From Modular Caustic-Side Solvent Extraction Unit During Macrobatch 4 Operations

Strip Effluent Hold Tank (SEHT), Decontaminated Salt Solution Hold Tank (DSSHT), and Caustic Wash Tank (CWT) samples from several of the ?microbatches? of Integrated Salt Disposition Project (ISDP) Salt Batch (?Macrobatch?) 4 have been analyzed for {sup 238}Pu, {sup 90}Sr, {sup 137}Cs, and by inductively-coupled plasma emission spectroscopy (ICPES). Furthermore, samples from the CWT have been analyzed by a variety of methods to investigate a decline in the decontamination factor (DF) of the cesium observed at MCU. The results indicate good decontamination performance within process design expectations. While the data set is sparse, the results of this set and the previous set of results for Macrobatch 3 samples indicate generally consistent operations. There is no indication of a disruption in plutonium and strontium removal. The average cesium DF and concentration factor (CF) for samples obtained from Macrobatch 4 are slightly lower than for Macrobatch 3, but still well within operating parameters. The DSSHT samples show continued presence of titanium, likely from leaching of the monosodium titanate in Actinide Removal Process (ARP).
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Peters, T. B. & Fink, S. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scattering in Thin Foils Associated with Passive Proton and Ion Beam Focusing (open access)

Scattering in Thin Foils Associated with Passive Proton and Ion Beam Focusing

None
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Yuen, A; Lund, S M; Barnard, J J & Cohen, R H
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wavelength Shifting Phoswich Detectors for Superior Depth-of-Interaction Resolution (open access)

Wavelength Shifting Phoswich Detectors for Superior Depth-of-Interaction Resolution

In order to simultaneously achieve both high spatial resolution and high sensitivity in small Positron Emission Tomography (PET) systems, scintillation detectors must be long in the radial direction as well as able to provide depth-of-interaction (DOI) information. DOI information is typically provided by constructing detectors from two or more layers of scintillators that are identifiable due to their different decay times. This approach has worked well in tomographs such as the High Resolution Research Tomograph (HRRT, CTI PET Systems, Inc.) in which the emission and excitation bands of the scintillator layers do not overlap each other. However, many potentially important pairs of scintillator crystals exist in which the emission of one crystal is, in fact, absorbed and re-emitted by the second crystal, thus impacting the pulse shape discrimination process used to identify the scintillator layers. These potentially useful pairs of scintillators are unlikely to be implemented in phoswich detectors without a comprehensive understanding of the complex emission that results when the light of one crystal is absorbed by the second crystal and then reemitted. Our objective is to develop a fundamental understanding of the optical phenomena that occur in phoswich detectors and to exploit these phenomena to achieve improved spatial …
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: Melcher, Charles L & Eriksson, Lars
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zgoubi users guide (open access)

Zgoubi users guide

N/A
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: F., Meot
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annual Site Environmental Report: 2011 (ASER) (open access)

Annual Site Environmental Report: 2011 (ASER)

None
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of Eddy Currents In the CTH Vacuum Vessel and Coil Frame (open access)

Calculation of Eddy Currents In the CTH Vacuum Vessel and Coil Frame

Knowledge of eddy currents in the vacuum vessel walls and nearby conducting support structures can significantly contribute to the accuracy of Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) equilibrium reconstruction in toroidal plasmas. Moreover, the magnetic fields produced by the eddy currents could generate error fields that may give rise to islands at rational surfaces or cause field lines to become chaotic. In the Compact Toroidal Hybrid (CTH) device (R0 = 0.75 m, a = 0.29 m, B ≤ 0.7 T), the primary driver of the eddy currents during the plasma discharge is the changing flux of the ohmic heating transformer. Electromagnetic simulations are used to calculate eddy current paths and profile in the vacuum vessel and in the coil frame pieces with known time dependent currents in the ohmic heating coils. MAXWELL and SPARK codes were used for the Electromagnetic modeling and simulation. MAXWELL code was used for detailed 3D finite-element analysis of the eddy currents in the structures. SPARK code was used to calculate the eddy currents in the structures as modeled with shell/surface elements, with each element representing a current loop. In both cases current filaments representing the eddy currents were prepared for input into VMEC code for MHD equilibrium reconstruction of …
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Zolfaghari, A.; Brooks, A; Michaels, A.; Hanson, J. & Hartwell, G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contemporary Fraction of bis(2-ethylhexyl) Phthalate in Stilton Cheese by Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (open access)

Contemporary Fraction of bis(2-ethylhexyl) Phthalate in Stilton Cheese by Accelerator Mass Spectrometry

None
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Nelson, M. A.; Ondov, J. A.; VanDerveer, M. C. & Buchholz, B. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Technical Report (open access)

Final Technical Report

This program applied reservoir cathode technology to increase the lifetime of cesiated tungsten photocathodes. Cesiated tungsten photocathodes provide a quantum efficiency of approximately 0.08% when cesium is initially applied to the surface. During operation, however, the cesium evaporates from the surface, resulting in a gradual decrease in quantum efficiency. After 4-6 hours of operation, the efficiency drop to below useful levels, requiring recoating on the emission surface. This program developed a cathode geometry where cesium could be continuously diffused to the surface at a rate matching the evaporation rate. This results in constant current emission until the cesium in the reservoir is depleted. Measurements of the evaporation rate indicated that the reservoir should provide cesium for more than 30,000 hours of continuous operation. This is orders of magnitude longer operation then previously available. Experiments also demonstrated that the photocathode could be rejuvenated following contamination from a vacuum leak. Recoating of the emission surface demonstrated that the initial quantum efficiency could be recovered.
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Ives, Lawrence; Montgomery, Eric; Pan, Zhigang; Riddick, Blake; Feldman, Donald & Falce, Lou
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Formed Core Sampler Hydraulic Conductivity Testing (open access)

Formed Core Sampler Hydraulic Conductivity Testing

A full-scale formed core sampler was designed and functionally tested for use in the Saltstone Disposal Facility (SDF). Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) was requested to compare properties of the formed core samples and core drilled samples taken from adjacent areas in the full-scale sampler. While several physical properties were evaluated, the primary property of interest was hydraulic conductivity. Differences in hydraulic conductivity between the samples from the formed core sampler and those representing the bulk material were noted with respect to the initial handling and storage of the samples. Due to testing conditions, the site port samples were exposed to uncontrolled temperature and humidity conditions prior to testing whereas the formed core samples were kept in sealed containers with minimal exposure to an uncontrolled environment prior to testing. Based on the results of the testing, no significant differences in porosity or density were found between the formed core samples and those representing the bulk material in the test stand.
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Miller, D. H. & Reigel, M. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gyrokinetic Studies of the Effect of Beta on Drift-wave Stability in NCSX (open access)

Gyrokinetic Studies of the Effect of Beta on Drift-wave Stability in NCSX

The gyrokinetic turbulence code GS2 was used to investigate the effects of plasma β on linear, collisionless ion temperature gradient (ITG) modes and trapped electron modes (TEM) in National Compact Stellarator Experiment (NCSX) geometry. Plasma β affects stability in two ways: through the equilibrium and through magnetic fluctuations. The first was studied here by comparing ITG and TEM stability in two NCSX equilibria of differing β values, revealing that the high β equilibrium was marginally more stable than the low β equilibrium in the adiabatic-electron ITG mode case. However, the high β case had a lower kinetic-electron ITG mode critical gradient. Electrostatic and electromagnetic ITG and TEM mode growth rate dependencies on temperature gradient and density gradient were qualitatively similar. The second β effect is demonstrated via electromagnetic ITG growth rates' dependency on GS2's β input parameter. A linear benchmark with gyrokinetic codes GENE and GKV-X is also presented.
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: J.A. Baumgaertel, G.W. Hammett, D.R. Mikkelsen, M. Nunami, and P. Xanthopoulos
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Hamiltonian Structure and Euler-Poincare Formulation of the Valsov-Maxwell and Gyrokinetic System (open access)

The Hamiltonian Structure and Euler-Poincare Formulation of the Valsov-Maxwell and Gyrokinetic System

We present a new variational principle for the gyrokinetic system, similar to the Maxwell-Vlasov action presented in Ref. 1. The variational principle is in the Eulerian frame and based on constrained variations of the phase space fluid velocity and particle distribution function. Using a Legendre transform, we explicitly derive the field theoretic Hamiltonian structure of the system. This is carried out with the Dirac theory of constraints, which is used to construct meaningful brackets from those obtained directly from Euler-Poincare theory. Possible applications of these formulations include continuum geometric integration techniques, large-eddy simulation models and Casimir type stability methods. __________________________________________________
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Squire, J.; Qin, H. & Tang, W. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inhibition Of Washed Sludge With Sodium Nitrite (open access)

Inhibition Of Washed Sludge With Sodium Nitrite

This report describes the results of electrochemical tests used to determine the relationship between the concentration of the aggressive anions in washed sludge and the minimum effective inhibitor concentration. Sodium nitrate was added as the inhibitor because of its compatibility with the DWPF process. A minimum of 0.05M nitrite is required to inhibit the washed sludge simulant solution used in this study. When the worst case compositions and safety margins are considered, it is expected that a minimum operating limit of nearly 0.1M nitrite will be specified. The validity of this limit is dependent on the accuracy of the concentrations and solubility splits previously reported. Sodium nitrite additions to obtain 0.1M nitrite concentrations in washed sludge will necessitate the additional washing of washed precipitate in order to decrease its sodium nitrite inhibitor requirements sufficiently to remain below the sodium limits in the feed to the DWPF. Nitrite will be the controlling anion in "fresh" washed sludge unless the soluble chloride concentration is about ten times higher than predicted by the solubility splits. Inhibition of "aged" washed sludge will not be a problem unless significant chloride dissolution occurs during storage. It will be very important tomonitor the composition of washed sludge …
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Congdon, J. W. & Lozier, J. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Environmental Report 2011 (open access)

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Environmental Report 2011

None
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Jones, H E; Bake, R G; Bertoldo, N A; Cerruti, S J; Dibley, V R; Doman, J L et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nonlinear Amplification and Decay of Phase-mixed Waves in Compressing Plasma (open access)

Nonlinear Amplification and Decay of Phase-mixed Waves in Compressing Plasma

Through particle-in-cell simulations, we show that plasma waves carrying trapped electrons can be amplified manyfold via compressing plasma perpendicularly to the wave vector. These simulations are the first ab initio demonstration of the conservation of nonlinear action for such waves, which contains a term independent of the field amplitude. In agreement with the theory, the maximum of amplification gain is determined by the total initial energy of the trapped-particle average motion but otherwise is insensitive to the particle distribution. Further compression destroys the wave; electrons are then untrapped at suprathermal energies and form a residual beam. As compression continues, the bump-on-tail instability is triggered each time one of the discrete modes comes in resonance with this beam. Hence, periodic bursts of the electrostatic energy are produced until a wide quasilinear plateau is formed.
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Schmit, Paul F.; Dodin, I. Y.; Rocks, J. & Fisch, N. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oxy-Combustion Environment Characterization: Fire- and Steam-Side Corrosion in Advanced Combustion (open access)

Oxy-Combustion Environment Characterization: Fire- and Steam-Side Corrosion in Advanced Combustion

Oxy-fuel combustion is burning a fuel in oxygen rather than air. The low nitrogen flue gas that results is relatively easy to capture CO{sub 2} from for reuse or sequestration. Corrosion issues associated with the environment change (replacement of much of the N{sub 2} with CO{sub 2} and higher sulfur levels) from air- to oxy-firing were examined. Alloys studied included model Fe-Cr alloys and commercial ferritic steels, austenitic steels, and nickel base superalloys. The corrosion behavior is described in terms of corrosion rates, scale morphologies, and scale/ash interactions for the different environmental conditions. Additionally, the progress towards laboratory oxidation tests in advanced ultra-supercritical steam is updated.
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Holcomb, G. R.; Tylczak, J.; Meier, G. H.; Lutz, B. S.; Yanar, N. M.; Pettit, F. S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rare Plant Monitoring and Restoration at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Experimental Test Site, Site 300, Project Progress Report 2007 through 2011 (open access)

Rare Plant Monitoring and Restoration at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Experimental Test Site, Site 300, Project Progress Report 2007 through 2011

None
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Carlsen, T M; Paterson, L E; Alfaro, T M & Gregory, S D
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rock Valley Direct Earthquake-Explosion Comparison Experiment (RV-DC): Initial Feasibility Study (open access)

Rock Valley Direct Earthquake-Explosion Comparison Experiment (RV-DC): Initial Feasibility Study

None
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Walter, W. R.; Pyle, M. L.; Ford, S. R.; Myers, S. C.; Smith, K. D.; Snelson, C. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Six-Point Remainder Function to all Loop Orders in the Multi-Regge Limit (open access)

The Six-Point Remainder Function to all Loop Orders in the Multi-Regge Limit

None
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Pennington, Jeffrey
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of the e+ e- to Hadrons Via ISR at BaBar (open access)

Study of the e+ e- to Hadrons Via ISR at BaBar

None
Date: September 25, 2012
Creator: Solodov, E. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library