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Molecular dynamic simulations, {sup 6}Li solid state NMR and ultraphosphate glasses (open access)

Molecular dynamic simulations, {sup 6}Li solid state NMR and ultraphosphate glasses

The author's laboratory continues to use NMR to investigate the structure and dynamics in amorphous materials, including the local structure of ultraphosphate glasses. Changes in the alkali environment in these phosphate glasses as a function of modifier concentration has recently been probed using {sup 6}Li and {sup 23}Na solid state NMR. Molecular dynamic (MD) simulations have also been performed in an attempt to gain additional insight into the variations of the local structure. Interestingly, although there are distinct variations in the Li coordination number as well as the Li-O bond lengths in the MD simulations (with a minimum or maximum in these parameters near the 20% Li{sub 2}O concentration), a linear change in the {sup 6}Li NMR chemical shift is observed between 5 and 50% Li{sub 2}O mole fraction. One would expect that such variations should be observable in the NMR chemical shift. In an attempt to understand this behavior the author has performed empirical calculation of the {sup 6}Li NMR chemical shift directly from the structures obtained in the MD simulations. It has been argued that the NMR chemical shift of alkali species can be related to a chemical shift parameter A, where A is defined as the summation …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: ALAM,TODD M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contained rocket motor burn demonstrations in X-tunnel: Final report for the DoD/DOE Joint Demilitarization Technology Program (open access)

Contained rocket motor burn demonstrations in X-tunnel: Final report for the DoD/DOE Joint Demilitarization Technology Program

Three low-pressure rocket motor propellant burn tests were performed in a large, sealed test chamber located at the X-tunnel complex on the Department of Energy's Nevada Test Site in the period May--June 1997. NIKE rocket motors containing double base propellant were used in two tests (two and four motors, respectively), and the third test used two improved HAWK rocket motors containing composite propellant. The preliminary containment safety calculations, the crack and burn procedures used in each test, and the results of various measurements made during and after each test are all summarized and collected in this document.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Allendorf, S. W.; Bellow, B. W. & Boehm, R. f.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Continuum-Based FEM Modeling of Ceramic Powder Compaction Using a Cap-Plasticity Constitutive Model (open access)

Continuum-Based FEM Modeling of Ceramic Powder Compaction Using a Cap-Plasticity Constitutive Model

Software has been developed and extended to allow finite element (FE) modeling of ceramic powder compaction using a cap-plasticity constitutive model. The underlying, general-purpose FE software can be used to model even the most complex three-dimensional (3D) geometries envisioned. Additionally, specialized software has been developed within this framework to address a general subclass of axisymmetric compacts that are common in industry. The expertise required to build the input deck, run the FE code, and post-process the results for this subclass of compacts is embedded within the specialized software. The user simply responds to a series of prompts, evaluates the quality of the FE mesh that is generated, and analyzes the graphical results that are produced. The specialized software allows users with little or no FE expertise to benefit from the tremendous power and insight that FE analysis can bring to the design cycle. The more general underlying software provides complete flexibility to model more complicated geometries and processes of interest to ceramic component manufacturers but requires significantly more user interaction and expertise.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Arguello, Jose G., Jr.; Fossum, Arlo F.; Zeuch, David H. & Ewsuk, Kevin G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Moments of the proton F{sub 2} structure function at low Q{sup 2} (open access)

Moments of the proton F{sub 2} structure function at low Q{sup 2}

The authors review the status of inclusive electron-proton scattering F{sub 2} structure function data in both the nucleon resonance region and the deep inelastic region, at momentum transfers below 5 (GeV/c){sup 2}. From these data they construct moments of F{sub 2}, down to momentum transfers of Q{sup 2}{approx}0.1(GeV/c){sup 2}. The second moment is only slowly varying with Q{sup 2} down to Q{sup 2}{approx}1, which is a reflection of duality. Below Q{sup 2} of 1 (GeV/c){sup 2}, the Q{sup 2} dependence of the moments is predominantly governed by the elastic contribution, whereas the inelastic channels still seem governed by local duality.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Armstrong, C. S.; Ent, R.; Keppel, C. E.; Liuti, S.; Niculescu, G. & Niculescu, I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parallel Processing of a Groundwater Contaminant Code (open access)

Parallel Processing of a Groundwater Contaminant Code

The U. S. Department of Energy’s Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL) is conducting a field test of experimental enhanced bioremediation of trichoroethylene (TCE) contaminated groundwater. TCE is a chlorinated organic substance that was used as a solvent in the early years of the INEEL and disposed in some cases to the aquifer. There is an effort underway to enhance the natural bioremediation of TCE by adding a non-toxic substance that serves as a feed material for the bacteria that can biologically degrade the TCE.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Arnett, Ronald Chester & Greenwade, Lance Eric
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of the Axial Anomaly using the {gamma}p {yields} {pi}{sup +}P{pi}{sup 0} n Reaction Near Threshold (open access)

Study of the Axial Anomaly using the {gamma}p {yields} {pi}{sup +}P{pi}{sup 0} n Reaction Near Threshold

This experiment was one of the first photoproduction experiments performed at Jefferson Lab using the CLAS and the Photon Tagger. The event reconstruction and the photon flux determination procedures have been developed and were proven to work well as we can see from the cross section measurement of the {gamma}p {yields} {pi}{sup +}n reaction. The preliminary results at CLAS for this reaction agree very well with previous world data. The analysis procedure has been developed to analyze the double-pion photoproduction. The differential cross sections for the {gamma}p {yields} P{pi}{sup +}{pi}{sup 0}n reaction have been measured with incident photon energies between 1 and 2 GeV. The Chew-Low extrapolation technique was used to extract the associated {gamma}{pi} {yields} {pi}{pi} cross sections from the differential cross sections. The extrapolation procedure of extracting the pole cross section has been explored. F{sup 3{pi}} was obtained from the {gamma}{pi} {yields} {pi}{pi} cross sections. The results show a momentum dependence of the F{sup 3{pi}} amplitude in which they agree with Holstein's calculation. These measurements test fundamental predictions of low energies QCD. Future work on this analysis will help reduce the uncertainty in F{sup 3{pi}}, and extend the measurements to the lower and higher s regions.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Asavapibhop, Burin
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Failure analysis of beryllium tile assembles following high heat flux testing for the ITER program (open access)

Failure analysis of beryllium tile assembles following high heat flux testing for the ITER program

The following document describes the processing, testing and post-test analysis of two Be-Cu assemblies that have successfully met the heat load requirements for the first wall and dome sections for the ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) fusion reactor. Several different joint assemblies were evaluated in support of a manufacturing technology investigation aimed at diffusion bonding or brazing a beryllium armor tile to a copper alloy heat sink for fusion reactor applications. Judicious selection of materials and coatings for these assemblies was essential to eliminate or minimize interactions with the highly reactive beryllium armor material. A thin titanium layer was used as a diffusion barrier to isolate the copper heat sink from the beryllium armor. To reduce residual stresses produced by differences in the expansion coefficients between the beryllium and copper, a compliant layer of aluminum or aluminum-beryllium (AlBeMet-150) was used. Aluminum was chosen because it does not chemically react with, and exhibits limited volubility in, beryllium. Two bonding processes were used to produce the assemblies. The primary process was a diffusion bonding technique. In this case, undesirable metallurgical reactions were minimized by keeping the materials in a solid state throughout the fabrication cycle. The other process employed an aluminum-silicon layer …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: B. C. Odegard, Jr.; Cadden, C. H. & Yang, N. Y. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
LEDA BEAM DIAGNOSTICS INSTRUMENTATION: BEAM POSITION MONITORS (open access)

LEDA BEAM DIAGNOSTICS INSTRUMENTATION: BEAM POSITION MONITORS

The Low Energy Demonstration Accelerator (LEDA) facility located at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) accelerates protons to an energy of 6.7-MeV and current of 100-mA operating in either a pulsed or cw mode. Of key importance to the commissioning and operations effort is the Beam Position Monitor system (BPM). The LEDA BPM system uses five micro-stripline beam position monitors processed by log ratio processing electronics with data acquisition via a series of custom TMS32OC40 Digital Signal Processing (DSP) boards. Of special interest to this paper is the operation of the system, the log ratio processing, and the system calibration technique. This paper will also cover the DSP system operations and their interaction with the main accelerator control system.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: BARR, D. & AL, ET
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project Canister Storage Building (CSB) Construction Acceptance Test Procedures (open access)

Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project Canister Storage Building (CSB) Construction Acceptance Test Procedures

None
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: BAZINET, G.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project Canister Storage Building (CSB) Factory Acceptance Test procedures (open access)

Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project Canister Storage Building (CSB) Factory Acceptance Test procedures

None
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: BAZINET, G.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project Canister Storage Building (CSB) Procurement Specifications [SEC 1 and 2] (open access)

Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project Canister Storage Building (CSB) Procurement Specifications [SEC 1 and 2]

This specification section defines the welding, brazing, thermal treatment, examination and testing requirements for carbon steel, and stainless steel piping.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: BAZINET, G.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Form factors and QCD in spacelike and timelike region (open access)

Form factors and QCD in spacelike and timelike region

The authors analyze the basic hard exclusive processes: {pi}{gamma}{sup *}{gamma}-transition, pion and nucleon electromagnetic form factors, and discuss the analytic continuation of QCD formulas from the spacelike q{sup 2} < 0 to the timelike region q{sup 2} > 0 of the relevant momentum transfers. They describe the construction of the timelike version of the coupling constant {alpha}{sub s}. They show that due to the analytic continuation of the collinear logarithms each eigenfunction of the evolution equation acquires a phase factor and investigate the resulting interference effects which are shown to be very small. They found no sources for the K-factor-type enhancements in the perturbative QCD contribution to the hadronic form factors. To study the soft part of the pion electromagnetic form factor, they use a QCD sum rule inspired model and show that there are non-canceling Sudakov double logarithms which result in a K-factor-type enhancement in the timelike region.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Bakulev, A.P.; Radyushkin, A.V. & Stefanis, N.G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metal Processing with Ultra-Short Laser Pulses (open access)

Metal Processing with Ultra-Short Laser Pulses

Femtosecond laser ablation has been shown to produce well-defined cuts and holes in metals with minimal heat effect to the remaining material. Ultrashort laser pulse processing shows promise as an important technique for materials processing. We will discuss the physical effects associated with processing based experimental and modeling results. Intense ultra-short laser pulse (USLP) generates high pressures and temperatures in a subsurface layer during the pulse, which can strongly modify the absorption. We carried out simulations of USLP absorption versus material and pulse parameters. The ablation rate as function of the laser parameters has been estimated. Since every laser pulse removes only a small amount of material, a practical laser processing system must have high repetition rate. We will demonstrate that planar ablation is unstable and the initially smooth crater bottom develops a corrugated pattern after many tens of shots. The corrugation growth rate, angle of incidence and the polarization of laser electric field dependence will be discussed. In the nonlinear stage, the formation of coherent structures with scales much larger than the laser wavelength was observed. Also, there appears to be a threshold fluence above which a narrow, nearly perfectly circular channel forms after a few hundred shots. Subsequent …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Banks, P S; Feit, M D; Komashko, A M; Perry, M D; Rubenchik, A M & Stuart, B C
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
LEDA beam diagnostics instrumentation: Beam current measurement (open access)

LEDA beam diagnostics instrumentation: Beam current measurement

None
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Barr, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plasma-Surface Interactions on Liquids (open access)

Plasma-Surface Interactions on Liquids

Liquid plasma-facing surfaces have been suggested as an option for advanced fusion devices, particularly in regions where solid materials may not survive over long operating periods. Because liquid surfaces can be replenished, they offer the possibility of tolerating intense particle bombardment and of recovering from off-normal events. As a preliminary step in understanding the nature of plasma-surface interactions on liquids, the authors consider some of the surface processes occurring in liquids undergoing irradiation by energetic particles. These include (1) sputtering, (2) segregation of liquid component species and impurities, (3) evaporation, and (4) trapping and release of incident particles. Aspects of these processes are examined for several candidate liquids, which represent three types of low-Z liquids: pure metals (Li), metallic alloys (Sn-Li), and compound insulators (Li{sub 2}BeF{sub 4}).
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Bastasz, R. & Eckstein, W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clean Cast Steel Technology - Machinability and Technology Transfer (open access)

Clean Cast Steel Technology - Machinability and Technology Transfer

There were two main tasks in the Clean Cast Steel Technology - Machinability and Technology Transfer Project. These were (1) determine the processing facts that control the machinability of cast steel and (2) determine the ability of ladle stirring to homogenize ladle temperature, reduce the tap and pouring temperatures, and reduce casting scrap.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Bates, C. E. & Griffin, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive Air Emissions Notice of Construction (NOC) for the Waste Sampling and Characterization Facility (WSCF) (open access)

Radioactive Air Emissions Notice of Construction (NOC) for the Waste Sampling and Characterization Facility (WSCF)

This NOC application is provided to update the description of amounts of material handled, and to update the calculation of potential for emissions and resultant calculation of offsite TEDE. This NOC also includes an updated description of the various emission units at WSCF, including use of portable tanks to receive and remove liquid waste contaminated with low levels of radioactive contamination. The resultant, adjusted estimate for TEDE to the hypothetical MEI due to all combined unabated emissions from WSCF is 1.4 E-02 millirem per year. The total adjusted estimate for all combined abated emissions is 2.8 E-03 millirem per year. No single emission unit at the WSCF Complex exceeds a potential (unabated) offsite dose of 2.7 E-03 millirem per year.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Bates, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gradient Effects on the Fracture of Inhomogeneous Materials (open access)

Gradient Effects on the Fracture of Inhomogeneous Materials

Functionally Graded Materials (FGMs) have a spatial variation in physical properties that can be tailored to meet the needs of a specific application and/or to minimize internal stresses arising from thermal and elastic mismatch. Modeling these materials as inhomogeneous continua allows assessment of the role of the gradient without requiring detailed knowledge of the microstructure. Motivated by the relative difficulty of obtaining analytical solutions to boundary value problems for FGMs, an accurate finite-element code is developed for obtaining numerical planar and axisymmetric linear thermoelastic solutions. In addition an approximate analytical technique for mapping homogeneous-modulus solutions to those for FGMs is assessed and classes of problems to which it applies accurately are identified. The fracture mechanics analysis of FGMs can be characterized by the classic stress intensities, KI and KII, but there has been scarce progress in understanding the role of the modulus gradient in determining fracture initiation and propagation. To address this question, a statistical fracture model is used to correlate near-tip stresses with brittle fracture initiation behavior. This describes the behavior of a material experiencing fracture initiation away from the crack tip. Widely dispersed zones of fracture initiation sites are expected. Finite-length kinks are analyzed to describe the crack …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Becker, Terrence Lee
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Habitat Evaluation Procedures (HEP) Report : Hellsgate Project, 1999-2000 Technical Report. (open access)

Habitat Evaluation Procedures (HEP) Report : Hellsgate Project, 1999-2000 Technical Report.

A Habitat Evaluation Procedure (HEP) study was conducted on lands acquired and/or managed (4,568 acres total) by the Hellsgate Big Game Winter Range Wildlife Mitigation Project (Hellsgate project) to mitigate some of the losses associated with the original construction and operation of Grand Coulee Dam and inundation of habitats behind the dams. Three separate properties, totaling 2,224 acres were purchased in 1998. One property composed of two separate parcels, mostly grassland lies southeast of the town of Nespelem in Okanogan County (770 acres) and was formerly called the Hinman property. The former Hinman property lies within an area the Tribes have set aside for the protection and preservation of the sharp-tailed grouse (Agency Butte unit). This special management area minus the Hinman acquisition contains 2,388 acres in a long-term lease with the Tribes. The second property lies just south of the Silver Creek turnoff (Ferry County) and is bisected by the Hellsgate Road (part of the Friedlander unit). This parcel contains 60 acres of riparian and conifer forest cover. The third property (now named the Sand Hills unit) acquired for mitigation (1,394 acres) lies within the Hellsgate Reserve in Ferry County. This new acquisition links two existing mitigation parcels (the …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Berger, Matthew
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monitoring large enrichment plants using thermal imagery from commercial satellites: A case study (open access)

Monitoring large enrichment plants using thermal imagery from commercial satellites: A case study

Thermal imagery from commercial satellites is an interesting candidate technology for use as a verification tool for the purpose of monitoring certain types of fissile material production sites. Examples of its potential treaty applications include the Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty (FMCT) or a Fissile Material Production Moratorium. To help determine the capabilities and limitations of such imagery as a monitoring tool, the author has examined archived LANDSAT-5 images of the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant, a large US uranium-enrichment facility in Ohio. This analysis indicates that large-scale gaseous diffusion plants can very likely be recognized as operational with thermal imagery throughout most of the year in clear weather conditions. It may also be possible to identify certain other large-scale qualitative changes in operations, such as the shut-down of a single process building in a plant, by a comparison of its temperature with the temperatures of neighboring operational process buildings. However, uncertainties in the current data set prevent a definitive conclusion regarding the latter capability. This study identifies intrinsic weaknesses, including vulnerability to countermeasures, that prevent thermal imagery from satellites from being a robust standalone verification tool, even for very large enrichment plants. Nonetheless, the imagery may be useful as a trigger …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Bernstein, Adam
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Robot Work Platform for Large Hot Cell Deactivation (open access)

Robot Work Platform for Large Hot Cell Deactivation

The 324 Building, located at the Hanford Site near Richland, Washington, is being deactivated to meet state and federal cleanup commitments. The facility is currently in its third year of a nine-year project to complete deactivation and closure for long-term surveillance and maintenance. The 324 building contains large hot cells that were used for high-radiation, high-contamination chemical process development and demonstrations. A major obstacle for the 324 deactivation project is the inability to effectively perform deactivation tasks within highly radioactive, contaminated environments. Current strategies use inefficient, resource intensive technologies that significantly impact the cost and schedule for deactivation. To meet mandated cleanup commitments, there is a need to deploy rapid, more efficient remote/robot technologies to minimize worker exposure, accelerate work tasks, and eliminate the need for multiple specialized tool design and procurement efforts. This paper describes the functions and performance requirements for a crane-deployed remote/robot Work Platform possessing full access capabilities. The remote/robot Work Platform will deploy commercially available off-the-shelf tools and end effectors to support Project cleanup goals and reduce overall project risk and cost. The intent of this system is to maximize the use of off-the-shelf technologies that minimize additional new, unproven, or novel designs. This paper further …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Bitten, E. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sandia Heat Flux Gauge Thermal Response and Uncertainty Models (open access)

Sandia Heat Flux Gauge Thermal Response and Uncertainty Models

None
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Blanchat, Thomas K.; Humphries, Larry L. & Gill, Walter
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Combining local search with co-evolution in a remarkably simple way (open access)

Combining local search with co-evolution in a remarkably simple way

The authors explore a new general-purpose heuristic for finding high-quality solutions to hard optimization problem. The method, called extremal optimization, is inspired by self-organized criticality, a concept introduced to describe emergent complexity in physical systems. In contrast to genetic algorithms, which operate on an entire gene-pool of possible solutions, extremal optimization successively replaces extremely undesirable elements of a single sub-optimal solution with new, random ones. Large fluctuations, or avalanches, ensue that efficiently explore many local optima. Drawing upon models used to simulate far-from-equilibrium dynamics, extremal optimization complements heuristics inspired by equilibrium statistical physics, such as simulated annealing. With only one adjustable parameter, its performance has proved competitive with more elaborate methods, especially near phase transitions. Phase transitions are found in many combinatorial optimization problems, and have been conjectured to occur in the region of parameter space containing the hardest instances. We demonstrate how extremal optimization can be implemented for a variety of hard optimization problems. We believe that this will be a useful tool in the investigation of phase transitions in combinatorial optimization, thereby helping to elucidate the origin of computational complexity.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Boettcher, S. & Percus, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Adaptive System Approach to the Implementation and Evaluation of Digital Library Recommendation Systems (open access)

An Adaptive System Approach to the Implementation and Evaluation of Digital Library Recommendation Systems

None
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Bollen, J. & Rocha, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library