Chemical aspects of actinides in the geosphere: towards a rational nuclear materials management (open access)

Chemical aspects of actinides in the geosphere: towards a rational nuclear materials management

A complete understanding of actinide interactions in the geosphere is paramount for developing a rational Nuclear and Environmental Materials Management Policy. One of the key challenges towards understanding the fate and transport of actinides is determining their speciation (i.e., oxidation state and structure). Since an element's speciation directly dictates physical properties such as toxicity and solubility, this information is critical for evaluating and controlling the evolution of an actinide element through the environment. Specific areas within nuclear and environmental management programs where speciation is important are (1) waste processing and separations; (2) wasteform materials for long-term disposition; and (3) aqueous geochemistry. The goal of this project was to develop Actinide X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy ( U S ) as a core capability at LLNL and integrate it with existing facilities, providing a multi-technique approach to actinide speciation. XAS is an element-specific structural probe which determines the oxidation state and structure for most atoms. XAS can be more incisive than other spectroscopies because it originates from an atomic process and the information is always attainable, regardless of an element's speciation. Despite the utility, XAS is relatively complex due to the need for synchrotron radiation and significant expertise with data acquisition and analysis. …
Date: February 9, 2001
Creator: Allen, P & Sylwester, E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Integrated Safety Management System Verification Enhancement Review of the Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP) (open access)

The Integrated Safety Management System Verification Enhancement Review of the Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP)

The primary purpose of the verification enhancement review was for the DOE Richland Operations Office (RL) to verify contractor readiness for the independent DOE Integrated Safety Management System Verification (ISMSV) on the Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP). Secondary objectives included: (1) to reinforce the engagement of management and to gauge management commitment and accountability; (2) to evaluate the ''value added'' benefit of direct public involvement; (3) to evaluate the ''value added'' benefit of direct worker involvement; (4) to evaluate the ''value added'' benefit of the panel-to-panel review approach; and, (5) to evaluate the utility of the review's methodology/adaptability to periodic assessments of ISM status. The review was conducted on December 6-8, 1999, and involved the conduct of two-hour interviews with five separate panels of individuals with various management and operations responsibilities related to PFP. A semi-structured interview process was employed by a team of five ''reviewers'' who directed open-ended questions to the panels which focused on: (1) evidence of management commitment, accountability, and involvement; and, (2) consideration and demonstration of stakeholder (including worker) information and involvement opportunities. The purpose of a panel-to-panel dialogue approach was to better spotlight: (1) areas of mutual reinforcement and alignment that could serve as good examples …
Date: February 9, 2000
Creator: BRIGGS, C.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solution to Monthly Problem 11410 (open access)

Solution to Monthly Problem 11410

None
Date: February 9, 2009
Creator: Bailey, David H. & Borwein, Jonathan M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
River Corridor Buildings 324 & 327 Cleanup (open access)

River Corridor Buildings 324 & 327 Cleanup

A major challenge in the recently awarded River Corridor Closure (RCC) Contract at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Hanford Site is decontaminating and demolishing (D&D) facilities in the 300 Area. Located along the banks of the Columbia River about one mile north of Richland, Washington, the 2.5 km{sup 2} (1 mi{sup 2})300 Area comprises only a small part of the 1517 km{sup 2} (586 mi{sup 2}) Hanford Site. However, with more than 300 facilities ranging from clean to highly contaminated, D&D of those facilities represents a major challenge for Washington Closure Hanford (WCH), which manages the new RCC Project for DOE's Richland Operations Office (RL). A complicating factor for this work is the continued use of nearly a dozen facilities by the DOE's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). Most of the buildings will not be released to WCH until at least 2009--four years into the seven-year, $1.9 billion RCC Contract. The challenge will be to deactivate, decommission, decontaminate and demolish (D4) highly contaminated buildings, such as 324 and 327, without interrupting PNNL's operations in adjacent facilities. This paper focuses on the challenges associated with the D4 of the 324 Building and the 327 Building.
Date: February 9, 2006
Creator: Bazzell, K. D. & Smith, B. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
End-Pumped 895 nm Cs Laser (open access)

End-Pumped 895 nm Cs Laser

A scientific demonstration of a Cs laser is described in which the measured slope efficiency is as high as 0.59 W/W using a Ti:Sapphire laser as a surrogate diode-pump. In addition to presenting experimental data, a laser energetics model that accurately predicts laser performance is described and used to model a power-scaled, diode-pumped system.
Date: February 9, 2004
Creator: Beach, R J; Krupke, W F; Kanz, V K; Payne, S A; Dubinskii, M A & Merkle, L D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Cost of Operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Enhanced Security (open access)

The Cost of Operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Enhanced Security

This CRS report estimates that the Department of Defense (DOD) has received over $201 billion for combat operations, occupation, and support for military personnel deployed or supporting operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and for enhanced security at military installations, collectively called the “global war on terrorism.”
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Belasco, Amy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compact Optical Technique for Streak Camera Calibration (open access)

Compact Optical Technique for Streak Camera Calibration

None
Date: February 9, 2004
Creator: Bell, Perry; Griffith, Roger; Hagans, Karla; Lerche, Richard; Allen, Curt; Davies, Terence et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Saudi Arabia: Background and U.S. Relations (open access)

Saudi Arabia: Background and U.S. Relations

The kingdom of Saudi Arabia, ruled by the Al Saud family since its founding in 1932, wields significant political and economic influence as the birthplace of the Islamic faith and by virtue of its large energy reserves. This report provides background information about Saudi Arabia and analyzes current issues in U.S.-Saudi relations.
Date: February 9, 2009
Creator: Blanchard, Christopher M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence of Transformation Bursts During Thermal Cycling of a Pu-Ga Alloy (open access)

Evidence of Transformation Bursts During Thermal Cycling of a Pu-Ga Alloy

The thermodynamics and kinetics of the fcc (delta) to monoclinic (alpha-prime) phase transformation and its reversion in a plutonium-gallium alloy have been studied using differential scanning calorimetry, resistometry, and dilatometry. Under ambient conditions, the delta phase is metastable in a Pu-2.0 at% Ga alloy. Thermal cycling to below the ambient temperature results in a partial transformation to the alpha-prime phase; this transformation is composition-invariant and exhibits martensitic behavior. Because this transformation results in an unusually invariant large 25% volume contraction that cannot be fully accommodated by purely elastic adjustments, the transformation mode is expected to involve burst formation of individual alpha-prime particles. However, upon cooling, these individual bursts were not resolved by the above techniques, although signals corresponding to the overall accumulation of many alpha-prime particles were observed. On the other hand, upon heating, signals from differential scanning calorimetry, resistometry, and dilatometry showed a series of discrete changes occurring in periodic increments beginning at approximately 32 C. These features correspond to the cooperative reversion of many alpha-prime particles to the delta phase; they appear to be the result of an interplay between the autocatalytically driven reversion of a cascade of individual martensite units, and self-quenching caused by small changes of …
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Blobaum, K M; Krenn, C R; Mitchell, J N; Haslam, J J; Wall, M A; Massalski, T B et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nucleation and growth of the Alpha-Prime Phase martensitic phase in Pu-Ga Alloys (open access)

Nucleation and growth of the Alpha-Prime Phase martensitic phase in Pu-Ga Alloys

In a Pu-2.0 at% Ga alloy, it is observed experimentally that the amount of the martensitic alpha-prime product formed upon cooling the metastable delta phase below the martensite burst temperature (M{sub b}) is a function of the holding temperature and holding time of a prior conditioning (''annealing'') treatment. Before subjecting a sample to a cooling and heating cycle to form and revert the alpha-prime phase, it was first homogenized for 8 hours at 375 C to remove any microstructural memory of prior transformations. Subsequently, conditioning was carried out in a differential scanning calorimeter apparatus at temperatures in the range between -50 C and 370 C for periods of up to 70 hours to determine the holding time and temperature that produced the largest volume fraction of alpha-prime upon subsequent cooling. Using transformation peak areas (i.e., the heats of transformation) as a measure of the amount of alpha-prime formed, the largest amount of alpha-prime was obtained following holding at 25 C for at prime least 6 hours. Additional time at 25 C, up to 70 hours, did not increase the amount of subsequent alpha-prime formation. At 25 C, the Pu-2.0 at% Ga alloy is below the eutectoid transformation temperature in the …
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Blobaum, K M; Krenn, C R; Wall, M A; Massalski, T B & Schwartz, A J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-Dimensional Hydrodynamic Experiments on the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Three-Dimensional Hydrodynamic Experiments on the National Ignition Facility

The production of supersonic jets of material via the interaction of a strong shock wave with a spatially localized density perturbation is a common feature of inertial confinement fusion and astrophysics. The behavior of two-dimensional (2D) supersonic jets has previously been investigated in detail [J. M. Foster et. al, Phys. Plasmas 9, 2251 (2002)]. In three-dimensions (3D), however, there are new aspects to the behavior of supersonic jets in compressible media. In this paper, the commissioning activities on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [J. A. Paisner et al., Laser Focus World 30, 75 (1994)] to enable hydrodynamic experiments will be presented as well as the results from the first series of hydrodynamic experiments. In these experiments, two of the first four beams of NIF are used to drive a 40 Mbar shock wave into millimeter scale aluminum targets backed by 100 mg/cc carbon aerogel foam. The remaining beams are delayed in time and are used to provide a point-projection x-ray backlighter source for diagnosing the three-dimensional structure of the jet evolution resulting from a variety of 2D and 3D features. Comparisons between data and simulations using several codes will be presented.
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Blue, B E; Robey, H F; Glendinning, S G; Bono, M J; Dixit, S N; Foster, J M et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nonperturbative geometrodynamic calculation of chaotic mixing time in charged-particle beams (open access)

Nonperturbative geometrodynamic calculation of chaotic mixing time in charged-particle beams

The time scale for irreversible mixing in a charged-particle bunch as a consequence of time-independent, nonlinear space-charge forces is estimated analytically to be a few plasma periods, much shorter than the two-body relaxation time. The basis for the estimate is a metric tensor inferred from Hamilton's least-action principle. Geodesics derived from the metric tensor correspond to particle trajectories. Their behavior reflects the properties of the curvilinear manifold in which they are embedded, among which irregularities associated with parametric resonances are of foremost importance. Exponential separation of nearby chaotic trajectories is thereby accessible to the geometrodynamic approach. The e-folding time associated with dispersing an initially localized perturbation throughout the bunch characterizes the process of irreversible mixing. It thereby constrains both the placement and size of hardware for emittance compensation that may be needed, for example, to undo phase-space degradation arising from coherent synchrotron radiation in magnetic bends. These constraints are estimated for linacs powering modern infrared and x-ray free-electron lasers.
Date: February 9, 2000
Creator: Bohn, C.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Airborne Electronic Warfare: Issues for the 107th Congress (open access)

Airborne Electronic Warfare: Issues for the 107th Congress

This report discusses electronic warfare (EW) as an effective technique for increasing aircraft and aircrew survivability in hostile environments, which in turn improves the overall effectiveness of the air campaign.
Date: February 9, 2001
Creator: Bolkcom, Christopher
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the Rayleigh-Taylor and Richtmyer-Meshkov instabilities (open access)

Investigation of the Rayleigh-Taylor and Richtmyer-Meshkov instabilities

The present research program is centered on the experimental and numerical study of two instabilities that develop at the interface between two different fluids when the interface experiences an impulsive or a constant acceleration. The instabilities, called the Richtmyer-Meshkov and Rayleigh-Taylor instability, respectively, adversely affect target implosion in experiments aimed at the achievement of nuclear fusion by inertial confinement by causing the nuclear fuel contained in a target and the shell material to mix, leading to contamination of the fuel, yield reduction or no ignition at all. The laboratory experiments summarized in this report include shock tube experiments to study a shock-accelerated bubble and a shock-accelerated 2-D sinusoidal interface; and experiments based on the use of magnetorheological fluids for the study of the Rayleigh-Taylor instability. Computational experiments based on the shock tube experimental conditions are also reported.
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Bonazza, Riccardo; Anderson, Mark & Smith, Leslie
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Sample Handling and Analytical Expertise For the Stardust Comet Sample Return (open access)

Development of Sample Handling and Analytical Expertise For the Stardust Comet Sample Return

NASA's Stardust mission returned to Earth in January 2006 with ''fresh'' cometary particles from a young Jupiter family comet. The cometary particles were sampled during the spacecraft flyby of comet 81P/Wild-2 in January 2004, when they impacted low-density silica aerogel tiles and aluminum foils on the sample tray assembly at approximately 6.1 km/s. This LDRD project has developed extraction and sample recovery methodologies to maximize the scientific information that can be obtained from the analysis of natural and man-made nano-materials of relevance to the LLNL programs.
Date: February 9, 2006
Creator: Bradley, John P.; Bajt, S.; Brennan, S.; Graham, G. A.; Grant, P. G.; Hutcheon, I. D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ISOcxx: The C++ portability package (open access)

ISOcxx: The C++ portability package

The level of C++ compliers' adherence to the ISO C++ standard varies considerably from compiler to compiler. This variability has significantly hindered users' attempts as standard-compliant C++ coding practices. ISOcxx is a software package that addresses such deficient aspects of users' C++ development environments. This portability package: (1) probes an environment to identify areas of non-compliance (defects) with the standard, and (2) supplies, where possible, compliance code so as to mitigate (cure) the ill effects of the detected defects. Each defect typically results from a feature that is required by the ISO C++ standard, but that a particular environment omits entirely, provides only incompletely, matches to an outdated draft of the standard, or otherwise incorrectly supports. A cure is applicable if test programs demonstrating the corresponding defect can be successfully compiled and run when the compliance code is incorporated. Where no compliance code is available, client code is nonetheless made aware of the defect and can thus avoid the offending construct. Thus, this package allows client code to be maximally compliant with the international C++ standard, yet still be acceptable to many otherwise-defective environments.
Date: February 9, 2000
Creator: Brown, W.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiopharmaceutical and Gene Therapy Program (open access)

Radiopharmaceutical and Gene Therapy Program

The objective of our research program was to determine whether novel receptors can be induced in solid cancers as a target for therapy with radiolabeled unmodified peptides that bind to the receptors. The hypothesis was that induction of a high number of receptors on the surface of these cancer cells would result in an increased uptake of the radiolabeled monomeric peptides as compared to published results with radiolabeled antibodies or peptides to naturally expressed antigens or receptors, and therefore a better therapeutic outcome. The following is a summary of published results.
Date: February 9, 2006
Creator: Buchsbaum, Donald J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioimmunotoxin Therapy of Experimental Colon and Ovarian Cancer (open access)

Radioimmunotoxin Therapy of Experimental Colon and Ovarian Cancer

To pursue the development of radiolabeled immunotoxins (RIT) for colon cancer, it was first necessary to identify an immunotoxin (IT) that could selectively kill colon cancer cell lines. Recently, our collaborators in the Vallera laboratory have observed that potent recombinant IT can be synthesized using recombinant single chain antibodies (sFv) spliced to truncated diphtheria toxin (DT) consisting of the first 390 amino acids of native DT. DT was chosen as a toxin because it is a catalytic bacterial toxin that is easily manipulated in genetic engineering studies. Also, the Vallera lab has developed new procedures for preparing the sFv fusion toxins from bacterial inclusion bodies such as DT and another good genetic engineering toxin pseudomonas exotoxin (PE) based on detergent refolding. This allows for enhanced yields and higher purity that is essential for generating the protein that will be needed for preparation of larger amounts of RIT for therapy. Many potential sFvs were considered for targeting colon cancer. The best results have been obtained with an sFv recognizing EpCam. EpCam, also known as ESA or EGP40, is a 40 kDa epithelial transmembrane glycoprotein found on the basolateral surface of simple, pseudostratified, and transitional epithelia. It has been found overexpressed on …
Date: February 9, 2006
Creator: Buchsbaum, Donald J. & Vallera, Daniel A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Endangered Species Act in the 109th Congress: Conflicting Values and Difficult Choices (open access)

The Endangered Species Act in the 109th Congress: Conflicting Values and Difficult Choices

None
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Buck, Eugene H.; Corn, M. Lynne; Sheikh, Pervaze A.; Baldwin, Pamela & Meltz, Robert
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biaxial Creep Specimen Fabrication (open access)

Biaxial Creep Specimen Fabrication

This report documents the results of the weld development and abbreviated weld qualification efforts performed by Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) for refractory metal and superalloy biaxial creep specimens. Biaxial creep specimens were to be assembled, electron beam welded, laser-seal welded, and pressurized at PNNL for both in-pile (JOYO reactor, O-arai, Japan) and out-of-pile creep testing. The objective of this test campaign was to evaluate the creep behavior of primary cladding and structural alloys under consideration for the Prometheus space reactor. PNNL successfully developed electron beam weld parameters for six of these materials prior to the termination of the Naval Reactors program effort to deliver a space reactor for Project Prometheus. These materials were FS-85, ASTAR-811C, T-111, Alloy 617, Haynes 230, and Nirnonic PE16. Early termination of the NR space program precluded the development of laser welding parameters for post-pressurization seal weldments.
Date: February 9, 2006
Creator: Bump, JL & Luther, RF
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

Impact of Uranyl Alteration Phases of Spent Fuel on Mobility of Np

None
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Burns, Peter C.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Axion Mass in Modular Invariant Supergravity (open access)

The Axion Mass in Modular Invariant Supergravity

When supersymmetry is broken by condensates with a single condensing gauge group, there is a nonanomalous R-symmetry that prevents the universal axion from acquiring a mass. It has been argued that, in the context of supergravity, higher dimension operators will break this symmetry and may generate an axion mass too large to allow the identification of the universal axion with the QCD axion. We show that such contributions to the axion mass are highly suppressed in a class of models where the effective Lagrangian for gaugino and matter condensation respects modular invariance (T-duality).
Date: February 9, 2005
Creator: Butter, Daniel & Gaillard, Mary K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cleanup Verification Package for the 600-259 Waste Site (open access)

Cleanup Verification Package for the 600-259 Waste Site

This cleanup verification package documents completion of remedial action for the 600-259 waste site. The site was the former site of the Special Waste Form Lysimeter, consisting of commercial reactor isotope waste forms in contact with soils within engineered caissons, and was used by Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to collect data regarding leaching behavior for target analytes. A Grout Waste Test Facility also operated at the site, designed to test leaching rates of grout-solidified low-level radioactive waste.
Date: February 9, 2006
Creator: Capron, J. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Device characteristics of the PnP AlGaAs/InGaAsN/GaAs double heterojunction bipolar transistor (open access)

Device characteristics of the PnP AlGaAs/InGaAsN/GaAs double heterojunction bipolar transistor

The authors have demonstrated a functional PnP double heterojunction bipolar transistor (DHBT) using AlGaAs, InGaAsN, and GaAs. The band alignment between InGaAsN and GaAs has a large {triangle}E{sub C} and a negligible {triangle}E{sub V}, and this unique characteristic is very suitable for PnP DHBT applications. The metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy (MOCVD) grown Al{sub 0.3}Ga{sub 0.7}As/In{sub 0.03}Ga{sub 0.97}As{sub 0.99}N{sub 0.01}/GaAs PnP DHBT is lattice matched to GaAs and has a peak current gain of 25. Because of the smaller bandgap (Eg = 1.20 eV) of In{sub 0.03}Ga{sub 0.97}As{sub 0.99}N{sub 0.01} used for the base layer, this device has a low V{sub ON} of 0.79 V, which is 0.25 V lower than in a comparable Pnp AlGaAs/GaAs HBT. And because GaAs is used for the collector, its BV{sub CEO} is 12 V, consistent with BV{sub CEO} of AlGaAs/GaAs HBTs of comparable collector thickness and doping level.
Date: February 9, 2000
Creator: Chang, Ping-Chih; Li, N. Y.; Laroche, J. R.; Baca, Albert G.; Hou, H. Q. & Ren, F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library