Characterization of Vadose Zone Sediment: Uncontaminated RCRA Borehole Core Samples and Composite Samples (open access)

Characterization of Vadose Zone Sediment: Uncontaminated RCRA Borehole Core Samples and Composite Samples

The overall goal of the of the Tank Farm Vadose Zone Project, led by CH2M HILL Hanford Group, Inc., is to define risks from past and future single-shell tank farm activities. To meet this goal, CH2M HILL Hanford Group, Inc. asked scientists from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to perform detailed analyses on vadose zone sediment from within the S-SX Waste Management Area. This report is the first in a series of four reports to present the results of these analyses. Specifically, this report contains all the geologic, geochemical, and selected physical characterization data collected on vadose zone sediment recovered from RCRA borehole bore samples and composite samples. Intact cores from two RCRA boreholes (299-W22-48 and 299-W22-50) near the SX Tank Farm and four, large-quantity grab samples from outcrop sediment on and off the Hanford Site were sampled to better understand the fate of contaminants in the vadose zone beneath underground storage tanks at the Hanford Site. Borehole and outcrop samples analyzed for this report are located outside the tank farms, and therefore may be considered standard or background samples from which to compare contaminated sediments within the tank farms themselves. This report presents our interpretation of the physical, chemical, and …
Date: February 12, 2002
Creator: Serne, R. Jeffrey; Bjornstad, Bruce N.; Schaef, Herbert T.; Williams, Bruce A.; Lanigan, David C.; Horton, Duane G. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Cloud Parameterizations in a High Resolution Atmospheric General Circulation Model Using ARM Data (open access)

Evaluation of Cloud Parameterizations in a High Resolution Atmospheric General Circulation Model Using ARM Data

Typical state of the art atmospheric general circulation models used in climate change studies have horizontal resolution of approximately 300 km. As computing power increases, many climate modeling groups are working toward enhancing the resolution of global models. An important issue that arises when resolution of a model is changed is whether cloud and convective parameterizations, which were developed for use at coarser resolutions, will need to be reformulated or re-tuned. We propose to investigate this issue and specifically cloud statistics using ARM data. The data streams produced by highly instrumented sections of Cloud and Radiation Testbeds (CART) of ARM program will provide a significant aid in the evaluation of cloud and convection parameterization in high-resolution models. Recently, we have performed multiyear global-climate simulations at T170 and T239 resolutions, corresponding to grid cell sizes of 0.7{sup 0} and 0.5{sup 0} respectively, using the NCAR Community Climate Model. We have also a performed climate change simulation at T170. On the scales of a T42 grid cell (300 km) and larger, nearly all quantities we examined in T170 simulation agree better with observations in terms of spatial patterns than do results in a comparable simulation at T42. Increasing the resolution to T239 …
Date: April 12, 2002
Creator: Govindasamy, B & Duffy, P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization of Hydroacoustic Deployments at John Day Dam (open access)

Optimization of Hydroacoustic Deployments at John Day Dam

This report describes short-term studies conducted in late November and early December 2001 to optimize hydroacoustic sampling techniques for John Day Dam before the 2002 fish passage efficiency (FPE) study. Knowledge gained in this study should significantly improve hydroacoustic sampling and the accuracy of estimates of fish passage at two locations that have presented problems in past studies. The spillway has been most problematic because many fish detected there were not entrained. Without correction, non-commitment of fish can result in multiple detections and overestimation of fish passage and FPE. Trash-rack-mounted, down-looking transducers for sampling unguided fish at a submerged traveling screen (STS) also have posed problems because the beam was aimed so far downstream that researchers had concerns about fish aspect and detectability. The deployments, aiming angles, and ping rates described here should eliminate all problems encountered in previous studies. This report describes hydroacoustic evaluations. The spill-bay deployment identified in this study should completely eliminate multiple detections of fish by limiting the sample volume for counting fish to the deep high-discharge volume adjacent to the gate. Results from testing of transducers deployed in a turbine intake with an STS suggest that, after testing in 2002, it may be possible to …
Date: November 12, 2002
Creator: Ploskey, Gene R.; Cook, Christopher B.; Titzler, P. Scott & Moursund, Russell A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Connecting to the Internet Securely: Windows 2000 CIAC-2321 (open access)

Connecting to the Internet Securely: Windows 2000 CIAC-2321

As the threat to computer systems increases with the increasing use of computers as a tool in daily business activities, the need to securely configure those systems becomes more important. There are far too many intruders with access to the Internet and the skills and time to spend compromising systems to not spend the time necessary to securely configure a system. Hand-in-hand with the increased need for security are an increased number of items that need to be securely configured. Windows 2000 has about seven hundred security related policy settings, up from seventy two in Windows NT. While Windows 2000 systems are an extension of the Windows NT 4 architecture, there are considerable differences between these two systems, especially in terms of system and security administration. Operational policy, system security, and file security are other areas where Windows 2000 has expanded considerably beyond the domain model of Windows NT 4. The Windows NT 4 Domain model consists of domains of workstations that, with a single login, share resources and are administered together. The database of user settings and credentials resides in the domain server. Domains can trust other domains to expand the sharing of resources between users of multiple domains. …
Date: March 12, 2002
Creator: Orvis, W; Call, K & Dias, J
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Pressure Back up Air Piping Pressure Test (open access)

High Pressure Back up Air Piping Pressure Test

None
Date: March 12, 2002
Creator: Rucinski, Russell A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Macroparticle simulation studies of a proton beam haloexperiment (open access)

Macroparticle simulation studies of a proton beam haloexperiment

We report macroparticle simulations for comparison withmeasured results from a proton beam-halo experiment in a 52-quadrupoleperiodic-focusing channel. An important issue is that the inputphase-space distribution is not experimentally known. Three differentinitial distributions with different shapes predict different beamprofiles in the transport system. Simulations have been fairly successfulin reproducing the core of the measured matched-beam profiles and thetrend of emittance growth as a function of mismatch factor, butunderestimate the growth rate of halo and emittance for mismatched beams.In this study, we find that knowledge of the Courant-Snyder parametersand emittances of the input beam is not sufficient for reliableprediction of the halo. Input distributions iwth greater population inthe tails produce larger rates of emittance growth, a result that isqualitatively consistent with the particle-core model of halo formationin mismatched beams.
Date: September 12, 2002
Creator: Qiang, J.; Colestock, P. L.; Gilpatrick, D.; Smith, H. V.; Wangler, T. P. & Schulze, M. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molecular Basis of Microbial One-Carbon Metabolism (open access)

Molecular Basis of Microbial One-Carbon Metabolism

The Gordon Research Conference (GRC) on Molecular Basis of Microbial One-Carbon Metabolism was held at Connecticut College, New London, Connecticut. Emphasis was placed on current unpublished research and discussion of the future target areas in this field.
Date: July 12, 2002
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic & Molecular Interactions (open access)

Atomic & Molecular Interactions

The Gordon Research Conference (GRC) on Atomic & Molecular Interactions was held at Roger Williams University, Bristol, RI. Emphasis was placed on current unpublished research and discussion of the future target areas in this field.
Date: July 12, 2002
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
MCNP Analysis of a Phoswich Detector (open access)

MCNP Analysis of a Phoswich Detector

A series of triple crystal phosphor sandwich detectors have been developed and constructed for testing at the University of Missouri-Columbia [1-7]. These detectors can simultaneously measure alpha, beta, and gamma radiation and utilize digital pulse shape discrimination to identify and separate radiation events coming from each of the separate phosphors. The research reported here uses Monte Carlo [8] software analysis to determine operating parameters for this detector system and optimizes its design for measuring trace amounts of alpha, beta and gamma-ray activity in effluent streams from nuclear waste cleanup processes. The previously designed, fabricated and tested phoswich detector [5] consisted of three scintillators placed on top of each other with a common diameter of 5.08 cm and viewed with a single photomultiplier tube. The scintillators (ZnS-0.00376 cm, CaF{sub 2}-0.254 cm and NaI-2.54 cm) interact preferentially with alpha, beta and gamma-ray radiation, respectively. This design allows preferential, but not exclusive, interaction of various radiations with specific layers. Taking into account and correcting for events that can occur in the ''wrong'' phosphor, this system was experimentally shown to have a 99% accuracy for properly identifying radiation coming from a mixed alpha/beta/gamma-ray source. In an attempt to better understand this system and provide …
Date: June 12, 2002
Creator: Childress, Nathan & Miller, William H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mineralogic Model (MM3.0) Analysis Model Report (open access)

Mineralogic Model (MM3.0) Analysis Model Report

The purpose of this report is to document the Mineralogic Model (MM), Version 3.0 (MM3.0) with regard to data input, modeling methods, assumptions, uncertainties, limitations and validation of the model results, qualification status of the model, and the differences between Version 3.0 and previous versions. A three-dimensional (3-D) Mineralogic Model was developed for Yucca Mountain to support the analyses of hydrologic properties, radionuclide transport, mineral health hazards, repository performance, and repository design. Version 3.0 of the MM was developed from mineralogic data obtained from borehole samples. It consists of matrix mineral abundances as a function of x (easting), y (northing), and z (elevation), referenced to the stratigraphic framework defined in Version 3.1 of the Geologic Framework Model (GFM). The MM was developed specifically for incorporation into the 3-D Integrated Site Model (ISM). The MM enables project personnel to obtain calculated mineral abundances at any position, within any region, or within any stratigraphic unit in the model area. The significance of the MM for key aspects of site characterization and performance assessment is explained in the following subsections. This work was conducted in accordance with the Development Plan for the MM (CRWMS M&O 2000). The planning document for this Rev. 00, …
Date: February 12, 2002
Creator: Lum, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compression dynamics of an indirect drive fast ignition target (open access)

Compression dynamics of an indirect drive fast ignition target

In an x-ray driven reentrant cone fast ignition target the x-ray spectrum contains a high energy component that cause preheating of the reentrant cone and mixing of its gold into the collapsing shell. Direct laser drive might avoid this problem.
Date: November 12, 2002
Creator: Stephens, R. B.; Hatchett, S. P.; Turner, R. E.; Tanaka, K. A.; Kodama, R.; Kodama, R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wafer-Bonded Internal Back-Surface Reflectors for Enhanced TPV Performance (open access)

Wafer-Bonded Internal Back-Surface Reflectors for Enhanced TPV Performance

This paper discusses recent efforts to realize GaInAsSb/GaSb TPV cells with an internal back-surface reflector (BSR). The cells are fabricated by wafer bonding the GaInAsSb/GaSb device layers to GaAs substrates with a dielectric/Au reflector, and subsequently removing the GaSb substrate. The internal BSR enhances optical absorption within the device while the dielectric layer provides electrical isolation. This approach is compatible with monolithic integration of series-connected TPV cells and can mitigate the requirements of filters used for front-surface spectral control.
Date: August 12, 2002
Creator: Wang, C. A.; Murphy, P. G.; O'Brien, P. W.; Shiau, D. A.; Anderson, A. C.; Liau, Z. L. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applications of Magnetized Plasma to Particle Acceleration (open access)

Applications of Magnetized Plasma to Particle Acceleration

Magnetized plasma can be used as an accelerating structure capable of supporting large amplitude longitudinal fields which are externally driven by a high-frequency microwave source. Such structures can be used at very high frequencies (hundreds of gigahertz), placing them in the intermediate region between conventional (metallic) accelerators, and laser-driven plasma accelerators. They review two magnetic field configurations with respect to the direction of the particle beam propagation: (1) parallel magnetic field plus a helical undulator, and (2) perpendicular magnetic field. In the first configuration, plasma exhibits electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) at the cyclotron frequency if the plasma frequency is equal to the electron cyclotron frequency. The second configuration corresponds to the inverse Cherenkov effect in magnetized plasma. In both cases, the group velocity of the accelerating plasma wave can be made very small, so that the incident electromagnetic wave is strongly compressed, resulting in the high accelerating gradient.
Date: December 12, 2002
Creator: Shvets, Gennady; Wurtele, Jonathan S. & Hur, Min-Sup
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct Energy Conversion Fission Reactor, Gaseous Core Reactor with Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) Generator; Final Report - Part I and Part II (open access)

Direct Energy Conversion Fission Reactor, Gaseous Core Reactor with Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) Generator; Final Report - Part I and Part II

This report focuses on the power conversion cycle and efficiency. The technical issues involving the ionization mechanisms, the power management and distribution and radiation shielding and safety will be discussed in future reports.
Date: November 12, 2002
Creator: Anghaie, Samim; Smith, Blair & Knight, Travis
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrective Action Investigation Plan for Corrective Action Unit 204: Storage Bunkers, Nevada Test Site, Nevada (December 2002, Revision No.: 0), Including Record of Technical Change No. 1 (open access)

Corrective Action Investigation Plan for Corrective Action Unit 204: Storage Bunkers, Nevada Test Site, Nevada (December 2002, Revision No.: 0), Including Record of Technical Change No. 1

The Corrective Action Investigation Plan contains the U.S. Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration Nevada Operations Office's approach to collect the data necessary to evaluate corrective action alternatives appropriate for the closure of Corrective Action Unit (CAU) 204 under the Federal Facility Agreement and Consent Order. Corrective Action Unit 204 is located on the Nevada Test Site approximately 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas, Nevada. This CAU is comprised of six Corrective Action Sites (CASs) which include: 01-34-01, Underground Instrument House Bunker; 02-34-01, Instrument Bunker; 03-34-01, Underground Bunker; 05-18-02, Chemical Explosives Storage; 05-33-01, Kay Blockhouse; 05-99-02, Explosive Storage Bunker. Based on site history, process knowledge, and previous field efforts, contaminants of potential concern for Corrective Action Unit 204 collectively include radionuclides, beryllium, high explosives, lead, polychlorinated biphenyls, total petroleum hydrocarbons, silver, warfarin, and zinc phosphide. The primary question for the investigation is: ''Are existing data sufficient to evaluate appropriate corrective actions?'' To address this question, resolution of two decision statements is required. Decision I is to ''Define the nature of contamination'' by identifying any contamination above preliminary action levels (PALs); Decision II is to ''Determine the extent of contamination identified above PALs. If PALs are not exceeded, the investigation …
Date: December 12, 2002
Creator: NSO, NNSA
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Cooling Rate, Thermal Expansion, and Waste Loading on Glass Fracture (open access)

Effect of Cooling Rate, Thermal Expansion, and Waste Loading on Glass Fracture

When waste glass is poured into metal canisters, it fractures, primarily due to temperature gradients induced during cooling. A technique to quantitatively determine the additional glass surface area due to fracture was developed based on this study.
Date: September 12, 2002
Creator: Kessler, J.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Tevatron collider run 2 Prospects for discoveries in particle physics (open access)

The Tevatron collider run 2 Prospects for discoveries in particle physics

The chances of discovering the Standard Model Higgs boson in Run 2 at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider are discussed. The reach of a search for MSSM Higgs boson and for other Susy particles is also mentioned. The large integrated luminosity potentially offered by the upgraded Tevatron in the years before the start of LHC will make an exciting physics program possible in the next several years. Let aside the luminosity, we can rely now on two much more powerful detectors than in run 1. This is a very real point of strength of the run 2 Tevatron program. The progress of the Tevatron from spring this year has been slow but steady. From this, there is no reason for being pessimistic, but admittedly no particular reason for being optimistic as well. CDF will be able to produce physics quality data early in 2002. After that, data will flow for years and years. We expect to be able to publish the first papers based on the new data in fall 2002.
Date: March 12, 2002
Creator: Bellettini, Giorgio
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Changes of the local distortions and colossal magnetoresistive properties of La(0.7)Ca(0.3)MnO(3) induced by Ti or Ga defects (open access)

Changes of the local distortions and colossal magnetoresistive properties of La(0.7)Ca(0.3)MnO(3) induced by Ti or Ga defects

The magnetoresistive properties of La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 change rapidly when Ti or Ga are substituted on the Mn site for concentrations, x, from 1 to 10 percent. The samples exhibit colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) and the resistivity increases dramatically with dopant concentration. The temperature of the resistivity peak, TR, shifts rapidly to lower temperatures with increasing x and the ferromagnetic transition broadens. However, the transition temperature, Tc, is only slightly suppressed. Consequently, TR occurs well below Tc for x above 2 percent. Investigations of these materials using Mn XAFS show that changes in the local structure, parametrized by the pair-distribution width, sigma, correlate well with Tc and the sample magnetization. For a given dopant, the resistivity peak occurs when sigma{sup 2} decreases below a critical value. Both dopants produce extended defects which increases the resistivity of the nearby materials considerably. The data suggest that even at x {approx}4 percent, most of the sites are slightly distorted at low T.
Date: July 12, 2002
Creator: Bridges, F.; Cao, D.; Anderson, M.; Ramirez, A.P.; Olapinski, M.; Subramanian, M.A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
TEMPERATURE-BASED REACTIVE FLOW MODEL FOR ANFO. (open access)

TEMPERATURE-BASED REACTIVE FLOW MODEL FOR ANFO.

Reaction rates depend on temperature as well as on the mechanical state. In shock wave initiation, experimental data almost always comprise mechanical measurements such as shock speed, material speed, compression, and pressure, and are accordingly modeled in terms of these parameters. Omission of temperature is one reason why mechanically based reaction rates do not extrapolate well out with the range of states used to normalize them. The model presented addresses chemical processes directly, enabling chemical kinetic data reported in terms of temperature (and at STP, generally) to be used in shock reaction models. We have recently extended a temperature-based model for use with ANFO-type formulations. Reactive material is treated as a heterogeneous mixture of components, each of which has its own model for response to dynamic loading (equation of state, strength model, reactions.) A finite-rate equilibration model is used to determine the overall response of the mixture to dynamic loading. In this model of ANFO, the ammonium nitrate and the fuel oil are treated as separate components in the unreacted mixture.
Date: June 12, 2002
Creator: MULFORD, ROBERTA & SWIFT, DAMIAN C
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Generalization of Spatial Channel Theory to Three-Dimensional x-y-z Transport Computations (open access)

Generalization of Spatial Channel Theory to Three-Dimensional x-y-z Transport Computations

Spatial channel theory, initially introduced in 1977 by M. L. Williams and colleagues at ORNL, is a powerful tool for shield design optimization. It focuses on so called ''contributon'' flux and current of particles (a fraction of the total of neutrons, photons, etc.) which contribute directly or through their progeny to a pre-specified response, such as a detector reading, dose rate, reaction rate, etc., at certain locations of interest. Particles that do not contribute directly or indirectly to the pre-specified response, such as particles that are absorbed or leak out, are ignored. Contributon fluxes and currents are computed based on combined forward and adjoint transport solutions. The initial concepts were considerably improved by Abu-Shumays, Selva, and Shure by introducing steam functions and response flow functions. Plots of such functions provide both qualitative and quantitative information on dominant particle flow paths and identify locations within a shield configuration that are important in contributing to the response of interest. Previous work was restricted to two dimensional (2-D) x-y rectangular and r-z cylindrical geometries. This paper generalizes previous work to three-dimensional x-y-z geometry, since it is now practical to solve realistic 3-D problems with multidimensional transport programs. As in previous work, new analytic …
Date: March 12, 2002
Creator: Abu-Shumays, I. K.; Hunter, M. A.; Martz, R. L. & Risner, J. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS MODEL VALIDATION: PUSHING THE ENVELOPE (open access)

STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS MODEL VALIDATION: PUSHING THE ENVELOPE

None
Date: April 12, 2002
Creator: DOEBLING, SCOTT W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigations of Probe Induced Perturbations in a Hall Thruster (open access)

Investigations of Probe Induced Perturbations in a Hall Thruster

An electrostatic probe used to measure spatial plasma parameters in a Hall thruster generates perturbations of the plasma. These perturbations are examined by varying the probe material, penetration distance, residence time, and the nominal thruster conditions. The study leads us to recommendations for probe design and thruster operating conditions to reduce discharge perturbations, including metal shielding of the probe insulator and operation of the thruster at lower densities.
Date: August 12, 2002
Creator: Staack, D.; Raitses, Y. & Fisch, N. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of One-On Analysis to Evaluate Total System Performance of the Proposed Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository (open access)

Use of One-On Analysis to Evaluate Total System Performance of the Proposed Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository

The Yucca Mountain Site Characterization Project is currently evaluating the future performance of the proposed U.S. high-level nuclear waste repository. Using the Total System Performance Assessment (TSPA) model, a stylized analysis was conducted to evaluate the relative importance of natural and engineered barriers to movement of radionuclides from the proposed repository. These stylized ''one-on'' analyses consist of sequentially adding features, components, and processes, associated with the natural and engineered barriers, incorporated within the TSPA model and evaluating the effect of these elements on repository performance, as measured by the total mean annual dose to a reasonably maximally exposed individual. The analyses are ''stylized'' in the sense that they are performed to gain insight only. They are not meant to represent a real physical system in most cases, and in some cases allow the TSPA model to simulate results using parameter ranges outside the normal bounds of the TSPA model. In particular, the analyses provide insight into the relative contributions of repository features and processes in a way that is not possible using the full TSPA performance-assessment model. For example, in the nominal scenario of the TSPA model, the contribution of the natural system is masked by the contribution of the …
Date: September 12, 2002
Creator: Saulnier, G. J., Jr.; Lee, K. P.; Mehta, S.; Sevougian, S. D.; Kalinich, D. & McNeish, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cesium Removal from Synthetic Supernate using Duolite CS-100 (open access)

Cesium Removal from Synthetic Supernate using Duolite CS-100

This document describes a laboratory tracer facility which was used to show Duolite CS-100 resin's capability for removing cesium from supernate.
Date: September 12, 2002
Creator: Kilpatrick, L.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library