Tank Characterization Report for Double Shell Tank (DST) 241-AN-107 (open access)

Tank Characterization Report for Double Shell Tank (DST) 241-AN-107

This report interprets information about the tank answering a series of six questions covering areas such as information drivers, tank history, tank comparisons, disposal implications, data quality and quantity, and unique aspects of the tank.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Adams, M. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Customer satisfaction assessment at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (open access)

Customer satisfaction assessment at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is developing and implementing a customer satisfaction assessment program (CSAP) to assess the quality of research and development provided by the laboratory. This report presents the customer survey component of the PNNL CSAP. The customer survey questionnaire is composed of two major sections: Strategic Value and Project Performance. Both sections contain a set of questions that can be answered with a 5-point Likert scale response. The strategic value section consists of five questions that are designed to determine if a project directly contributes to critical future national needs. The project Performance section consists of nine questions designed to determine PNNL performance in meeting customer expectations. A statistical model for customer survey data is developed and this report discusses how to analyze the data with this model. The properties of the statistical model can be used to establish a gold standard or performance expectation for the laboratory, and then to assess progress. The gold standard is defined using laboratory management input--answers to four questions, in terms of the information obtained from the customer survey: (1) What should the average Strategic Value be for the laboratory project portfolio? (2) What Strategic Value interval should include most …
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Anderson, DN & Sours, ML
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metrology Measurement Capabilities (open access)

Metrology Measurement Capabilities

This document contains descriptions of Federal Manufacturing and Technologies (FM and T) Metrology capabilities, traceability flow charts, and the measurement uncertainty of each measurement capability. Metrology provides NIST traceable precision measurements or equipment calibration for a wide variety of parameters, ranges, and state-of-the-art uncertainties in laboratories that conform to the requirements of the Department of Energy Development and Production Manual Chapter 8.4, and ANSI/NCSL Z540-1 (equivalent to ISO Guide 25). FM and T Metrology laboratories are accredited by NVLAP for the parameters, ranges, and uncertainties listed in the specific scope of accreditation under NVLAP Lab code 200108-0. These parameters are summarized.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Barnes, L. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced numerical methods and software approaches for semiconductor device simulation (open access)

Advanced numerical methods and software approaches for semiconductor device simulation

In this article the authors concisely present several modern strategies that are applicable to drift-dominated carrier transport in higher-order deterministic models such as the drift-diffusion, hydrodynamic, and quantum hydrodynamic systems. The approaches include extensions of upwind and artificial dissipation schemes, generalization of the traditional Scharfetter-Gummel approach, Petrov-Galerkin and streamline-upwind Petrov Galerkin (SUPG), entropy variables, transformations, least-squares mixed methods and other stabilized Galerkin schemes such as Galerkin least squares and discontinuous Galerkin schemes. The treatment is representative rather than an exhaustive review and several schemes are mentioned only briefly with appropriate reference to the literature. Some of the methods have been applied to the semiconductor device problem while others are still in the early stages of development for this class of applications. They have included numerical examples from the recent research tests with some of the methods. A second aspect of the work deals with algorithms that employ unstructured grids in conjunction with adaptive refinement strategies. The full benefits of such approaches have not yet been developed in this application area and they emphasize the need for further work on analysis, data structures and software to support adaptivity. Finally, they briefly consider some aspects of software frameworks. These include dial-an-operator approaches …
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: CAREY,GRAHAM F.; PARDHANANI,A.L. & BOVA,STEVEN W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Canister Storage Building (CSB) Design Basis Accident Analysis Documentation (open access)

Canister Storage Building (CSB) Design Basis Accident Analysis Documentation

This document provided the detailed accident analysis to support HNF-3553, Spent Nuclear Fuel Project Final Safety Analysis Report, Annex A, ''Canister Storage Building Final Safety Analysis Report''. All assumptions, parameters, and models used to provide the analysis of the design basis accidents are documented to support the conclusions in the Canister Storage Building Final Safety Analysis Report.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: CROWE, R.D. & PIEPHO, M.G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Vulcan Calculations (open access)

Summary of Vulcan Calculations

This is a summary of the results of my calculations compared to Elisabeth Wolfrum's data on the Vulcan imprint experiments. The material strength makes essentially no difference to the growth of perturbations seeded by the laser imprint. For the low-intensity case (30 J laser energy, beam intensity of 0.5 x 10{sup 12} W/cm{sup 2}) the thin (2 microns) Al foil melts quickly from the front (driven) surface and decompresses quickly from the back surface, so there is actually only a fraction of the foil that is solid and compressed, and then for only a short time. And this solid fraction is not accelerating much during this short time. In particular, the shock (which is at about 250 kbar when it is about half way through the foil) travels entirely through the foil in about 0.25 ns. At 0.3 ns the ablation front is 0.6 {micro}m in from the original position of the front surface, the next 0.6 {micro}m is melted, so only the back 0.8 {micro}m is solid and compressed. This solid portion, though, is not moving much; the place where the imprinted perturbations are growing is back at the ablation front, where the perturbations are clearly growing fluid-like. By …
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Colvin, J.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of surface steps on the microstructure of lateral composition modulation (open access)

Effect of surface steps on the microstructure of lateral composition modulation

Growth of InAs/AlAs short-period superlattices on appropriately miscut (001) InP substrates is shown to alter the microstructure of composition modulation from a 2D organization of short compositionally enriched wires to a single dominant modulation direction and wire lengths up to {approximately}1 {micro}m. The effects of miscut are interpreted in terms of surface step orientation and character. The material is strongly modulated and exhibits intense optical emission. The 1D modulations appear potentially useful for new devices that take advantage of the preferred direction formed in the growth plane.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Follstaedt, David M.; Norman, A. G.; Reno, John L.; Jones, Eric D.; Twesten, R. D.; Lee, Stephen R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of Cassini GPHS Fueled-Clad Production Girth Welds (open access)

Characterization of Cassini GPHS Fueled-Clad Production Girth Welds

Fueled clads for radioisotope power systems are produced by encapsulating {sup 238}PuO{sub 2} in iridium alloy cups, which are joined at their equators by gas tungsten arc welding. Cracking problems at the girth weld tie-in area during production of the Galileo/Ulysses GPHS capsules led to the development of a first-generation ultrasonic test for girth weld inspection at the Savannah River Plant. A second-generation test and equipment with significantly improved sensitivity and accuracy were jointly developed by the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant and Westinghouse Savannah River Company for use during the production of Cassini GPHS capsules by the Los Alamos National Laboratory. The test consisted of Lamb wave ultrasonic scanning of the entire girth weld from each end of the capsule combined with a time-of-flight evaluation to aid in characterizing nonrelevant indications. Tangential radiography was also used as a supplementary test for further evaluation of reflector geometry. Each of the 317 fueled GPHS capsules, which were girth welded for the Cassini Program, was subjected to a series of nondestructive tests that included visual, dimensional, helium leak rate, and ultrasonic testing. Thirty-three capsules were rejected prior to ultrasonic testing. Of the 44 capsules rejected by the standard ultrasonic test, 22 were upgraded …
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Franco-Ferreira, E.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of Geophysical Characterization Methods Used at the Hanford Site (open access)

Review of Geophysical Characterization Methods Used at the Hanford Site

Geophysical methods have been used for characterization of hydrogeologic conditions and/or contaminant distributions at the Hanford site since at least the mid- to late-1940s. A review of these geophysical methods is presented in two parts: (1) shallow surface-based geophysical methods and (2) borehole geophysical-logging methods.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Last, G. V. & Horton, D. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of geophysical characterization methods used at the Hanford Site (open access)

Review of geophysical characterization methods used at the Hanford Site

This paper presents a review of geophysical methods used at Hanford in two parts: (1) shallow surface-based geophysical methods and (2) borehole geophysical methods. This review was not intended to be ``all encompassing'' but should represent the vast majority (>90% complete) of geophysical work conducted onsite and aimed at hazardous waste investigations in the vadose zone and/or uppermost groundwater aquifers. This review did not cover geophysical methods aimed at large-scale geologic structures or seismicity and, in particular, did not include those efforts conducted in support of the Basalt Waste Isolation Program. This review focused primarily on the more recent efforts.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Last, GV & Horton, DG
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of Geophysical Characterization Methods Used at the Hanford Site (open access)

Review of Geophysical Characterization Methods Used at the Hanford Site

Geophysical methods have been used for characterization of hydrogeologic conditions and/or contaminant distributions at the Hanford site since at least the mid- to late-1940s. A review of these geophysical methods is presented in two parts: 1) shallow surface-based geophysical methods and 2) borehole geophysical-logging methods.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Last, George V. & Horton, Duane G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uncertainty in Dispersion Forecasting Using Meteorological Ensembles (open access)

Uncertainty in Dispersion Forecasting Using Meteorological Ensembles

A approach for quantifying meteorological uncertainty is via development of an ensemble of forecasts from slightly perturbed initial conditions (Sivillo et al., 1997) to predict the time evolution of the probability density function of atmospheric variables (Mullen and Baurnhefner, 1994). We create an ensemble of forecasts by varying the initial (and boundary) conditions for the COAMPS meteorological model. The variations in the initial conditions must be consistent with analysis error. Optimally, the range of initial conditions would encompass the ''true'' atmospheric state, but which is never actually known. Our method for creating varying initial conditions is to use different global data sets to derive the necessary data. We use two models from the National Weather Service (the AVN and ETA models) and one from the Navy (the NOGAPS model). In addition to those data sets we perturb the data from those models, using a normally distributed random number at each grid point in the COAMPS model. We perturb the (u,v) wind components, the temperature and the moisture. The size of the perturbation is determined by the variability within that variable field. The forecasts are run for 48 hours. We then use the output from the COAMPS model to drive a …
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Leach, M. J. & Chin, H.-N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Layer MDT Octant Supprt Analysis (open access)

A Layer MDT Octant Supprt Analysis

None
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Levand, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A DOE-STD-3009 hazard and accident analysis methodology for non-reactor nuclear facilities (open access)

A DOE-STD-3009 hazard and accident analysis methodology for non-reactor nuclear facilities

This paper demonstrates the use of appropriate consequence evaluation criteria in conjunction with generic likelihood of occurrence data to produce consistent hazard analysis results for nonreactor nuclear facility Safety Analysis Reports (SAR). An additional objective is to demonstrate the use of generic likelihood of occurrence data as a means for deriving defendable accident sequence frequencies, thereby enabling the screening of potentially incredible events (<10{sup {minus}6} per year) from the design basis accident envelope. Generic likelihood of occurrence data has been used successfully in performing SAR hazard and accident analyses for two nonreactor nuclear facilities at Sandia National Laboratories. DOE-STD-3009-94 addresses and even encourages use of a qualitative binning technique for deriving and ranking nonreactor nuclear facility risks. However, qualitative techniques invariably lead to reviewer requests for more details associated with consequence or likelihood of occurrence bin assignments in the test of the SAR. Hazard analysis data displayed in simple worksheet format generally elicits questions about not only the assumptions behind the data, but also the quantitative bases for the assumptions themselves (engineering judgment may not be considered sufficient by some reviewers). This is especially true where the criteria for qualitative binning of likelihood of occurrence involves numerical ranges. Oftentimes reviewers …
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: MAHN,JEFFREY A. & WALKER,SHARON ANN
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanisms of transition-metal gettering in silicon (open access)

Mechanisms of transition-metal gettering in silicon

The atomic process, kinetics, and equilibrium thermodynamics underlying the gettering of transition-metal impurities in Si are reviewed from a mechanistic perspective. Methods for mathematical modeling of gettering are reviewed and illustrated. Needs for further research are discussed.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Myers, Samuel M., Jr.; Seibt, M. & Schroter, W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biomass power for rural development. Technical progress report Phase-II. Contractual reporting period October-December 1999 (open access)

Biomass power for rural development. Technical progress report Phase-II. Contractual reporting period October-December 1999

The project undertaken by the Salix Consortium is a multi-phased, multi-partner endeavor. Phase 1 focused on initial development and testing of the technology and forging the necessary agreements to demonstrate commercial willow production. The Phase 1 objectives have been successfully completed: preparing design plans for 2 utility pulverized coal boilers for 20 MW of biopower capacity; developing fuel supply plans for the project with a goal of establishing 365 ha (900 ac) of willow; obtaining power production commitments from the power companies for Phase 2; obtaining construction and environmental permits; and developing an experimental strategy for crop production and power generation improvements needed to assure commercial success. The R and D effort also addresses environmental issues pertaining to introduction of the willow energy system.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: Neuhauser, Edward & Consortium, The Salix
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Analysis of Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) of Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) (open access)

Thermal Analysis of Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) of Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF)

The thermal analysis examined transient thermal and chemical behavior of the Multi-Canister Overpack (MCO) container for a broad range of cases that represent the Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) processes. The cases were defined to consider both normal and off-normal operations at the CVD Facility for an MCO with N Reactor spent fuel. This analysis provides the basis for the MCO thermal behavior at the CVD Facility in support of the safety basis documentation.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: PIEPHO, M.G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Net Positive Suction Head Available (NPSHA) Analysis for Phase 1 Waste Tanks (open access)

Net Positive Suction Head Available (NPSHA) Analysis for Phase 1 Waste Tanks

This document identifies the means to determine NPSHa for Hanford waste tanks. It presents the values of vapor pressure and density of Hanford double-shell tank waste as they relate to temperature.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: SHAW, C.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interfacial fracture between highly crosslinked polymer networks and a solid surface: Effect of interfacial bond density (open access)

Interfacial fracture between highly crosslinked polymer networks and a solid surface: Effect of interfacial bond density

For highly crosslinked, polymer networks bonded to a solid surface, the effect of interfacial bond density as well as system size on interfacial fracture is studied molecular dynamics simulations. The correspondence between the stress-strain curve and the sequence of molecular deformations is obtained. The failure strain for a fully bonded surface is equal to the strain necessary to make taut the average minimal path through the network from the bottom solid surface to the top surface. At bond coverages less than full, nanometer scale cavities form at the surface yielding an inhomogeneous strain profile. The failure strain and stress are linearly proportional to the number of bonds at the interface unless the number of bonds is so few that van der Waals interactions dominate. The failure is always interfacial due to fewer bonds at the interface than in the bulk.
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: STEVENS,MARK J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Protection Agency: Comparing Annual Budgets for Science and Technology (open access)

Environmental Protection Agency: Comparing Annual Budgets for Science and Technology

Testimony issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO: (1) discussed the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) budget justification for the Science and Technology account; and (2) presented observations on EPA's budget justifications for fiscal years (FY) 1999, 2000, and 2001."
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Export Controls: National Security Risks and Revisions to Controls on Computer Systems (open access)

Export Controls: National Security Risks and Revisions to Controls on Computer Systems

Testimony issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed its recent reports concerning the export controls for high performance computers, focusing on how the executive branch: (1) assesses the national security risks associated with the export of high performance computers going to countries of concern; and (2) determines when the exports of computers at existing performance levels can no longer be controlled."
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health Care Access: Programs for Underserved Populations Could Be Improved (open access)

Health Care Access: Programs for Underserved Populations Could Be Improved

Testimony issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed the effectiveness of the Health Resources and Services Administration's (HRSA) two safety-net programs--the Community and Migrant Health Center program and the National Health Service Corps--to improve access to medically underserved populations."
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Human Capital: Observations on EPA's Efforts to Implement a Workforce Planning Strategy (open access)

Human Capital: Observations on EPA's Efforts to Implement a Workforce Planning Strategy

A statement of record issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed its observations on the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) efforts to determine the workforce it needs to meet its strategic goals and objectives, focusing on: (1) how EPA determines the number of employees and competencies needed to carry out its strategic goals and objectives; and (2) what actions, if any, EPA is taking to improve its workforce planning activities."
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Medicare Contractors: Further Improvement Needed in Headquarters and Regional Office Oversight (open access)

Medicare Contractors: Further Improvement Needed in Headquarters and Regional Office Oversight

A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Health Care Financing Administration's (HCFA) recent efforts to address weaknesses in how the central office and regional offices work together to oversee Medicare contractors, and the continuing management challenges HCFA faces."
Date: March 23, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library