Superconducting solenoids for an international muon coolingexperiment (open access)

Superconducting solenoids for an international muon coolingexperiment

None
Date: August 3, 2002
Creator: Green, M.A. & Rey, J.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Project Report G-Plus Windshield Coatings (open access)

Final Project Report G-Plus Windshield Coatings

Samples of Sungate windshield material provided by PPG were analyzed to ascertain failure mechanisms observed at the interface between a copper busbar and the electrically conductive coating in use. Samples of “failed” windshield material were characterized using optical and electron microscopy, as well as surface analysis methods. These were compared to corresponding samples of “good” coatings. The primary failure mechanism of the coated windshield appears to be related to electrical discharges that originate where air-filled gaps are present between the copper busbar and the conductive coating. Gaps are produced by irregularities or wrinkles in the copper busbar that may result from the installation process.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: Matson, Dean W. & Koram, Kwaku
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Residential hot water distribution systems: Roundtablesession (open access)

Residential hot water distribution systems: Roundtablesession

Residential building practice currently ignores the lossesof energy and water caused by the poor design of hot water systems. Theselosses include: combustion and standby losses from water heaters, thewaste of water (and energy) while waiting for hot water to get to thepoint of use; the wasted heat as water cools down in the distributionsystem after a draw; heat losses from recirculation systems and thediscarded warmth of waste water as it runs down the drain. Severaltechnologies are available that save energy (and water) by reducing theselosses or by passively recovering heat from wastewater streams and othersources. Energy savings from some individual technologies are reported tobe as much as 30 percent. Savings calculations of prototype systemsincluding bundles of technologies have been reported above 50 percent.This roundtable session will describe the current practices, summarizethe results of past and ongoing studies, discuss ways to think about hotwater system efficiency, and point to areas of future study. We will alsorecommend further steps to reduce unnecessary losses from hot waterdistribution systems.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: Lutz, James D.; Klein, Gary; Springer, David & Howard, Bion D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
DFBX boxes -- electrical and cryogenic distribution boxes for thesuperconducting magnets in the LHC straight sections (open access)

DFBX boxes -- electrical and cryogenic distribution boxes for thesuperconducting magnets in the LHC straight sections

None
Date: August 3, 2002
Creator: Zbasnik, Jon P.; Corradi, Carol A.; Gourlay, S.A.; Green, MichaelA.; Hafalia, Aurelio Q.; Kajiyama (Jr.), Yoichi et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanism and Estimation of Fatigue Crack Initiation in Austenitic Stainless Steels in LWR Environments. (open access)

Mechanism and Estimation of Fatigue Crack Initiation in Austenitic Stainless Steels in LWR Environments.

The ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code provides rules for the construction of nuclear power plant components. Figures I-9.1 through I-9.6 of Appendix I to Section III of the Code specify fatigue design curves for structural materials. However, the effects of light water reactor (LWR) coolant environments are not explicitly addressed by the Code design curves. Existing fatigue strain-vs.-life ({var_epsilon}-N) data illustrate potentially significant effects of LWR coolant environments on the fatigue resistance of pressure vessel and piping steels. This report provides an overview of fatigue crack initiation in austenitic stainless steels in LWR coolant environments. The existing fatigue {var_epsilon}-N data have been evaluated to establish the effects of key material, loading, and environmental parameters (such as steel type, strain range, strain rate, temperature, dissolved-oxygen level in water, and flow rate) on the fatigue lives of these steels. Statistical models are presented for estimating the fatigue {var_epsilon}-N curves for austenitic stainless steels as a function of the material, loading, and environmental parameters. Two methods for incorporating environmental effects into the ASME Code fatigue evaluations are presented. The influence of reactor environments on the mechanism of fatigue crack initiation in these steels is also discussed.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: Chopra, O. K. & Technology, Energy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Visualizing and Tracking Evolving Features in 3D Unstructured and Adaptive Datasets (open access)

Visualizing and Tracking Evolving Features in 3D Unstructured and Adaptive Datasets

The massive amounts of time-varying datasets being generated demand new visualization and quantification techniques. Visualization alone is not sufficient. Without proper measurement information/computations real science cannot be done. Our focus is this work was to combine visualization with quantification of the data to allow for advanced querying and searching. As part of this proposal, we have developed a feature extraction adn tracking methodology which allows researcher to identify features of interest and follow their evolution over time. The implementation is distributed and operates over data In-situ: where it is stored and when it was computed.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: Silver, D. & Zabusky, N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Renewable Energy Development on Tribal Lands (Brochure) (open access)

Renewable Energy Development on Tribal Lands (Brochure)

Tribal Energy Program under DOE's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy provides financial and technical assistance to Tribes for feasibility studies and shares the cost of implementing sustainable renewable energy installations on tribal lands.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Program Activities& Accomplishments in FY 2002: State& Alternative Fuel Provider Program Annual Report. EPAct Fleet Information& Regulations Fact Sheet. (open access)

Program Activities& Accomplishments in FY 2002: State& Alternative Fuel Provider Program Annual Report. EPAct Fleet Information& Regulations Fact Sheet.

From vehicle acquisition and credit trading to exemptions and outreach activity, the Annual Report summarizes the State& Alternative Fuel Provider Program accomplishments during FY 2002/MY2001.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inertial Fusion Energy Studies on an Earth Simulator-Class Computer (open access)

Inertial Fusion Energy Studies on an Earth Simulator-Class Computer

The U.S. is developing fusion energy based on inertial confinement of the burning fusion fuel, as a complement to the magnetic confinement approach. DOE's Inertial Fusion Energy (IFE) program within the Office of Fusion Energy Sciences (OFES) is coordinated with, and gains leverage from, the much larger Inertial Confinement Fusion program of the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). Advanced plasma and particle beam simulations play a major role in the IFE effort, and the program is well poised to benefit from an Earth Simulator-class resource. Progress in all key physics areas of IFE, including heavy-ion ''drivers'' which impart the energy to the fusion fuel, the targets for both ion- and laser-driven approaches, and an advanced concept known as fast ignition, would be dramatically accelerated by an Earth Simulator-class resource.
Date: August 13, 2002
Creator: Friedman, A & Stephens, R
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
BRIGHT Lights, BIG City: Massive Galaxies, Giant Ly-A Nebulae, and Proto-Clusters (open access)

BRIGHT Lights, BIG City: Massive Galaxies, Giant Ly-A Nebulae, and Proto-Clusters

High redshift radio galaxies are great cosmological tools for pinpointing the most massive objects in the early Universe: massive forming galaxies, active super-massive black holes and proto-clusters. They report on deep narrow-band imaging and spectroscopic observations of several z > 2 radio galaxy fields to investigate the nature of giant Ly-{alpha} nebulae centered on the galaxies and to search for over-dense regions around them. They discuss the possible implications for our understanding of the formation and evolution of massive galaxies and galaxy clusters.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: van Breugel, W.; Reuland, M.; de Vries, W.; Stanford, A.; Dey, A.; Kurk, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Resolution Broadband Spectral Interferometry (open access)

High-Resolution Broadband Spectral Interferometry

We demonstrate solar spectra from a novel interferometric method for compact broadband high-resolution spectroscopy. The spectral interferometer (SI) is a hybrid instrument that uses a spectrometer to externally disperse the output of a fixed-delay interferometer. It also has been called an externally dispersed interferometer (EDI). The interferometer can be used with linear spectrometers for imaging spectroscopy or with echelle spectrometers for very broad-band coverage. EDI's heterodyning technique enhances the spectrometer's response to high spectral-density features, increasing the effective resolution by factors of several while retaining its bandwidth. The method is extremely robust to instrumental insults such as focal spot size or displacement. The EDI uses no moving parts, such as purely interferometric FTS spectrometers, and can cover a much wider simultaneous bandpass than other internally dispersed interferometers (e.g. HHS or SHS).
Date: August 9, 2002
Creator: Erskine, D J & Edelstein, J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A SPICE Model and Electrostatic Field Analysis of the MOS Turn-Off Thyristor (open access)

A SPICE Model and Electrostatic Field Analysis of the MOS Turn-Off Thyristor

This paper presents a circuit model and an electrostatic field analysis with an approximate model of the SDM170HK MOS turn-off thyristor (MTO) fabricated by Silicon Power Corporation. The circuit model consists of five cells, each containing two bipolar junction transistors and three resistors. The turn-off feature of the MTO was simulated by inserting an array of 21 Fairchild FDS6670A MOSFET importable sub-circuit components between the cathode and the turn-on gate. The model was then used to create a four-terminal sub-circuit component representing the MTO that can be readily imported into computer-aided circuit design programs such as PSPICE and Micro-Cap. The generated static I-V characteristics and simulated switching waveforms are shown. The electrostatic field analysis was done for the maximum operating voltage of 4.5 kV using the Ansoft Maxwell 3D field simulator. Electrostatic field magnitudes that exceed the nominal air breakdown threshold of 30 kV/cm were observed surrounding the simulated turn-off gate wire, the turn-off gate ring contact, and the cathode ring contact. The resulting areas of high fields are a concern, as arc track marks have been found on the inner surface of the ceramic insulator near the internal gate connections of a failed device.
Date: August 5, 2002
Creator: Kelly, D. Q.; Mayhall, D. J.; Wilson, M. J. & Lahowe, D. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Horizontal and Slant-Path Surveillance with Speckle Imaging (open access)

Horizontal and Slant-Path Surveillance with Speckle Imaging

A fundamental problem in providing high-quality surveillance images recorded over long horizontal or slant paths is the blurring caused by atmospheric turbulence, which reduces both the resolution and contrast. The objective of the work reported here is to develop a capability for long-range imaging through the atmosphere that is not limited by the atmosphere but only by the fundamental diffraction limit of the optics. This paper describes our recent horizontal and slant-path imaging experiments of point targets and extended scenes as well as simulations of point targets in comparison to experiment. We show the near-diffraction limited resolution results obtained using bispectral speckle-imaging techniques. The experiments were performed with an 8-inch diameter telescope placed either in a field, on a rooftop, or on a hillside and cover ranges of interest from 100 meters up to 10 km. The scenery includes resolution targets, people, vehicles, and other structures.
Date: August 19, 2002
Creator: Carrano, C J & Brase, J M
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
EVALUATION OF THE MIGRATION POTENTIAL FOR 60Co AND 137Cs AT THE MAINE YANKEE SITE. (open access)

EVALUATION OF THE MIGRATION POTENTIAL FOR 60Co AND 137Cs AT THE MAINE YANKEE SITE.

The objective of this report is to discuss the degree of sorption and desorption of {sup 137}Cs and {sup 60}Co that may be associated with the granite bedrock and the ''popcorn'' cement drain system that underlie the Maine Yankee Containment Foundation. The purpose is to estimate how much retardation of these two radionuclides takes place in groundwater that flows in the near-field of the Containment Foundation, specifically with respect to contamination originating at the PAB Test Pit. Specific concerns revolve around the potential for the contamination originating near the PAB to create a radioactive dose to a hypothetical ''resident farmer'' using a well intercepting this water to exceed 4 millirems/yr.
Date: August 8, 2002
Creator: FUHRMANN,M. SULLIVAN,T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Explosion Violence of HMX-Based and RDX-Based Explosives - Effects of Composition, Confinement, and Solid Phase Using the Scaled Thermal Explosion Experiment (open access)

Thermal Explosion Violence of HMX-Based and RDX-Based Explosives - Effects of Composition, Confinement, and Solid Phase Using the Scaled Thermal Explosion Experiment

The Scaled Thermal Explosion Experiment (STEX) has been developed to quantify the violence of thermal explosion under well defined and carefully controlled initial and boundary conditions. Here we present results with HMX-based explosives (LX-04 and PBX-9501) and with Composition B. Samples are 2 inches (50 mm) in diameter and 8 inches (200 mm) in length, under confinement of 7,500-30,000 psi (50-200 MPa), with heating rates of 1-3 C/hr. We quantify reaction violence by measuring the wall velocity in the ensuing thermal explosion, and relate the measured velocity to that expected from a detonation. Results with HMX-based explosives (LX-04 and PBX-9501) have shown the importance of confinement and HMX solid phase, with reaction violence ranging from mild pressure bursts to near detonations. By contrast, Composition B has shown very violent reactions over a wide range of conditions.
Date: August 26, 2002
Creator: Maienschein, J L & Wardell, J F
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Nanolaminate Thin Shell Mirrors (open access)

Development of Nanolaminate Thin Shell Mirrors

The space science community has identified a need for ultra-light weight, large aperture optical systems that are capable of producing high-resolution images of low contrast. Current mirror technologies are limited due either to not being scalable to larger sizes at reasonable masses, or to lack of surface finish, dimensional stability in a space environment or long fabrication times. This paper will discuss the development of thin-shell, nano-laminate mirror substrates that are capable of being electro-actively figured. This technology has the potential to substantially reduce the cost of space based optics by allowing replication of ultra-lightweight primary mirrors from a master precision tool. Precision master tools have been shown to be used multiple times with repeatable surface quality results with less than one week fabrication times for the primary optical mirror substrate. Current development has developed a series of 0.25 and 0.5 meter spherical nanolaminate mirrors that are less than 0.5 kg/m{sup 2} areal density before electroactive components are mounted, and a target of less than 2.0 kg/m with control elements. This paper will provide an overview of nanolaminate materials for optical mirrors, modeling of their behavior under figure control and experiments conducted to validate precision control.
Date: August 9, 2002
Creator: Hickey, G S; Lih, S S & Barbee, T
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impulsive Stimulated Light Scattering at High Pressure - Precise Determination of Elastic Constants of Opaque Materials (open access)

Impulsive Stimulated Light Scattering at High Pressure - Precise Determination of Elastic Constants of Opaque Materials

Impulsive stimulated light scattering has been used to measure interfacial wave propagation speeds and elastic constants under conditions of high pressure. Data obtained from single-crystal Ge and Fe, and from polycrystalline Ta is presented. The method is complementary to other techniques for obtaining this type of information. There appears no fundamental reason why it cannot be extended to the 1 Mbar regime.
Date: August 22, 2002
Creator: Crowhurst, J C; Zaug, J M; Abramson, E H; Brown, J M & Ahre, D W
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemistry at Extreme Conditions (open access)

Chemistry at Extreme Conditions

We present equation of state results from impulsively stimulated light scattering (ISLS) experiments conducted in diamond anvil cells on pure supercritical fluids. We have made measurements on fluid H{sub 2}O (water), and CH{sub 3}OH (methanol). Sound speeds measured through ISLS have allowed us to refine existing potential models used in the exponential-6 (EXP-6) detonation product library [Fried, L. E., and Howard, W. M., J. Chem. Phys. 109 (17): 7338-7348 (1998).]. The refined models allow us to more accurately assess the chemical composition at the Chapman-Jouget (C-J) state of common energetic materials. We predict that water is present in appreciable quantities at the C-J state of energetic materials HMX, RDX, and nitro methane.
Date: August 8, 2002
Creator: Zaug, J M; Fried, L E; Abramson, E H; Hansen, D W; Crowhurst, J C & Howard, W M
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of Sextupolar Resonance Driving Terms in RHIC (open access)

Measurement of Sextupolar Resonance Driving Terms in RHIC

N/A
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: Fischer, W.; Schmidt, F. & Tomas, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Research on Captive Broodstock Programs for Pacific Salmon, 2001-2002 Annual Report. (open access)

Research on Captive Broodstock Programs for Pacific Salmon, 2001-2002 Annual Report.

The efficacy of captive broodstock programs depends on high in-culture survival and the fitness of cultured salmon after release, either as adults or juveniles. Continuing captive broodstock research designed to improve technology is being conducted to cover all major life history stages of Pacific salmon. The following summarizes some of the work performed and results from the FY 2001 performance period: (1) The incidence of male maturation of age-1 chinook salmon was significantly reduced by reducing growth in the first year of rearing. (2) Experimentally manipulated growth rates of captively-reared coho salmon had significant effects on female maturation rate, egg size, and fecundity, and the effects were stage-specific (i.e., pre-smolt vs. post-smolt). (3) A combination of Renogen and MT239 vaccination of yearling chinook salmon given an acute R. salmoninarum challenge had a significantly longer survival time than the mock-vaccinated group. The survival time was marginally higher than was seen in acutely challenged fish vaccinated with either Renogen or MT239 alone and suggests that a combination vaccine of Renogen and MT239 may be useful as both a prophylactic and therapeutic agent against BKD. (4) Full-sib (inbred) groups of chinook salmon have thus far exhibited lower ocean survival than half-sib and non-related …
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: Berejikian, Barry; Tezak, E. & Endicott, Rick
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monitoring and Evaluation of Smolt Migration in the Columbia Basin Volume VIII : Comparison of the RPA Testing Rules, Technical Report 2002. (open access)

Monitoring and Evaluation of Smolt Migration in the Columbia Basin Volume VIII : Comparison of the RPA Testing Rules, Technical Report 2002.

The 2000 FCRPS Biological Opinion (BO) suggested two statistical hypothesis tests to assess the RPA compliance by the years 2005 and 2008. With the decision rules proposed in the BO, Skalski and Ngouenet (2001) developed a compliance framework based on classical t-tests and used Monte-Carlo simulations to calculate power curves. Unfortunately, the two-sample t tests proposed in the BO only have moderate-to-low probability of correctly assessing the true status of the smolt survival recovery. We have developed a superior two-phase regression statistical model for testing the RPA compliance. The two-phase regression model improves the statistical power over the standard two-sample t-tests. In addition, the two-phase regression model has a higher probability of correctly assessing the true status of the smolt survival recovery. These classical statistical power curve approaches do not incorporate prior knowledge into the decision process. Therefore, we propose to examine Bayesian methods that complement classical statistics in situations where uncertainty must be taken into account. The Bayesian analysis will incorporate scientific/biological knowledge/expertise to thoroughly assess the RPA compliance in 2005 and 2008.
Date: August 1, 2002
Creator: Skalski, John & Ngouenet, Roger
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterizing proton beam of 6.7 MeV LEDA RFQ by fitting HEBT wire-scanner profiles to improved model. (open access)

Characterizing proton beam of 6.7 MeV LEDA RFQ by fitting HEBT wire-scanner profiles to improved model.

Quadrupole scans in the HEBT of the 6.7 MeV LEDA RFQ were analyzed to characterize the transverse phase space at the RFQ exit. In previous work, the profiles measured by the wire scanner were fit to various models (HEBT simulations from the RFQ exit to the wire scanner) in an effort to determine the transverse Courant-Snyder parameters (a, p, and t) at the RFQ exit. Unfortunately, at the larger quadrupole settings, the measured profiles showed features that were not present in the simulations. This made good fits impossible. Here we describe our latest analysis, which resulted in very good fits by using an improved model for the beam at the RFQ exit. The model beam was generated by the RFQ simulation code TOUTATIS. In the fitting code, this beam was distorted by linear transformations that changed the Courant-Snyder parameters to whatever values were required by the nonlinear optimizer while preserving the high-order features of the phase-space distribution. This present success indicates that there has not been any missing physics in the codes, which gives us increased confidence in our accelerator designs. In addition, we have learned that details in the RFQ beam can make a significant difference in observed behavior …
Date: 2002-08~
Creator: Lysenko, Walter P.; Gilpatrick, John Douglas; Qiang, Ji; Ryne, Robert; Rybarcyk, Lawrence J.; Schneider, J. David et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The first half century of the particle-in-cell method (open access)

The first half century of the particle-in-cell method

None
Date: August 26, 2002
Creator: Brackbill, J. U. (Jeremiah U.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cryogenic & Gas System Piping Pressure Tests (A Collection of PT Permits) (open access)

Cryogenic & Gas System Piping Pressure Tests (A Collection of PT Permits)

This engineering note is a collection of pipe pressure testing documents for various sections of piping for the D-Zero cryogenic and gas systems. High pressure piping must conform with FESHM chapter 5031.1. Piping lines with ratings greater than 150 psig have a pressure test done before the line is put into service. These tests require the use of pressure testing permits. It is my intent that all pressure piping over which my group has responsibility conforms to the chapter. This includes the liquid argon and liquid helium and liquid nitrogen cryogenic systems. It also includes the high pressure air system, and the high pressure gas piping of the WAMUS and MDT gas systems. This is not an all inclusive compilation of test documentation. Some piping tests have their own engineering note. Other piping section test permits are included in separate safety review documents. So if it isn't here, that doesn't mean that it wasn't tested. D-Zero has a back up air supply system to add reliability to air compressor systems. The system includes high pressure piping which requires a review per FESHM 5031.1. The core system consists of a pressurized tube trailer, supply piping into the building and a pressure …
Date: August 22, 2002
Creator: Rucinski, Russell A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library