Sol-Gel Based Polybenzimidazole Membranes for Hydrogen Pumping Devices (open access)

Sol-Gel Based Polybenzimidazole Membranes for Hydrogen Pumping Devices

Electrochemical hydrogen pumping using a high temperature (>100°C) PBI membrane was demonstrated under non-humidified and humidified conditions at ambient pressures. Relatively low voltages were required to operate the pump over a wide range of hydrogen flow rates. The advantages of the high temperature capability were shown by operating the pump on reformate feed gas mixtures containing various amounts of CO and CO{sub 2}. Gas purity measurements on the cathode gas product were conducted and significant reductions in gas impurities were detected. The applicability of the PBI membrane for electrochemical hydrogen pumping and its durability under typical operating conditions was established with tests that lasted for nearly 4000 hours.
Date: February 26, 2014
Creator: Benicewicz, Brian
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The BlackHat Library for One-Loop Amplitudes (open access)

The BlackHat Library for One-Loop Amplitudes

None
Date: February 19, 2014
Creator: Bern, Z.; Dixon, L. J.; Cordero, F. Febres; Hoeche, S.; Ita, H.; Kosower, D. A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Next-to-leading Order Diphoton 2-jet Production at the LHC (open access)

Next-to-leading Order Diphoton 2-jet Production at the LHC

None
Date: January 7, 2014
Creator: Bern, Z.; Dixon, L.J.; Cordero, F. Febres; Hoeche, S.; Ita, H.; Kosower, D. A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ntuples for NLO events at Hadron Colliders (open access)

Ntuples for NLO events at Hadron Colliders

None
Date: February 19, 2014
Creator: Bern, Z.; Dixon, L.J.; Cordero, F.Febres; Hoeche, S.; Ita, H.; Kosower, D.A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORES 9 & 10: COLUMNAR HEXAGONAL POINT-ON-POINT PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO (open access)

HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORES 9 & 10: COLUMNAR HEXAGONAL POINT-ON-POINT PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO

PROTEUS is a zero-power research reactor based on a cylindrical graphite annulus with a central cylindrical cavity. The graphite annulus remains basically the same for all experimental programs, but the contents of the central cavity are changed according to the type of reactor being investigated. Through most of its service history, PROTEUS has represented light-water reactors, but from 1992 to 1996 PROTEUS was configured as a pebble-bed reactor (PBR) critical facility and designated as HTR-PROTEUS. The nomenclature was used to indicate that this series consisted of High Temperature Reactor experiments performed in the PROTEUS assembly. During this period, seventeen critical configurations were assembled and various reactor physics experiments were conducted. These experiments included measurements of criticality, differential and integral control rod and safety rod worths, kinetics, reaction rates, water ingress effects, and small sample reactivity effects (Ref. 3). HTR-PROTEUS was constructed, and the experimental program was conducted, for the purpose of providing experimental benchmark data for assessment of reactor physics computer codes. Considerable effort was devoted to benchmark calculations as a part of the HTR-PROTEUS program. References 1 and 2 provide detailed data for use in constructing models for codes to be assessed. Reference 3 is a comprehensive summary of …
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Bess, John D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
NEUTRON RADIOGRAPHY (NRAD) REACTOR 64-ELEMENT CORE UPGRADE (open access)

NEUTRON RADIOGRAPHY (NRAD) REACTOR 64-ELEMENT CORE UPGRADE

The neutron radiography (NRAD) reactor is a 250 kW TRIGA (registered) (Training, Research, Isotopes, General Atomics) Mark II , tank-type research reactor currently located in the basement, below the main hot cell, of the Hot Fuel Examination Facility (HFEF) at the Idaho National Laboratory (INL). It is equipped with two beam tubes with separate radiography stations for the performance of neutron radiography irradiation on small test components. The interim critical configuration developed during the core upgrade, which contains only 62 fuel elements, has been evaluated as an acceptable benchmark experiment. The final 64-fuel-element operational core configuration of the NRAD LEU TRIGA reactor has also been evaluated as an acceptable benchmark experiment. Calculated eigenvalues differ significantly (approximately +/-1%) from the benchmark eigenvalue and have demonstrated sensitivity to the thermal scattering treatment of hydrogen in the U-Er-Zr-H fuel.
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Bess, John D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORE 4: RANDOM PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO (open access)

HTR-PROTEUS PEBBLE BED EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM CORE 4: RANDOM PACKING WITH A 1:1 MODERATOR-TO-FUEL PEBBLE RATIO

In its deployment as a pebble bed reactor (PBR) critical facility from 1992 to 1996, the PROTEUS facility was designated as HTR-PROTEUS. This experimental program was performed as part of an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Coordinated Research Project (CRP) on the Validation of Safety Related Physics Calculations for Low Enriched HTGRs. Within this project, critical experiments were conducted for graphite moderated LEU systems to determine core reactivity, flux and power profiles, reaction-rate ratios, the worth of control rods, both in-core and reflector based, the worth of burnable poisons, kinetic parameters, and the effects of moisture ingress on these parameters. One benchmark experiment was evaluated in this report: Core 4. Core 4 represents the only configuration with random pebble packing in the HTR-PROTEUS series of experiments, and has a moderator-to-fuel pebble ratio of 1:1. Three random configurations were performed. The initial configuration, Core 4.1, was rejected because the method for pebble loading, separate delivery tubes for the moderator and fuel pebbles, may not have been completely random; this core loading was rejected by the experimenters. Cores 4.2 and 4.3 were loaded using a single delivery tube, eliminating the possibility for systematic ordering effects. The second and third cores differed slightly …
Date: March 1, 2014
Creator: Bess, John D. & Montierth, Leland M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AY-102 Leak Detection Pit Drain Line Inspection Report (open access)

241-AY-102 Leak Detection Pit Drain Line Inspection Report

This document provides a description of the design components, operational approach, and results from the Tank AY-102 leak detection pit drain piping visual inspection. To perform this inspection a custom robotic crawler with a deployment device was designed, built, and operated by IHI Southwest Technologies, Inc. for WRPS to inspect the 6-inch leak detection pit drain line.
Date: January 20, 2014
Creator: Boomer, Kayle D.; Engeman, Jason K.; Gunter, Jason R.; Joslyn, Cameron C.; Vazquez, Brandon J.; Venetz, Theodore J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank 241-AY-102 Secondary Liner Corrosion Evaluation - 14191 (open access)

Tank 241-AY-102 Secondary Liner Corrosion Evaluation - 14191

In October 2012, Washington River Protection Solutions, LLC (WRPS) determined that the primary tank of 241-AY-102 (AY-102) was leaking. A number of evaluations were performed after discovery of the leak which identified corrosion from storage of waste at the high waste temperatures as one of the major contributing factors in the failure of the tank. The propensity for corrosion of the waste on the annulus floor will be investigated to determine if it is corrosive and must be promptly removed or if it is benign and may remain in the annulus. The chemical composition of waste, the temperature and the character of the steel are important factors in assessing the propensity for corrosion. Unfortunately, the temperatures of the wastes in contact with the secondary steel liner are not known; they are estimated to range from 45 deg C to 60 deg C. It is also notable that most corrosion tests have been carried out with un-welded, stress-relieved steels, but the secondary liner in tank AY-102 was not stress-relieved. In addition, the cold weather fabrication and welding led to many problems, which required repeated softening of the metal to flatten secondary bottom during its construction. This flame treatment may have altered …
Date: January 7, 2014
Creator: Boomer, Kayle D.; Washenfelder, Dennis J. & Johnson, Jeremy M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multi-Hybrid Power Vehicles with Cost Effective and Durable Polymer Electrolyte (open access)

Multi-Hybrid Power Vehicles with Cost Effective and Durable Polymer Electrolyte

Anima Bose, the principal investigator of the project, originally proposed to develop composite membranes to operate PEMFCs at much higher temperatures than 80{degrees}C and to alleviate the flooding problems often encountered in Nafion menmbrane containing fuel cells. The PI has successfully created composite membranes by blending small quantities of octasilane-poss (OSP) with Nafion. The composite membranes exhibited temperature tolerance up to 110{degrees}C without scarifying cell performance as determined by polarization curves and proton conductivity measurements. These membranes also exhibited superior water management performance as evident from the lack of flooding. Furthermore, these fuel cells performed well under reduced humidities. Structural and thermal analyses revealed that these Nafion-octasilane composite membranes are homogenous at concentrations up to 3 wt% of the OSP and that the siloxane offers additional thermal stability.
Date: February 28, 2014
Creator: Bose, Anima
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
KONGMING: Performance Prediction in the Cloud via Multidimensional Interference Surrogates (open access)

KONGMING: Performance Prediction in the Cloud via Multidimensional Interference Surrogates

None
Date: January 15, 2014
Creator: Bowen, Z; Bronevetsky, G; Casas-Guix, M & Bagchi, S
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Fuels Campaign Light Water Reactor Accident Tolerant Fuel Performance Metrics Executive Summary (open access)

Advanced Fuels Campaign Light Water Reactor Accident Tolerant Fuel Performance Metrics Executive Summary

Research and development (R&D) activities on advanced, higher performance Light Water Reactor (LWR) fuels have been ongoing for the last few years. Following the unfortunate March 2011 events at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant in Japan, the R&D shifted toward enhancing the accident tolerance of LWRs. Qualitative attributes for fuels with enhanced accident tolerance, such as improved reaction kinetics with steam resulting in slower hydrogen generation rate, provide guidance for the design and development of fuels and cladding with enhanced accident tolerance. A common set of technical metrics should be established to aid in the optimization and down selection of candidate designs on a more quantitative basis. “Metrics” describe a set of technical bases by which multiple concepts can be fairly evaluated against a common baseline and against one another. This report describes a proposed technical evaluation methodology that can be applied to evaluate the ability of each concept to meet performance and safety goals relative to the current UO2 – zirconium alloy system and relative to one another. The resultant ranked evaluation can then inform concept down-selection, such that the most promising accident tolerant fuel design option(s) can continue to be developed toward qualification.
Date: February 1, 2014
Creator: Bragg-Sitton, Shannon
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary Scaling and controls Analysis of an FHR-HTSE System Idaho National Laboratory Summer 2013 Final Report (open access)

Preliminary Scaling and controls Analysis of an FHR-HTSE System Idaho National Laboratory Summer 2013 Final Report

For new nuclear reactor system designs to be approved by regulatory agencies like the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), the details of system operation must be validated with respect to standards of safety, control, and output. A scaled experiment that replicates certain properties of the system can be used to validate compliance with regulatory standards, while avoiding the prohibitive cost and labor required to develop a fully functional prototype system; therefore, designing such an experiment is of special interest to current efforts to develop hybrid energy systems (HES) that integrate small modular reactors (SMRs), renewable energy systems, and industrial process applications such as hydrogen production and desalination. In addition, a scaled experiment can be an economical method of analyzing the interconnections between HES components and understanding the time constants associated between inter-component energy and information flows. This report discusses the results of a preliminary scaling analysis done for the primary loop of a 300 MWth Fluoride-Salt-Cooled High Temperature Reactor (FHR) that is coupled with a High-Temperature Steam Electrolysis system (HTSE), as well as the basic control logic that governs the primary components and the necessary hardware to achieve optimal functionality. The scaled facility will be a 1 MWth system that uses …
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: Bragg-Sitton, Shannon; Sabharwall, Piyush & Upadhya, Rohit
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel Heavy Quark Phenomena in QCD (open access)

Novel Heavy Quark Phenomena in QCD

None
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel QCD Phenomena and New Perspectives for Hadron Physics (open access)

Novel QCD Phenomena and New Perspectives for Hadron Physics

None
Date: February 4, 2014
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Systematic Scale-Setting to All Orders: The Principle of Maximum Conformality and Commensurate Scale Relations (open access)

Systematic Scale-Setting to All Orders: The Principle of Maximum Conformality and Commensurate Scale Relations

None
Date: January 21, 2014
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.; Mojaza, Matin & Wu, Xing-Gang
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Threefold Complementary Approach to Holographic QCD (open access)

Threefold Complementary Approach to Holographic QCD

None
Date: January 6, 2014
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.; de Teramond, Guy F. & Dosch, Hans Gunter
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enzo: An Adaptive Mesh Refinement Code for Astrophysics (open access)

Enzo: An Adaptive Mesh Refinement Code for Astrophysics

None
Date: January 15, 2014
Creator: Bryan, Greg L.; Norman, Michael L.; O'Shea, Brian W.; Abel, Tom; Wise, John H.; Turk, Matthew J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Damping Ring Kickers (open access)

Damping Ring Kickers

None
Date: March 4, 2014
Creator: Bulos, F.; Tomlin, Bill T. & Weaver, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kicker Magnet and Pulser (open access)

Kicker Magnet and Pulser

None
Date: March 4, 2014
Creator: Bulos, Fatin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam-dump Kicker Magnets (open access)

Beam-dump Kicker Magnets

None
Date: March 4, 2014
Creator: Bulos, Fatin; Odian, A. & Tomlin, Bill T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of excited nucleons and their structure (open access)

Study of excited nucleons and their structure

Recent advances in the study of excited nucleons are discussed. Much of the progress has been achieved due to the availability of high precision meson production data in the photoproduction and electroproduction sectors, the development of multi-channel partial wave analysis techniques, and advances in Lattice QCD with predictions of the full excitation spectrum.
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: Burkert, Volker D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Expanded Capabilities Of The Cementitious Barriers Partnership Software Toolbox Version 2.0 - 14331 (open access)

The Expanded Capabilities Of The Cementitious Barriers Partnership Software Toolbox Version 2.0 - 14331

The Cementitious Barriers Partnership (CBP) Project is a multi-disciplinary, multi-institutional collaboration supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (US DOE) Office of Tank Waste Management. The CBP program has developed a set of integrated tools (based on state-of-the-art models and leaching test methods) that help improve understanding and predictions of the long-term structural, hydraulic and chemical performance of cementitious barriers used in nuclear applications. The CBP Software Toolbox – “Version 1.0” was released early in FY2013 and was used to support DOE-EM performance assessments in evaluating various degradation mechanisms that included sulfate attack, carbonation and constituent leaching. The sulfate attack analysis predicted the extent and damage that sulfate ingress will have on concrete vaults over extended time (i.e., > 1000 years) and the carbonation analysis provided concrete degradation predictions from rebar corrosion. The new release “Version 2.0” includes upgraded carbonation software and a new software module to evaluate degradation due to chloride attack. Also included in the newer version are a dual regime module allowing evaluation of contaminant release in two regimes – both fractured and un-fractured. The integrated software package has also been upgraded with new plotting capabilities and many other features that increase the “user-friendliness” of the package. …
Date: January 10, 2014
Creator: Burns, Heather; Flach, Greg; Smith, Frank; Langton, Christine; Brown, Kevin; Kosson, David et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library

Map Matching and Real World Integrated Sensor Data Warehousing

The inclusion of interlinked temporal and spatial elements within integrated sensor data enables a tremendous degree of flexibility when analyzing multi-component datasets. The presentation illustrates how to warehouse, process, and analyze high-resolution integrated sensor datasets to support complex system analysis at the entity and system levels. The example cases presented utilizes in-vehicle sensor system data to assess vehicle performance, while integrating a map matching algorithm to link vehicle data to roads to demonstrate the enhanced analysis possible via interlinking data elements. Furthermore, in addition to the flexibility provided, the examples presented illustrate concepts of maintaining proprietary operational information (Fleet DNA) and privacy of study participants (Transportation Secure Data Center) while producing widely distributed data products. Should real-time operational data be logged at high resolution across multiple infrastructure types, map matched to their associated infrastructure, and distributed employing a similar approach; dependencies between urban environment infrastructures components could be better understood. This understanding is especially crucial for the cities of the future where transportation will rely more on grid infrastructure to support its energy demands.
Date: February 1, 2014
Creator: Burton, E.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library