Acceptance Test Procedure for New Pumping Instrumentation & Control Skid V (open access)

Acceptance Test Procedure for New Pumping Instrumentation & Control Skid V

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) provides for the inspection and testing of the new Pumping Instrumentation and Control (PIC) skid designated as ''V''. The ATP will be performed after the construction of the PIC skid in the fabrication shop.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Koch, M. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beneficial Use of Drilling Waste - A Wetland Restoration Technology (open access)

Beneficial Use of Drilling Waste - A Wetland Restoration Technology

This project demonstrated that treated drill cuttings derived from oil and gas operations could be used as source material for rebuilding eroding wetlands in Louisiana. Planning to supply a restoration site, drill a source well, and provide part of the funding. Scientists from southeastern Louisiana University's (SLU) Wetland Biology Department were contracted to conduct the proposed field research and to perform mesocosm studies on the SLU campus. Plans were to use and abandoned open water drill slip as a restoration site. Dredged material was to be used to create berms to form an isolated cell that would then be filled with a blend of dredged material and drill cuttings. Three elevations were used to test the substrates ability to support various alternative types of marsh vegetation, i.e., submergent, emergent, and upland. The drill cuttings were not raw cuttings, but were treated by either a dewatering process (performed by Cameron, Inc.) or by a stabilization process to encapsulate undesirable constituents (performed by SWACO, Division of Smith International).
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Pioneer Natural Resources
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CALCULATION: PRECIPITATION CHARACTERISITICS FOR STORM WATER MANAGEMENT (open access)

CALCULATION: PRECIPITATION CHARACTERISITICS FOR STORM WATER MANAGEMENT

This Calculation is intended to satisfy engineering requirements for maximum 60-minute precipitation amounts for 50 and 100-year return periods at and near Yucca Mountain. This data requirement is documented in the ''Interface Control Document for Support Operations to Surface Facilities Operations Functional and Organizational Interfaces'' (CRWMS M&O 1998a). These developed data will supplement the information on 0.1 hour to 6-hour (in 0.1-hour increments) probable maximum precipitation (PMP) presented in the report, ''Precipitation Design Criteria for Storm Water Management'' (CRWMS M&O 1998b). The Reference Information Base (RIB) item, Precipitation ''Characteristics for Storm Water Management'' (M09902RIB00045 .OOO), was developed based on CRWMS M&O (1998b) and will be supplemented (via revision) with the information developed in this Calculation. The ''Development Plan for the Calculation: Precipitation Characteristics for Storm Water Management'' (CRWMS M&O 2000) was prepared in accordance with AP-2.l3Q, ''Technical Product Development Planning''. This calculation was developed in accordance with AP-3.12Q, Rev. O/ICN 2.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Ambos, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characteristics of Workload on Asci Blue-Pacific at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (open access)

Characteristics of Workload on Asci Blue-Pacific at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Symmetric multiprocessor (SMP) clusters have become the prevalent computing platforms for large-scale scientific computation in recent years mainly due to their good scalability. In fact, many parallel machines being used at supercomputing centers and national laboratories are of this type. It is critical and often very difficult on such large-scale parallel computers to efficiently manage a stream of jobs, whose requirement for resources and computing time greatly varies. Understanding the characteristics of workload imposed on a target environment plays a crucial role in managing system resources and developing an efficient resource management scheme. A parallel workload is analyzed typically by studying the traces from actual production parallel machines. The study of the workload traces not only provides the system designers with insight on how to design good processor allocation and job scheduling policies for efficient resource management, but also helps system administrators monitor and fine-tune the resource management strategies and algorithms. Furthermore, the workload traces are a valuable resource for those who conduct performance studies through either simulation or analytical modeling. The workload traces can be directly fed to a trace-driven simulator in a more realistic and specific simulation experiments. Alternatively, one can obtain certain parameters that characterize the workload …
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Yoo, A. B. & Jette, M. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Water Radiolysis in Water Cooled Reactors, NERI Proposal No.99-0010 (open access)

Effects of Water Radiolysis in Water Cooled Reactors, NERI Proposal No.99-0010

OAK B188 Effects of Water Radiolysis in Water Cooled Reactors, NERI Proposal No.99-0010. The aim of this project is to develop an experiment-and-theory based model for the radiolysis of nonstandard aqueous systems like those that will be encountered in the Advance Light Water reactor. Three aspects of the radiation chemistry of aqueous systems at elevated temperatures are considered in the project: the radiation-induced reaction within the primary track and with additives, the homogeneous production of H{sub 2}O{sub 2} at high radiation doses, and the heterogeneous reaction of the radiation-induced species escaping the track. The goals outlined for Phase 1 of the program were: the compilation of information on the radiation chemistry of water at elevated temperatures, the simulation of existing experimental data on the escape yields of e{sub aq}{sup -}, OH, H{sub 2} and H{sub 2}O{sub 2} in {gamma} radiolysis at elevated temperatures, the measurement of low LET and high LET production of H{sub 2}O{sub 2} at room temperature, the compilation of information on the radiation chemistry of water-(metal) oxide interfaces, and the synthesis and characterization the heterogeneous water-oxide systems of interest.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Pimblott, S.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Establish and Operate a Geologic Core and Sample Repository in Midland, Texas (open access)

Establish and Operate a Geologic Core and Sample Repository in Midland, Texas

Shell Oil Company donated its proprietary core and sample repository to the Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin, in 1994. This collection of geologic materials is composed of 325,000 boxes of rocks and samples housed in a 32,700-ft{sup 2} warehouse in Midland, Texas. The material includes cores from more than 3,000 wells (75,000 boxes) and cuttings from more than 90,000 wells (260,000 boxes). In addition to the warehouse space, the repository consists of layout rooms, a processing room, and office space. The U.S. Department of Energy provided $375,000 under Grant Number DE-FG22-94BC14854 for organizing the collection, staffing the facility, and making the material available to the public for the first 5 years of operation. Shell Oil Company provided an endowment of $1.3 million to cover the cost of operating the facility after the fifth year of operation.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Tyler, Noel
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanochromism, Shear Force Anisotropy, and Molecular Mechanics in Polydiacetylene Monolayers (open access)

Mechanochromism, Shear Force Anisotropy, and Molecular Mechanics in Polydiacetylene Monolayers

The authors use scanning probe microscopy to actuate and characterize the nanoscale mechanochromism of polydiacetylene monolayer on atomically-flat silicon oxide substrates. They find explicit evidence that the irreversible blue-to-red transformation is caused by shear forces exerted normal to the polydiacetylene polymer backbone. The anisotropic probe-induced transformation is characterized by a significant change in the tilt orientation of the side chains with respect to the surface normal. They also describe a new technique, based on shear force microscopy, that allows them to image friction anisotropy of polydiacetylene monolayer independent of scan direction. Finally, they discuss preliminary molecular mechanics modeling and electronic structure calculations that allow them to understand the correlation of mechanochromism with bond-angle changes in the conjugated polymer backbone.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Burns, Alan R.; Carpick, R. W.; Sasaki, Darryl Y.; Shelnutt, John A. & Haddad, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Midland Core Repository (open access)

Midland Core Repository

This report summarizes activities for the repository during this quarter. The repository holds drill cores and cuttings samples from oil wells that can be viewed or checked out by users.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Tyler, Noel
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Midland Core Repository (open access)

Midland Core Repository

This report summarizes activities for this quarter in one table. Industrial users of this repository viewed and/or checked out 163 boxes of drill cores and cuttings samples from 18 wells during the quarter.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Tyler, Noel
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Ignition Facility Project Execution Plan (open access)

National Ignition Facility Project Execution Plan

The ''National Ignition Facility (NIF) Justification of Mission Need'', which was approved by the Secretary of Energy in January 1993, defines the mission of the National Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) Program and discusses the specific mission of the NIF Project. The NIF experimental capability will allow nuclear-weapons scientists to assess stockpile problems, verify computational tools, test for nuclear-weapons effects, and increase their understanding of weapons physics. The three weapons laboratory directors and the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) Deputy Administrator for Defense Programs have reviewed the role of the NIT; in Stockpile Stewardship in a joint letter. Along with the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative numerical simulations and other aboveground experimental facilities, the NIF will provide critical data that will allow the United States to maintain its technical capabilities in nuclear weapons in the absence of underground testing. As a secondary objective, the NIF will advance our understanding of ICF and help to assess its potential as an energy source. Achieving fusion ignition in the NIF will advance both defense and energy objectives. In affirming the Project's Critical Decision 2,* ''Approval of New Start'', the Secretary of Energy verified the mission need and emphasized that the NIF has the potential to …
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Moses, Edward
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Organic Analysis of AW-101 and AN-107 Tank Waste (open access)

Organic Analysis of AW-101 and AN-107 Tank Waste

None
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Klinger, GS; Urie, MW; Campbell, JA; Clauss, SA; Clauss, TW; Hoppe, EW et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Processing of Silicon Nitride Ceramics from Concentrated Aqueous Suspensions by Robocasting (open access)

Processing of Silicon Nitride Ceramics from Concentrated Aqueous Suspensions by Robocasting

The optimization of concentrated AlliedSignal GS-44 silicon nitride aqueous slurries for robocasting was investigated. The dispersion mechanisms of GS-44 Si{sub 3}N{sub 4} aqueous suspensions with and without polyacrylate were analyzed. The zero point of charge (ZPC) was at about pH 6. Well-dispersed GS-44 suspensions were obtained in the pH range from 7 to 11 by the addition of Darvan 821A. The influence of pH, amount of Darvan 821A and solids loading on the theological behavior of GS-44 aqueous suspensions was determined. A coagulant, aluminum nitrate, was used to control the yield stress and shear thinning behavior of highly loaded Si{sub 3}N{sub 4} slurries. Homogeneous and stable suspensions of 52 vol% GS-44 Si{sub 3}N{sub 4} were robocast successfully at pH 7.8 to pH 8.5. The sintering process, mechanical properties and microstructural characteristics of robocast GS-44 bars were determined.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: He, Guoping; Hirschfeld, Deidre A.; Cesarano, Joseph, III & Stuecker, John N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Separating Mechanical and Chemical Contributions to Molecular-Level Friction (open access)

Separating Mechanical and Chemical Contributions to Molecular-Level Friction

The authors use force-probe microscopy to study the friction force and the adhesive interaction for molecular monolayer self-assembled on both Au probe tips and substrate surfaces. By systematically varying the chemical nature of the end groups on these monolayers the authors have, for the first time, delineated the mechanical and chemical origins of molecular-level friction. They use chemically inert {double_bond}CH{sub 3} groups on both interracial surfaces to establish the purely mechanical component of the friction and contrast the results with the findings for chemically active {double_bond}COOH end-groups. In addition, by using odd or even numbers of methylene groups in the alkyl backbones of the molecules they are able to determine the levels of inter-film and intra-film hydrogen bonding.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: KIM,HYUN I. & HOUSTON,JACK E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulations of a Furnace Brazing Process Using Tera-Scale Computing (open access)

Simulations of a Furnace Brazing Process Using Tera-Scale Computing

None
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: HOSKING,F. MICHAEL & GIANOULAKIS,STEVEN E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Special session: computational predictability of natural convection flows in enclosures (open access)

Special session: computational predictability of natural convection flows in enclosures

Modern thermal design practices often rely on a ''predictive'' simulation capability--although predictability is rarely quantified and often difficult to confidently achieve in practice. The computational predictability of natural convection in enclosures is a significant issue for many industrial thermal design problems. One example of this is the design for mitigation of optical distortion due to buoyancy-driven flow in large-scale laser systems. In many instances the sensitivity of buoyancy-driven enclosure flows can be linked to the presence of multiple bifurcation points that yield laminar thermal convective processes that transition from steady to various modes of unsteady flow. This behavior is brought to light by a problem as ''simple'' as a differentially-heated tall rectangular cavity (8:1 height/width aspect ratio) filled with a Boussinesq fluid with Pr = 0.71--which defines, at least partially, the focus of this special session. For our purposes, the differentially-heated cavity provides a virtual fluid dynamics laboratory.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Christon, M A; Gresho, P M & Sutton, S B
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Status and Future of Geothermal Electric Power (open access)

The Status and Future of Geothermal Electric Power

Geothermal electricity production in the US began in 1960. Today there are over 20 plants in the western US providing a total of about 2,200 MW of clean and reliable electricity. Currently identified resources could provide over 20,000 MW of power in the US, and undiscovered resources might provide 5 times that amount. In the 1990s industry growth slowed due to the loss of market incentives and competition from natural gas. However, increased interest in clean energy sources, ongoing technological improvements, and renewed opportunities abroad hold promise for a resurgence in the industry. This review paper covers the status of the technology, the issues faced, and the latest research. While the focus is on geothermal in the US, a brief description of the large international market is included.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: Kutscher, Charles F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermocline Thermal Storage Test for Large-Scale Solar Thermal Power Plants (open access)

Thermocline Thermal Storage Test for Large-Scale Solar Thermal Power Plants

Solar thermal-to-electric power plants have been tested and investigated at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) since the late 1970s, and thermal storage has always been an area of key study because it affords an economical method of delivering solar-electricity during non-daylight hours. This paper describes the design considerations of a new, single-tank, thermal storage system and details the benefits of employing this technology in large-scale (10MW to 100MW) solar thermal power plants. Since December 1999, solar engineers at Sandia National Laboratories' National Solar Thermal Test Facility (NSTTF) have designed and are constructing a thermal storage test called the thermocline system. This technology, which employs a single thermocline tank, has the potential to replace the traditional and more expensive two-tank storage systems. The thermocline tank approach uses a mixture of silica sand and quartzite rock to displace a significant portion of the volume in the tank. Then it is filled with the heat transfer fluid, a molten nitrate salt. A thermal gradient separates the hot and cold salt. Loading the tank with the combination of sand, rock, and molten salt instead of just molten salt dramatically reduces the system cost. The typical cost of the molten nitrate salt is $800 per ton …
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: ST.LAURENT,STEVEN J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-ray resonant scattering studies of charge and orbital ordering in Pr{sub 1{minus}z}, Ca{sub x}, MnO{sub 3} (open access)

X-ray resonant scattering studies of charge and orbital ordering in Pr{sub 1{minus}z}, Ca{sub x}, MnO{sub 3}

We present the results of x-ray scattering studies of the charge and orbital ordering in the manganite series Pr{sub 1{minus}z}, Ca{sub x}, MnO{sub 3} with x = 0.25, 0.4 and 0.5. The polarization and azimuthal dependence of the charge and orbital ordering in these compounds is characterized both in the resonant and nonresonant limits, and compared with the predictions of current theories. The results are qualitatively consistent with both cluster and LDA+U calculations of the electronic structure.
Date: August 14, 2000
Creator: V. Zimmermann, M.; Nelson, C. S.; Hill, J. P.; Gibbs, D.; Blume, M.; Casa, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experience with magnetic shielding of a large scale accelerator (open access)

Experience with magnetic shielding of a large scale accelerator

It is not unusual to place multiple accelerators in a common enclosure to save on civil construction costs. This often complicates operations, especially if accelerators are affecting each other. At Fermilab, the influence of a rapidly cycling Main Injector (MI) synchrotron on an antiproton storage ring (Recycler), placed in a common tunnel, was initially found to be unacceptable for a reliable operation of the Recycler. Initial closed orbit excursions in the Recycler ring during the MI ramp were in excess of 5 mm (rms). This paper describes a shielding technique, used to reduce these orbit excursions by a factor of five.
Date: August 14, 2001
Creator: al., Sergei Nagaitsev et
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A holistic look at minimizing adverse environmental impact under section 316(b) of the clean water act. (open access)

A holistic look at minimizing adverse environmental impact under section 316(b) of the clean water act.

None
Date: August 14, 2001
Creator: Veil, J. A.; Puder, M. G.; Littleton, D. J. & Johnson, N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Large aperture magnets for a future high power proton synchrotron (open access)

Large aperture magnets for a future high power proton synchrotron

A high intensity, high power proton synchrotron is currently under consideration at Fermilab. The machine--known as the Proton Driver--would accelerate 3 x 10{sup 13} protons from 400 MeV to 12 GeV (stage I) or 16 GeV (stage II) and ultimately deliver in excess of 1 MW of beam power. To minimize losses and insure beam stability, the space charge-induced tune shift must be kept well below 0.5. This is accomplished by spreading out bunches both longitudinally and transversely. While the former strategy favors high voltage low frequency RF, the latter leads to magnets with unconventionally large apertures. This requirement, combined with a 1.5 T bending field and rapid cycling operation results in a number of serious but not insurmountable challenges. In this paper, they discuss the design of the Proton Driver magnets and the rationale behind it.
Date: August 14, 2001
Creator: Mills, Jean-Francois Ostiguy and Frederick M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Liquid Scoping Study for Tritium-Lean, Fast Ignition Inertial Fusion Energy Power Plants (open access)

Liquid Scoping Study for Tritium-Lean, Fast Ignition Inertial Fusion Energy Power Plants

In a thick-liquid protected chamber design, such as HYLIFE-II, a molten-salt is used to attenuate neutrons and protect the chamber structures from radiation damage. The molten-salt absorbs some of the material and energy given off by the target explosion. In the case of a fast ignition inertial fusion system, advanced targets have been proposed that may be Self-sufficient in the tritium breeding (i.e., the amount of tritium bred in target exceeds the amount burned). These ''tritium-lean'' targets contain approximately 0.5% tritium and 99.5% deuterium, but require a large pr of 10-20 g/cm{sup 2}. Although most of the yield is provided by D-T reactions, the majority of fusion reactions are D-D, which produces a net surplus of tritium. This aspect allows for greater freedom when selecting a liquid for the protective blanket (lithium-bearing compounds are not required). This study assesses characteristics of many single, binary, and ternary molten-salts. Using the NIST Properties of Molten Salts Database, approximately 4300 molten-salts were included in the study [1]. As an initial screening, salts were evaluated for their safety and environmental (S&E) characteristics, which included an assessment of waste disposal rating, contact dose, and radioactive afterheat. Salts that passed the S&E criteria were then evaluated …
Date: August 14, 2001
Creator: Schmitt, R. C.; Latkowski, J. F.; Durbin, S. G.; Meier, W. R. & Reyes, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling of the primary proton beamline of the Fermilab NuMI project (open access)

Modeling of the primary proton beamline of the Fermilab NuMI project

The 120 GeV primary proton beamline for the NuMI-MINOS [1] experiment at Fermilab will transport one of the most intense high-energy beams ever constructed. in parallel operation with the Collider program, 80% of the intensity capability of the Fermilab Main Injector can be sent to NuMI. Radiation safety pertaining to residual activity, damage of equipment and irradiation of groundwater is a primary concern. A particular challenge is that this beam will be transported to and targeted in a cavern excavated in rock in an aquifer region. A model of the beamline, including transport elements and excavated enclosures, has been built in the radiation simulation program MARS. This model has been used to determine limits for allowable beam loss, and to study effects of instabilities and of various failure types. Some results obtained with this model are presented.
Date: August 14, 2001
Creator: Striganov, Sergei; Childress, S.; Drozhdin, S.; Grossman, N.; Lucas, P. & Mokhov, N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monitoring the Durability Performance of Concrete in Nuclear Waste Containment (open access)

Monitoring the Durability Performance of Concrete in Nuclear Waste Containment

OAK-B135 Monitoring the Durability Performance of Concrete in Nuclear Waste Containment
Date: August 14, 2001
Creator: Ulm, Franz-Josef
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library