Tank 241-AX-101 grab samples 1AX-97-1 through 1AX-97-3 analytical results for the final report (open access)

Tank 241-AX-101 grab samples 1AX-97-1 through 1AX-97-3 analytical results for the final report

This document is the final report for tank 241-AX-101 grab samples. Four grab samples were collected from riser 5B on July 29, 1997. Analyses were performed on samples 1AX-97-1, 1AX-97-2 and 1AX-97-3 in accordance with the Compatibility Grab Sampling and Analysis Plan (TSAP) and the Data Quality Objectives for Tank Farms Waste Compatibility Program (DQO) (Rev. 1: Fowler, 1995; Rev. 2: Mulkey and Miller, 1997). The analytical results are presented in Table 1. No notification limits were exceeded. All four samples contained settled solids that appeared to be large salt crystals that precipitated upon cooling to ambient temperature. Less than 25 % settled solids were present in the first three samples, therefore only the supernate was sampled and analyzed. Sample 1AX-97-4 contained approximately 25.3 % settled solids. Compatibility analyses were not performed on this sample. Attachment 1 is provided as a cross-reference for relating the tank farm customer identification numbers with the 222-S Laboratory sample numbers and the portion of sample analyzed. Table 2 provides the appearance information. All four samples contained settled solids that appeared to be large salt crystal that precipitated upon cooling to ambient temperature. The settled solids in samples 1AX-97-1, 1AX-97-2 and 1AX-97-3 were less than …
Date: November 13, 1997
Creator: Esch, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Definition and means of maintaining the criticality detectors and alarms portion of the PFP safety envelope (open access)

Definition and means of maintaining the criticality detectors and alarms portion of the PFP safety envelope

The purpose of this document is to provide the definition and means of maintaining the Safety Envelope (SE) related to the Criticality Alarm System (CAS). This document provides amplification of the Limiting Condition for Operation (LCO) described in the Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP) Operational Safety Requirements (OSR), WHC-SD-CP-OSR-010, Rev. 0, 1994, Section 3.1.2, Criticality Detectors and Alarms. This document, with its appendices, provides the following: (1) System functional requirements for determining system operability (Section 3); (2) A list of annotated system block diagrams which indicate the safety envelope boundaries (Appendix C); (3) A list of the Safety Class 1 and 2 Safety Envelope (SC-1/2 SE) equipment for input into the Master Component Index (Appendix B); (4) Functional requirements for individual SC-1/2 SE components, including appropriate setpoints and process parameters (Section 6 and Appendix A); (5) A list of the operational, maintenance and surveillance procedures necessary to operate and maintain the SC-1/2 SE components as required by the LCO (Section 6 and Appendix A).
Date: May 13, 1997
Creator: White, W. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of evaluation protocols for DOE's integrated performance evaluation program (IPEP). (open access)

Development of evaluation protocols for DOE's integrated performance evaluation program (IPEP).

None
Date: October 13, 1997
Creator: Streets, W. E.; Lindahl, P. C.; Marr, J. J.; Parish, K. J.; Scandora, A. E., Jr.; Anast, G. A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Results of pilot implementation studies of DOE'S integrated performance evaluation program (IPEP). (open access)

Results of pilot implementation studies of DOE'S integrated performance evaluation program (IPEP).

None
Date: October 13, 1997
Creator: Anast, G. A.; Connolly, J.; Dahlgran, J. R.; Fisk, J.; Lindahl, P. C.; Marr, J. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preparation of multilayered materials in cross-section for in situ TEM tensile deformation studies (open access)

Preparation of multilayered materials in cross-section for in situ TEM tensile deformation studies

The success of in-situ transmission electron microscopy experimentation is often dictated by proper specimen preparation. We report here a novel technique permitting the production of cross-sectioned tensile specimens of multilayered films for in-situ deformation studies. Of primary importance in the development of this technique is the production of an electron transparent micro-gauge section using focused ion beam technology. This microgauge section predetermines the position at which plastic deformation is initiated; crack nucleation, growth and failure are then subsequently observed.
Date: May 13, 1997
Creator: Wall, M. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Behavior of dense immiscible solvents in fractured clay-rich soils. Technical progress report, 1997 (open access)

Behavior of dense immiscible solvents in fractured clay-rich soils. Technical progress report, 1997

'The overall goal of the research program is to develop a better understanding of the physical and chemical factors and processes influencing fate and transport of immiscible and dissolved-phase dense solvents in groundwater in fractured, highly weathered clays and shales. These widespread materials are much different, physically and chemically, from granular soils or fractured low porosity rocks, which are the media used for most previous investigations of solvent behavior. The investigations are needed to provide a basic scientific framework for assessment of solvent transport and remediation in fractured clay-rich deposits. Specific experimental objectives include: (1) Determine the nature and distribution of porosity in these materials, and its influence on pressure-saturation behavior for immiscible solvents. This includes determining values for entry pressure, residual saturation, fracture aperture and matrix pore size distribution, as well as assessment of methodologies for measuring/characterizing these parameters. (2) Determine the influence of dissolution, sorption and diffusion into the matrix on long term disappearance of residual solvents in the fractured materials. (3) Assessment of the potential for natural attenuation of common solvents, especially TCE, in these deposits. This includes investigating the natural geochemistry and microbiology of the deposits, and assessing biologically-mediated degradation of solvents in the laboratory and …
Date: October 13, 1997
Creator: McKay, L.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Periodic arrays of pinning centers in thin vanadium films. (open access)

Periodic arrays of pinning centers in thin vanadium films.

Commensurability effects between the superconducting flux line lattice and a square lattice (period d=1{micro}m and diameter D=0.4{micro}m) of submicron holes in 1500 {angstrom} vanadium films were studied by atomic force microscopy, DC magnetization, AC susceptibility, magnetoresistivity and I-V measurements. Peaks in the magnetization and critical current at matching fields are found to depend nonlinearly upon the value of external AC field or current, as well as the inferred symmetry of the flux line lattice.
Date: July 13, 1997
Creator: Brueck, S. R. J.; Chung, K.; Crabtree, G.; DeLong, L. E.; Hesketh, P. J.; Ilic, B. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Search for Nuclei Containing Two Strange Quarks (open access)

Search for Nuclei Containing Two Strange Quarks

This paper discusses a search for nuclei containing two strange quarks performed at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The goals and approach of experiment E885 are reviewed. Preliminary missing mass spectra for a subset of the data are presented, showing sensitivity for {Xi} hypernuclei and H particle searches. Existence of an angular correlation between pions in the sequential decay of {Lambda}{Lambda} hypernuclei is suggested on theoretical grounds.
Date: October 13, 1997
Creator: May, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Decomposition studies of filtered slurries using the enhanced comprehensive catalyst (open access)

Decomposition studies of filtered slurries using the enhanced comprehensive catalyst

This study examined decomposition of the soluble phenylborates at elevated temperatures (45 degrees Celsius) to determine the effects of filtering the solid tetraphenylborate, solid sludge and monosodium titanate and spiking additional levels of transition metal catalyst.
Date: November 13, 1997
Creator: Wilmarth, W. R.; Crawford, C. L. & Peterson, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Epimorphin Functions as a Key Morphoregulator for Mammary Epithelial Cells (open access)

Epimorphin Functions as a Key Morphoregulator for Mammary Epithelial Cells

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and EGF have been reported to promote branching morphogenesis of mammary epithelial cells. We now show that it is epimorphin that is primarily responsible for this phenomenon. In vivo, epimorphin was detected in the stromal compartment but not in lumenal epithelial cells of the mammary gland; in culture, however, a subpopulation of mammary epithelial cells produced significant amounts of epimorphin. When epimorphin-expressing epithelial cell clones were cultured in collagen gels they displayed branching morphogenesis in the presence of HGF, EGF, keratinocyte growth factor, or fibroblast growth factor, a process that was inhibited by anti-epimorphin but not anti-HGF antibodies. The branch length, however, was roughly proportional to the ability of the factors to induce growth. Accordingly, epimorphin-negative epithelial cells simply grew in a cluster in response to the growth factors and failed to branch. When recombinant epimorphin was added to these collagen gels, epimorphin-negative cells underwent branching morphogenesis. The mode of action of epimorphin on morphogenesis of the gland, however, was dependent on how it was presented to the mammary cells. If epimorphin was overexpressed in epimorphin-negative epithelial cells under regulation of an inducible promoter or was allowed to coat the surface of each epithelial cell in …
Date: October 13, 1997
Creator: Hirai, H.; Lochter, A.; Galosy, S.; Koshida, S.; Niwa, S. & Bissell, M.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Density of topological defects after a quench (open access)

Density of topological defects after a quench

We present results of numerical studies of the Landau-Ginzburg dynamics of the order parameter in one-dimensional models inspired by the condensed matter analogues of cosmological phase transitions. The main goal of our work is to show that, as proposed by one of us, the density of the frozen-out topological defects is set by the competition between the quench rate - the rate at which the phase transition is taking place - and the relaxation rate of the order parameter. In other words, the characteristic domain size, which determines the typical separation of topological defects in the new broken symmetry phase, is of the order of the correlation length at the instant at which the relaxation timescale of the order parameter equals the time remaining to the phase transition. In estimating the size of topological domains, this scenario shares with the original Kibble mechanism the idea that topological defects will form along the boundaries of independently selected regions of the new broken symmetry vacuum. However, it derives the size of such domains from non-equilibrium aspects of the transition (quench rate), as opposed to Kibble`s original proposal in which their size was estimated from the Ginzburg temperature above which thermally activated symmetry …
Date: May 13, 1997
Creator: Laguna, P. & Zurek, W.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improved Recovery From Gulf of Mexico Reservoirs. Volume Ii (of 4): Task 5, Modify Publicly Available Simulators. Final Report, February 14, 1995--October 13, 1996 (open access)

Improved Recovery From Gulf of Mexico Reservoirs. Volume Ii (of 4): Task 5, Modify Publicly Available Simulators. Final Report, February 14, 1995--October 13, 1996

The objective for this portion of the research involved the continuation of the modifications of the public domain simulators BOAST and MASTER. The modifications continued during this project are generic relative to both BOAST and MASTER. BOAST was the primary concern during the research however, because MASTER as well.
Date: January 13, 1997
Creator: Kimbrell, W. C.; Bassiouni, Z. A. & Bourgoyne, A. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A 3-dimensional ray-trace model for predicting the performance of flashlamp-pumped laser amplifiers (open access)

A 3-dimensional ray-trace model for predicting the performance of flashlamp-pumped laser amplifiers

We have developed a fully three-dimensional model for the performance of flashlamp pumped laser amplifiers. The model uses a reverse ray-trace technique to calculate the pumping of the laser glass by the flashlamp radiation. We have discovered several different methods by which we can speed up the calculation of the gain profile in a amplifier. The model predicts the energy-storage performance of the Beamlet amplifiers to better than 5%. This model will be used in the optimization of the National Ignition Facility (NIF) amplifier design.
Date: February 13, 1997
Creator: Jancaitis, K.S.; Haney, S.W.; Munro, D.H.; Le Touze, G. & Cabourdin, O.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nonequilibrium sulfur capture and retention in an air cooled slagging coal combustor (open access)

Nonequilibrium sulfur capture and retention in an air cooled slagging coal combustor

Calcium oxide injected in a slagging combustor react with the sulfur from coal combustion to form sulfur bearing particles, which are deposited on the liquid slag layer on the combustor wall. Due to the low solubility of sulfur in slag, it must be drained from the combustor to limit sulfur gas re-evolution. Analysis indicated that slag mass flow rates in excess of 400 lb/hr should limit sulfur re- evolution. The objective of this 36 month project was to perform a series of 16 one day tests to determine the factors that control the retention of the sulfur in the slag. In the present quarterly reporting period, 3 days of combustor tests were performed, bringing the total number of tests performed to 19. Two of the test were a repeat of two tests performed in the previous quarter with a high, 37% ash, Indian coal. The high slag flow rate with that coal resulted in the highest observed sulfur retention to-date, namely 20% of the injected sulfur. In the present quarter, this test was repeated with the same coal feed rate but with 75% longer period of 2.4 hours. The total mineral matter injected was 635 lb/hr, compared to only 19.7 …
Date: August 13, 1997
Creator: Zauderer, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ring-imaging Cerenkov studies. Final performance report (open access)

Ring-imaging Cerenkov studies. Final performance report

This project involved collaboration in the design, construction and testing of a prototype chamber capable of detecting Cerenkov rings. The chamber incorporated several novel techniques in that it used parallel-plate pad readout and a Cesium-iodide (CsI) solid photocathode. The pad system used gas multiplication where the gas was kept at low pressure to minimize photon losses due to absorption and back-scattering and to minimize ion collection times. Low pressure also lowers the chamber response to charged particles. The chamber gas was ethane at 20 torr and the chamber was operated at room temperature. The chamber was built at the University of Pennsylvania by a University of Puerto Rico graduate student, Jorge Millan. Initial tests at Pennsylvania using a hydrogen-discharge lamp indicated a quantum efficiency of 13% at 190 nm. The chamber was then tested in the M-Test beam line at Fermilab and behind the C3 beamline dump at Brookhaven Lab. Cerenkov rings were clearly observed with each photoelectron typically exciting one pad. On average each ring had five struck pads and only 10% of the events had hits in the center due to the charged particle. These results indicate that a RICH detector using a solid CsI photocathode coupled to …
Date: March 13, 1997
Creator: Lopez, A. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impurity and laser-induced damage in the growth sectors of rapidly grown DKP crystals (open access)

Impurity and laser-induced damage in the growth sectors of rapidly grown DKP crystals

We report the experimental results of impurity contamination and laser-induced damage investigations on rapidly grown potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KDP) crystals. Using absorption spectroscopy and chemical analysis, we determined the impurity distribution in the different growing sectors of KDP single crystals. The level of impurity was dependent on starting materials and growth rate. We also studied influence of impurities on laser-induced damage in fast grown KDP. The laser damage threshold (LDT) in the impurity-rich prismatic sector is same as in the high purity pyramidal sector within experimental error. Meanwhile, the LDT at the boundary of the prismatic and pyramidal sectors is less than half of that in the bulk. Furthermore, we found that the thermal annealing of the crystal eliminated the weakness of this sector boundary and increased its LDT to the same level as in the bulk of the crystal. Result suggests that the laser damage occurred in the vicinity of a high; localized strain field.
Date: February 13, 1997
Creator: Yan, M.; Torres, R.; Runkel, M.; Woods, B.; Hutcheon, I.; Zaitseva, N. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Canister choices for sampling of fuel and sludge from K West basin canisters (second characterization campaign) (open access)

Canister choices for sampling of fuel and sludge from K West basin canisters (second characterization campaign)

The Characterization of Spent Nuclear Fuel in the sealed K West canisters involves four steps, (1) sampling of gas/liquid, (2) ``Lift-and-Look`` visual examinations of fuel elements, (3) sampling of canister sludge, and (4) retrieving fuel for hot cell examinations. This document indicates the choices of particular canisters that were examined during the second characterization campaign in the Hanford K West Basin.
Date: March 13, 1997
Creator: Makenas, B. J.; Trimble, D. J.; Pitner, A. L.; Baker, R. B. & Lawrence, L. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three dimensional high-resolution simulations of richtmyer-meshkov mixing and shock-turbulence interaction (open access)

Three dimensional high-resolution simulations of richtmyer-meshkov mixing and shock-turbulence interaction

Three-dimensional high-resolution simulations are performed of the Richtmyer- Meshkov (RM) instability for a Mach 6 shock, and of the passage of a second shock from the same side through a developed RM instability. The second shock is found to rapidly smear fine structure and strongly enhance mixing. Studies of the interaction of moderately strong shocks with a pre-existing turbulent field indicate amplification of transverse vorticity and reduction Of stream-wise vorticity, as well as the mechanisms for these changes.
Date: June 13, 1997
Creator: Cohen, R. H.; Dannevik, W. P.; Dinits, A.; Miason, D.; Mirin, A. A.; Portor, D. H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrical resistivity monitoring of the drift scale test in Yucca Mountain (open access)

Electrical resistivity monitoring of the drift scale test in Yucca Mountain

Of the several thermal, mechanical and hydrological measurements being used to monitor the rockmass response, electrical resistance tomography (ERT) is being used to monitor the movement of liquid water with a special interest in the movement of condensate out of the system. Eight boreholes, containing a total of 140 ERT electrodes, were drilled above and below the Heated Drift (HD) to form vertical planes parallel to the drift. In addition, 4 boreholes, containing 60 electrodes, drilled from the Access Observation Drift (AOD) form vertical planes at right angles to the HD. Four ERT surveys, three before and one after heating began, were conducted during the first quarter of FY 98. Tomographic images of absolute electrical resistivity have been calculated using these data and are presented in this report. The report also presents the coordinates of the electrodes used for the ERT surveys. Future reports will include images of electrical resistivity change calculated using data collected before and during the heating episode. The changes to be recovered will then be used in combination with temperature maps of the region to calculate maps of saturation change around the HD.
Date: January 13, 1997
Creator: Ramirez, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anomalous gauge boson couplings (open access)

Anomalous gauge boson couplings

The measurement of anomalous gauge boson self couplings is reviewed for a variety of present and planned accelerators. Sensitivities are compared for these accelerators using models based on the effective Lagrangian approach. The sensitivities described here are for measurement of {open_quotes}generic{close_quotes} parameters {kappa}{sub V}, {lambda}{sub V}, etc., defined in the text. Pre-LHC measurements will not probe these coupling parameters to precision better than O(10{sup -1}). The LHC should be sensitive to better than O(10{sup -2}), while a future NLC should achieve sensitivity of O(10{sup -3}) to O(10{sup -4}) for center of mass energies ranging from 0.5 to 1.5 TeV.
Date: January 13, 1997
Creator: Barklow, T.; Rizzo, T. & Baur, U.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parallel unconstrained minimization of potential energy in LAMMPS (open access)

Parallel unconstrained minimization of potential energy in LAMMPS

This report describes a new minimization capability added to LAMMPS V4.0. Minimization of potential energy is used to find molecular conformations that are close to structures found in nature. The new minimization algorithm uses LAMMPS subroutines for calculating energy and force vectors, and follows the LAMMPS partitioning scheme for distributing large data objects on multiprocessor machines. Since gradient-based algorithms cannot tolerate nonsmoothness, a new Coulomb style that smoothly cuts off to zero at a finite distance is provided. This report explains the minimization algorithm and its parallel implementation within LAMMPS. Guidelines are given for invoking the algorithm and interpreting results.
Date: October 13, 1997
Creator: Plantenga, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of the Pegasus Z pinch machine to study inertial instabilities in aluminum: a preliminary report (open access)

Use of the Pegasus Z pinch machine to study inertial instabilities in aluminum: a preliminary report

We have designed a target to probe the use of the Pegasus Z-Pinch machine to image inertial instabilities that develop on cylindrical- convergent material interfaces. The Z-pinch is tailored so that the target, soft Al 1100-O, remains solid; instabilities and inertial effects are seeded by wire inclusions of different densities. We present here the first images and preliminary results from this experiment.
Date: June 13, 1997
Creator: Chandler, E.; Egan, P.; Winer, K.; Stokes, J.; Fulton, R. D.; King, N. S. P. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Summary of Criticality Safety of Tank 41 Salt Dissolution In-Tank Precipitation and Extended Sludge Process (open access)

A Summary of Criticality Safety of Tank 41 Salt Dissolution In-Tank Precipitation and Extended Sludge Process

This report describes the criticality safety basis of the ITP and ESP processes, and of the salt dissolution process in Waste Tank 41H.
Date: March 13, 1997
Creator: Davis, P.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improved Recovery From Gulf of Mexico Reservoirs. Volume I (of 4): Task 1, Conduct Research on Mud-Rich Submarine Fans. Final Report, February 14, 1995--October 13, 1996 (open access)

Improved Recovery From Gulf of Mexico Reservoirs. Volume I (of 4): Task 1, Conduct Research on Mud-Rich Submarine Fans. Final Report, February 14, 1995--October 13, 1996

The objective for this portion of the research involved conducting field studies and laboratory investigations to develop and refine models for mud-rich submarine fan architectures used by seismic analysis and reservoir engineers. These research aspects have been presented in two papers as follows: (1) Bouma, A.H., {open_quotes}Review of Fine-Grained Submarine Fans and Turbidite Systems{close_quotes}; (2) Kirkova, J.T. and Lorenzo, J.M., {open_quotes}Synthetic Seismic Modeling of Measured Submarine Fans Sections, Case Study of the Tanqua Complex, Karoo, South Africa{close_quotes} The {open_quotes}Review of Fine-Grained Submarine Fans and Turbidite Systems{close_quotes} by Arnold Bouma discusses research targeted toward stimulating an increase in oil and gas recovery by developing new and improved geological understanding. The {open_quotes}Synthetic Seismic Modeling of Measured Submarine Fan Sections, Case Study of the Tanqua Complex, Karoo, South Africa{close_quotes} by J.T. Kirkova and J.M. Lorenso discusses the limitations of verticle resolution and how this affects the interpretation and characterization of submarine fan complexes.
Date: January 13, 1997
Creator: Kimbrell, W. C.; Bassiouni, Z. A. & Bourgoyne, A. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library