Final Report for grant DE-FG02-06ER54888, "Simulation of Beam-Electron Cloud Interactions in Circular Accelerators Using Plasma Models" (open access)

Final Report for grant DE-FG02-06ER54888, "Simulation of Beam-Electron Cloud Interactions in Circular Accelerators Using Plasma Models"

The primary goal of this collaborative proposal was to modify the code QuickPIC and apply it to study the long-time stability of beam propagation in low density electron clouds present in circular accelerators. The UCLA contribution to this collaborative proposal was in supporting the development of the pipelining scheme for the QuickPIC code, which extended the parallel scaling of this code by two orders of magnitude.
Date: November 27, 2012
Creator: Decyk, Viktor K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sodium pool fire phenomena, sodium pool fire modeling in SOFIRE II, and SOFIRE II calculations for the AFR-100 (open access)

Sodium pool fire phenomena, sodium pool fire modeling in SOFIRE II, and SOFIRE II calculations for the AFR-100

None
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Sienicki, J. J. & Moisseytsev, A. (Nuclear Engineering Division)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Of FFT-based convolutions and correlations, with application to solving Poisson's equation in an open rectangular pipe (open access)

Of FFT-based convolutions and correlations, with application to solving Poisson's equation in an open rectangular pipe

A new method is presented for solving Poisson's equation inside an open-ended rectangular pipe. The method uses Fast Fourier Transforms (FFTs)to perform mixed convolutions and correlations of the charge density with the Green function. Descriptions are provided for algorithms based on theordinary Green function and for an integrated Green function (IGF). Due to its similarity to the widely used Hockney algorithm for solving Poisson'sequation in free space, this capability can be easily implemented in many existing particle-in-cell beam dynamics codes.
Date: November 7, 2011
Creator: Ryne, Robert D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced inactive materials for improved lithium-ion battery safety. (open access)

Advanced inactive materials for improved lithium-ion battery safety.

None
Date: November 1, 2012
Creator: Orendorff, Christopher J.; Nagasubramanian, Ganesan; Lambert, Timothy N.; Fenton, Kyle Ross; Apblett, Christopher Alan; Shaddix, Christopher R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
PRODUCTION TPBAR INPUTS FOR CORE DESIGNERS TTQP-1-116 Rev 15 (open access)

PRODUCTION TPBAR INPUTS FOR CORE DESIGNERS TTQP-1-116 Rev 15

The purpose of this controlled document is to provide a convenient reference for tritiumproducing burnable absorber rod (TPBAR) parameters used by reactor core designers.
Date: November 1, 2012
Creator: Collins, Brian A.; Love, Edward F. & Thornhill, Cheryl K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reduction And Sequestration Of Pertechnetate To Technetium Dioxide And Protection From Reoxidation (open access)

Reduction And Sequestration Of Pertechnetate To Technetium Dioxide And Protection From Reoxidation

This effort is part of the technetium management initiative and provides data for the handling and disposition of technetium. To that end, the objective of this effort was to challenge tin(lI)apatite (Sn(II)apatite) against double-shell tank 241-AN-105 simulant spiked with pertechnetate (TcO{sub 4}). The Sn(II)apatite used in this effort was synthesized on site using a recipe developed at and provided by Sandia National Laboratories; the synthesis provides a high quality product while requiring minimal laboratory effort. The Sn(ll)apatite reduces pertechnetate from the mobile +7 oxidation state to the non-mobile +4 oxidation state. It also sequesters the technetium and does not allow for re-oxidization to the mobile +7 state under acidic or oxygenated conditions within the tested period of time (6 weeks). Previous work indicated that the Sn(II) apatite can achieve an ANSI leachability index in Cast Stone of 12.8. The technetium distribution coefficient for Sn(lI)apatite exhibited a direct correlation with the pH of the technetium-spiked simulant media.
Date: November 7, 2012
Creator: Duncan, J. B.; Johnson, J. M.; Moore, R. C.; Hagerty, K.; Rhodes, R. N.; Huber, H. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Small-Scale Spray Releases: Initial Aerosol Test Results (open access)

Small-Scale Spray Releases: Initial Aerosol Test Results

One of the events postulated in the hazard analysis at the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant (WTP) and other U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) nuclear facilities is a breach in process piping that produces aerosols with droplet sizes in the respirable range. The current approach for predicting the size and concentration of aerosols produced in a spray leak involves extrapolating from correlations reported in the literature. These correlations are based on results obtained from small engineered spray nozzles using pure liquids with Newtonian fluid behavior. The narrow ranges of physical properties on which the correlations are based do not cover the wide range of slurries and viscous materials that will be processed in the WTP and across processing facilities in the DOE complex. Two key technical areas were identified where testing results were needed to improve the technical basis by reducing the uncertainty due to extrapolating existing literature results. The first technical need was to quantify the role of slurry particles in small breaches where the slurry particles may plug and result in substantially reduced, or even negligible, respirable fraction formed by high-pressure sprays. The second technical need was to determine the aerosol droplet size distribution and volume from prototypic …
Date: November 1, 2012
Creator: Mahoney, Lenna A.; Gauglitz, Phillip A.; Kimura, Marcia L.; Brown, Garrett N.; Kurath, Dean E.; Buchmiller, William C. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced Superconducting Gaps in Trilayer High-Temperature Bi (2) Sr (2) Ca (2) Cu (3) O (10+delta) Cuprate Superconductor (open access)

Enhanced Superconducting Gaps in Trilayer High-Temperature Bi (2) Sr (2) Ca (2) Cu (3) O (10+delta) Cuprate Superconductor

None
Date: November 14, 2012
Creator: Ideta, S.; Takashima, K.; Hashimoto, M.; Yoshida, T.; Fujimori, A.; Anzai, H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impact Of Particle Agglomeration On Accumulation Rates In The Glass Discharge Riser Of HLW Melter (open access)

Impact Of Particle Agglomeration On Accumulation Rates In The Glass Discharge Riser Of HLW Melter

The major factor limiting waste loading in continuous high-level radioactive waste (HLW) melters is an accumulation of particles in the glass discharge riser during a frequent and periodic idling of more than 20 days. An excessive accumulation can produce robust layers a few centimeters thick, which may clog the riser, preventing molten glass from being poured into canisters. Since the accumulation rate is driven by the size of particles we investigated with x-ray microtomography, scanning electron microscopy, and image analysis the impact of spinel forming components, noble metals, and alumina on the size, concentration, and spatial distribution of particles, and on the accumulation rate. Increased concentrations of Fe and Ni in the baseline glass resulted in the formation of large agglomerates that grew over the time to an average size of ~185+-155 {mu}m, and produced >3 mm thick layer after 120 h at 850 deg C. The noble metals decreased the particle size, and therefore significantly slowed down the accumulation rate. Addition of alumina resulted in the formation of a network of spinel dendrites which prevented accumulation of particles into compact layers.
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Kruger, A. A.; Rodriguez, C. A.; Matyas, J.; Owen, A. T.; Jansik, D. P. & Lang, J. B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
FY2012 Report on Fast Reactor Toolset Work (PROTEUS-Fast) (open access)

FY2012 Report on Fast Reactor Toolset Work (PROTEUS-Fast)

None
Date: November 12, 2012
Creator: Wolters, E. R.; Smith, M. A.; Derstine, K.; Lee, C. H.; Yesilyurt, G. & Marin-Lafleche, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Fisheye Lens for Many Point PDV (open access)

A Fisheye Lens for Many Point PDV

The features of the fisheye lens are illustrated, including a design with reflector prisms. The fisheye fiber map and the beam footprint are shown. Fisheye rough-angle metrology was done and results presented. Next steps are given, including a smaller top fisheye lens element, longer reflector prisms with better mounting, and different fiber arrangements.
Date: November 1, 2011
Creator: Frogget, B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Importance of Motor Shaft Alignment, Motor Systems Tip Sheet #4 (Fact Sheet) (open access)

The Importance of Motor Shaft Alignment, Motor Systems Tip Sheet #4 (Fact Sheet)

Motor tip sheet for the Advanced Manufacturing Office.
Date: November 1, 2012
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parameters for the injection, acceleration, and extraction of uranium ions in Booster, AGS, and RHIC (open access)

Parameters for the injection, acceleration, and extraction of uranium ions in Booster, AGS, and RHIC

N/A
Date: November 27, 2012
Creator: Gardner, C. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Report for "Compact Crab Cavity Design" (open access)

Final Report for "Compact Crab Cavity Design"

The goal of this project is to provide an innovative, new crab cavity design relevant to the MEIC. Through this work, we will provide comprehensive modeling of this new cavity design, including electromagnetic, thermal, and microphonic effects. One most likely candidate configuration is the design put forward by JLab and Lancaster University, UK, researchers known as the four-rod configuration. In the Phase I, Tech-X Corporation researchers performed analysis and design optimization and iteration, utilizing their state-of-the art time-domain particle-in-cell software, on a 400 MHz design for the LHC by JLab and Lancaster University, UK, researchers known as the four-rod design.
Date: November 8, 2012
Creator: Smithe, David N
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling Single Well Injection-Withdrawal (SWIW) Tests for Characterization of Complex Fracture-Matrix Systems (open access)

Modeling Single Well Injection-Withdrawal (SWIW) Tests for Characterization of Complex Fracture-Matrix Systems

The ability to reliably predict flow and transport in fractured porous rock is an essential condition for performance evaluation of geologic (underground) nuclear waste repositories. In this report, a suite of programs (TRIPOLY code) for calculating and analyzing flow and transport in two-dimensional fracture-matrix systems is used to model single-well injection-withdrawal (SWIW) tracer tests. The SWIW test, a tracer test using one well, is proposed as a useful means of collecting data for site characterization, as well as estimating parameters relevant to tracer diffusion and sorption. After some specific code adaptations, we numerically generated a complex fracture-matrix system for computation of steady-state flow and tracer advection and dispersion in the fracture network, along with solute exchange processes between the fractures and the porous matrix. We then conducted simulations for a hypothetical but workable SWIW test design and completed parameter sensitivity studies on three physical parameters of the rock matrix - namely porosity, diffusion coefficient, and retardation coefficient - in order to investigate their impact on the fracture-matrix solute exchange process. Hydraulic fracturing, or hydrofracking, is also modeled in this study, in two different ways: (1) by increasing the hydraulic aperture for flow in existing fractures and (2) by adding a …
Date: November 1, 2010
Creator: Cotte, F.P.; Doughty, C. & Birkholzer, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Cornell-SLAC Pixel Array Detector at LCLS (open access)

The Cornell-SLAC Pixel Array Detector at LCLS

None
Date: November 19, 2012
Creator: Hart, P.; Boutet, S.; Carini, G.; Dragone, A.; Duda, B.; Freytag, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ultrasensitive, amplification-free assays for detecting pathogens. (open access)

Ultrasensitive, amplification-free assays for detecting pathogens.

None
Date: November 1, 2012
Creator: Meagher, Robert J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Savings and Green Initiatives Project Grant (open access)

Energy Savings and Green Initiatives Project Grant

This project entails retrofitting all four foot, 2, 3 and 4 bulb 40 watt T12 fixtures to T8 28 watt and 150 watt incandescent to 26 watt compact fluorescent bulbs. In total, 2,086 fixtures will be retrofitted
Date: November 21, 2011
Creator: MacLennan, Kathy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sensible Heat, Direct, Dual-Media Thermal Energy Storagy System: Phase 1 Final Technical Report (open access)

Sensible Heat, Direct, Dual-Media Thermal Energy Storagy System: Phase 1 Final Technical Report

Work under this project has ultimately focused on the development of a modular packed bed based thermal energy storage system. The design assumes the use of standard segments of carbon steel pipe filled with spherical materials creating a packed bed. These materials are assumed to be manufactured in such a way that the spherical shape is uniform throughout the packed bed. Out of 32 candidate materials evaluated, 8 materials remain. Each material meets the Phase I milestones that were specified for this storage system: a round trip efficiency in excess of 93%, and a required volume of packed bed material that does not exceed the volume of molten salt used in a two-tank storage system with equivalent thermal performance.
Date: November 4, 2011
Creator: Newmarker, Marc & Campbell, Mark
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical calculating the thermodynamic properties of solid sorbents for CO{sub 2} capture applications (open access)

Theoretical calculating the thermodynamic properties of solid sorbents for CO{sub 2} capture applications

Since current technologies for capturing CO{sub 2} to fight global climate change are still too energy intensive, there is a critical need for development of new materials that can capture CO{sub 2} reversibly with acceptable energy costs. Accordingly, solid sorbents have been proposed to be used for CO{sub 2} capture applications through a reversible chemical transformation. By combining thermodynamic database mining with first principles density functional theory and phonon lattice dynamics calculations, a theoretical screening methodology to identify the most promising CO{sub 2} sorbent candidates from the vast array of possible solid materials has been proposed and validated. The calculated thermodynamic properties of different classes of solid materials versus temperature and pressure changes were further used to evaluate the equilibrium properties for the CO{sub 2} adsorption/desorption cycles. According to the requirements imposed by the pre- and post- combustion technologies and based on our calculated thermodynamic properties for the CO{sub 2} capture reactions by the solids of interest, we were able to screen only those solid materials for which lower capture energy costs are expected at the desired pressure and temperature conditions. Only those selected CO{sub 2} sorbent candidates were further considered for experimental validations. The ab initio thermodynamic technique has …
Date: November 2, 2012
Creator: Duan, Yuhua
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Protective, Modular Wave Power Generation System (open access)

Protective, Modular Wave Power Generation System

The concept of small wave energy conversion modules that can be built into large, scalable arrays, in the same vein as solar panels, has been developed. This innovation lends itself to an organic business and development model, and enables the use of large-run manufacturing technology to reduce system costs. The first prototype module has been built to full-scale, and tested in a laboratory wave channel. The device has been shown to generate electricity and dissipate wave energy. Improvements need to be made to the electrical generator and a demonstration of an array of modules should be made in natural conditions.
Date: November 27, 2012
Creator: Vvedensky, Jane M. & Park, Robert Y.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Technical Report - Integrated Hydrogeophysical and Hydrogeologic Driven Parameter Upscaling for Dual-Domain Transport Modeling (open access)

Final Technical Report - Integrated Hydrogeophysical and Hydrogeologic Driven Parameter Upscaling for Dual-Domain Transport Modeling

The three major components of this research were: 1. Application of minimally invasive, cost effective hydrogeophysical techniques (surface and borehole), to generate fine scale (~1m or less) 3D estimates of subsurface heterogeneity. Heterogeneity is defined as spatial variability in hydraulic conductivity and/or hydrolithologic zones. 2. Integration of the fine scale characterization of hydrogeologic parameters with the hydrogeologic facies to upscale the finer scale assessment of heterogeneity to field scale. 3. Determination of the relationship between dual-domain parameters and practical characterization data.
Date: November 5, 2012
Creator: Shafer, John M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
PARTICLE IMAGE VELOCIMETRY MEASUREMENTS IN A REPRESENTATIVE GAS-COOLED PRISMATIC REACTOR CORE MODEL: FLOW IN THE COOLANT CHANNELS AND INTERSTITIAL BYPASS GAPS (open access)

PARTICLE IMAGE VELOCIMETRY MEASUREMENTS IN A REPRESENTATIVE GAS-COOLED PRISMATIC REACTOR CORE MODEL: FLOW IN THE COOLANT CHANNELS AND INTERSTITIAL BYPASS GAPS

Core bypass flow is one of the key issues with the prismatic Gas Turbine-Modular Helium Reactor, and it refers to the coolant that navigates through the interstitial, non-cooling passages between the graphite fuel blocks instead of traveling through the designated coolant channels. To determine the bypass flow, a double scale representative model was manufactured and installed in the Matched Index-of-Refraction flow facility; after which, stereo Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) was employed to measure the flow field within. PIV images were analyzed to produce vector maps, and flow rates were calculated by numerically integrating over the velocity field. It was found that the bypass flow varied between 6.9-15.8% for channel Reynolds numbers of 1,746 and 4,618. The results were compared to computational fluid dynamic (CFD) pre-test simulations. When compared to these pretest calculations, the CFD analysis appeared to under predict the flow through the gap.
Date: November 1, 2012
Creator: Conder, Thomas E.; Skifton, Richard & Budwig, Ralph
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geomechanical Simulation of Fluid-Driven Fractures (open access)

Geomechanical Simulation of Fluid-Driven Fractures

The project supported graduate students working on experimental and numerical modeling of rock fracture, with the following objectives: (a) perform laboratory testing of fluid-saturated rock; (b) develop predictive models for simulation of fracture; and (c) establish educational frameworks for geologic sequestration issues related to rock fracture. These objectives were achieved through (i) using a novel apparatus to produce faulting in a fluid-saturated rock; (ii) modeling fracture with a boundary element method; and (iii) developing curricula for training geoengineers in experimental mechanics, numerical modeling of fracture, and poroelasticity.
Date: November 30, 2012
Creator: Makhnenko, R.; Nikolskiy, D.; Mogilevskaya, S. & Labuz, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library