Mechanical behavior of 304 LN weldments (open access)

Mechanical behavior of 304 LN weldments

Mechanical properties of various weld configurations for 304 LN stainless steel are reported. The results include Charpy V-notch, tensile, and fracture toughness data. The determinations were made at temperatures of 300, 77, and 4.2/sup 0/K. Each of the three types of mechanical evaluations are treated separately.
Date: February 22, 1979
Creator: Jelinek, F.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
100-K Area electrical power system load and voltage study for project CG-775. Revision (open access)

100-K Area electrical power system load and voltage study for project CG-775. Revision

The proposed increased water capacity for 100-K plants will increase the electrical load to be supplied. The load study showed that the capacity of the existing 13.8 kV system is adequate to carry the increased loads proposed for Project CG-775, while for the 5 kV system, an expanded power system is proposed. Likewise, the voltage regulation on the kV system bus will be excessive, and voltage regulators should be added.
Date: February 22, 1960
Creator: Thorson, W. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Precision of source response inside dimpled HAD brass tubes (open access)

Precision of source response inside dimpled HAD brass tubes

We have measured the variation in response of the {sup 137}CS source as positioned in 10 samples of the brass source tubes, dimpled at {plus_minus}5 cm from the center of a scintillator tile. We find an RMS in the signals of 2.5%.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Jankowski, D. J. & Stanek, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Model building, control and optimization of large scale systems. Progress report, January 1992--January 1993 (open access)

Model building, control and optimization of large scale systems. Progress report, January 1992--January 1993

This report covers the research progress made during the calendar year 1992. The new results obtained during this period are described, keyed to the references listed on the last two pages of this report.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Basar, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Overview of WARP, a particle code for Heavy Ion Fusion (open access)

Overview of WARP, a particle code for Heavy Ion Fusion

The beams in a Heavy Ion beam driven inertial Fusion (HIF) accelerator must be focused onto small spots at the fusion target, and so preservation of beam quality is crucial. The nonlinear self-fields of these space-charge-dominated beams can lead to emittance growth; thus a self-consistent field description is necessary. We have developed a multi-dimensional discrete-particle simulation code, WARP, and are using it to study the behavior of HIF beams. The code`s 3d package combines features of an accelerator code and a particle-in-cell plasma simulation, and can efficiently track beams through many lattice elements and around bends. We have used the code to understand the physics of aggressive drift-compression in the MBE-4 experiment at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL). We have applied it to LBL`s planned ILSE experiments, to various ``recirculator`` configurations, and to the study of equilibria and equilibration processes. Applications of the 3d package to ESQ injectors, and of the r, z package to longitudinal stability in driver beams, are discussed in related papers.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Friedman, A.; Grote, D. P.; Callahan, D. A.; Langdon, A. B. & Haber, I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fuels Preparation Department monthly report, January 1960 (open access)

Fuels Preparation Department monthly report, January 1960

This document details activities of the Fuels Preparation Department during the month of January 1960. (FI)
Date: February 22, 1960
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
PIC space-charge emission with finite {Delta}t and {Delta}z (open access)

PIC space-charge emission with finite {Delta}t and {Delta}z

A new algorithm for space charge emission has been developed to provide the correct (to a few percent) Child-Langmuir steady-state current limits as the number of mesh points in the voltage gap drops to O(10). Further, the transient behavior of such flows compares well with idealized, analytic cases, lending confidence as we extend these algorithms into full RZ geometry with curved emitting surfaces to investigate transient characteristics of realistic injector designs.
Date: February 22, 1993
Creator: Hewett, D. W. & Chen, Yu-Jiuan
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Expansion task force: Old reactors speed of control for no overbore cases (open access)

Expansion task force: Old reactors speed of control for no overbore cases

The Criteria for Speed of Control must be met for all cases being considered in the Expansion Studies. These Criteria are dependent upon the ratio Volume of water/volume of uranium in the process channel, the reactor power level, and the rate at which the vertical rods are released and inserted into the reactor. For those cases wherein the graphite channel is overbored by 0.200 inch., the criteria can generally be met for the power levels under consideration since the ratio of Vw/Vu is maintained adequately small by the use of large diameter fuel elements. If the graphite is not overbored, high pressure drop across the fuel element section must be maintained in order to maintain small values of Vw/Vu, which results in a substantial increase in the front header pressure. A method is developed in this document which ties together and defines the hydraulic and physics characteristics of the fuel-process channel geometry necessary to satisfy the Speed of Control Criteria over a range of feasible operating conditions. This study assumes no graphite overboring and employs throughout a smooth bore zircaloy process tube having an inside diameter of 1.650 inches. The fuel elements are self-supported., and the inner hole size was …
Date: February 22, 1960
Creator: Gilbert, W. D.; Carlson, P. A. & Nechodom, W. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of short pulse laser pumped x-ray lasers (open access)

Development of short pulse laser pumped x-ray lasers

X-ray lasers have been extensively studied around the world since the first laboratory demonstration on the Novette laser at LLNL in 1984. The characteristic properties of short wavelength, high monochromaticity, collimation and coherence make x-ray lasers useful for various applications. These include demonstrations of biological imaging within the water window, interferometry of laser plasmas and radiography of laser-heated surfaces. One of the critical issues has been the high power pump required to produce the inversion. The power scaling as a function of x-ray laser wavelength follows a {approx} {lambda}{sup -4} to {approx} {lambda}{sup -6} law. The shortest x-ray laser wavelength of {approx}35 {angstrom} demonstrated for Ni-like Au was at the limit of Nova laser capabilities. By requiring large, high power lasers such as Nova, the shot rate and total number of shots available have limited the rapid development of x-ray lasers and applications. In fact over the last fifteen years the main thrust has been to develop more efficient, higher repetition rate x-ray lasers that can be readily scaled to shorter wavelengths. The recent state of progress in the field can be found in references. The objective of the project was to develop a soft x-ray laser (XRL) pumped by …
Date: February 22, 2000
Creator: Dunn, J; Osterheld, A L; Hunter, J R & Shlyaptsev, V N
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developing models for simulation of pinched-beam dynamics in heavy ion fusion. Revision 1 (open access)

Developing models for simulation of pinched-beam dynamics in heavy ion fusion. Revision 1

For heavy-ion fusion energy applications, Mark and Yu have derived hydrodynamic models for numerical simulation of energetic pinched-beams including self-pinches and external-current pinches. These pinched-beams are applicable to beam propagation in fusion chambers and to the US High Temperature Experiment. The closure of the Mark-Yu model is obtained with adiabatic assumptions mathematically analogous to those of Chew, Goldberger, and Low for MHD. Features of this hydrodynamic beam model are compared with a kinetic treatment.
Date: February 22, 1984
Creator: Boyd, J. K.; Mark, J. W. K.; Sharp, W. M. & Yu, S. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heavy ion inertial fusion: interface between target gain, accelerator phase space and reactor beam transport revisited (open access)

Heavy ion inertial fusion: interface between target gain, accelerator phase space and reactor beam transport revisited

Recently revised estimates of target gain have added additional optimistic inputs to the interface between targets, accelerators and fusion chamber beam transport. But it remains valid that neutralization of the beams in the fusion chamber is useful if ion charge state Z > 1 or if > 1 kA per beamlet is to be propagated. Some engineering and economic considerations favor higher currents.
Date: February 22, 1984
Creator: Barletta, W. A.; Fawley, W. M.; Judd, D. L.; Mark, J. W. K. & Yu, S. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RESULTS FOR THE FOURTH QUARTER 2010 TANK 50 WAC SLURRY SAMPLE: CHEMICAL AND RADIONUCLIDE CONTAMINANT RESULTS (open access)

RESULTS FOR THE FOURTH QUARTER 2010 TANK 50 WAC SLURRY SAMPLE: CHEMICAL AND RADIONUCLIDE CONTAMINANT RESULTS

This report details the chemical and radionuclide contaminant results for the characterization of the 2010 Fourth Quarter sampling of Tank 50 for the Saltstone Waste Acceptance Criteria (WAC). Information from this characterization will be used by Liquid Waste Operations (LWO) to support the transfer of low-level aqueous waste from Tank 50 to the Salt Feed Tank in the Saltstone Facility in Z-Area, where the waste will be immobilized. This information is also used to update the Tank 50 Waste Characterization System. The following conclusions are drawn from the analytical results provided in this report: (1) The concentrations of the reported chemical and radioactive contaminants were less than their respective WAC targets or limits unless noted in this section. (2) The reported detection limits for {sup 94}Nb, {sup 247}Cm and {sup 249}Cf are above the requested limits from Reference 2. However, they are below the limits established in Reference 3. (3) There is an estimated concentration of trimethylbenzene (2.25 mg/L). This is not a WAC analyte, but it is the first time this organic compound has been detected in a quarterly WAC sample from Tank 50. (4) The reported detection limit for Norpar 13 is greater than the limit from Table …
Date: February 22, 2011
Creator: Reigel, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sector 30 collimator radiation (open access)

Sector 30 collimator radiation

The collimators at Sector 30 of the SLAC accelerator are designed to scrape off a significant fraction (e.g., {approximately}20%) of the SLC beam. The electromagnetic cascade shower that develops in the collimator, and in the scraper and waveguide downbeam, leads to very high radiation exposures of TV cameras (and other devices) located nearby. The collimator (point) source accounts for one-third of the dose and is best shielded by extending the radius of the copper scraper. Radiation from the waveguide accounts for the remaining two-thirds of the dose, and is difficult to shield since it is a line source. However, the spectrum from the waveguide is expected to be softer than that from the collimator. This paper discusses shielding of these sources.
Date: February 22, 1990
Creator: Namito, Y. (Ship Research Inst., Tokyo (Japan)); Nelson, W. R. & Benson, E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A VUV Photoionization Study of the Combustion-Relevant Reaction of the Phenyl Radical (C6H5) with Propylene (C3H6) in a High Temperature Chemical Reactor (open access)

A VUV Photoionization Study of the Combustion-Relevant Reaction of the Phenyl Radical (C6H5) with Propylene (C3H6) in a High Temperature Chemical Reactor

We studied the reaction of phenyl radicals (C6H5) with propylene (C3H6) exploiting a high temperature chemical reactor under combustion-like conditions (300 Torr, 1,200-1,500 K). The reaction products were probed in a supersonic beam by utilizing tunable vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) radiation from the Advanced Light Source and recording the photoionization efficiency (PIE) curves at mass-to-charge ratios of m/z = 118 (C9H10+) and m/z = 104 (C8H8+). Our results suggest that the methyl and atomic hydrogen losses are the two major reaction pathways with branching ratios of 86 10 percent and 14 10 percent. The isomer distributions were probed by fitting the recorded PIE curves with a linear combination of the PIE curves of the individual C9H10 and C8H8 isomers. Styrene (C6H5C2H3) was found to be the exclusive product contributing to m/z = 104 (C8H8+), whereas 3-phenylpropene, cis-1-phenylpropene, and 2-phenylpropene with branching ratios of 96 4 percent, 3 3 percent, and 1 1 percent could account for signal at m/z = 118 (C9H10+). Although searched for carefully, no evidence of the bicyclic indane molecule could be provided. The reaction mechanisms and branching ratios are explained in terms of electronic structure calculations nicely agreeing with a recent crossed molecular beam study on this …
Date: February 22, 2012
Creator: Manoa, University of Hawaii at; Laboratories, Sandia National; Zhang, Fangtong; Kaiser, Ralf I.; Golan, Amir; Ahmed, Musahid et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spin Transport in Semiconductor heterostructures (open access)

Spin Transport in Semiconductor heterostructures

The focus of the research performed under this grant has been the investigation of spin transport in magnetic semiconductor heterostructures. The interest in these systems is motivated both by their intriguing physical properties, as the physical embodiment of a spin-polarized Fermi liquid, as well as by their potential applications as spintronics devices. In our work we have analyzed several different problems that affect the spin dynamics in single and bi-layer spin-polarized two-dimensional (2D) systems. The topics of interests ranged from the fundamental aspects of the electron-electron interactions, to collective spin and charge density excitations and spin transport in the presence of the spin-orbit coupling. The common denominator of these subjects is the impact at the macroscopic scale of the spin-dependent electron-electron interaction, which plays a much more subtle role than in unpolarized electron systems. Our calculations of several measurable parameters, such as the excitation frequencies of magneto-plasma modes, the spin mass, and the spin transresistivity, propose realistic theoretical estimates of the opposite-spin many-body effects, in particular opposite-spin correlations, that can be directly connected with experimental measurements.
Date: February 22, 2011
Creator: Marinescu, Domnita Catalina
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Technical Report (open access)

Final Technical Report

The research project focuses on the following topics: a) removal of artifacts in the Doppler spectra from the ARM cloud radars, b) development of the second generation Active Remote Sensing of Cloud Layers (ARSCL) cloud data products, and c) evaluation of ARM cloud property retrievals within the framework of the EarthCARE simulator. We continue to pursue research on areas related to radiative transfer, atmospheric heating rates and related dynamics (topics of interest to the ARM science community at this time) and to contribute on an ad-hoc basis to the science of other ARM-supported principal investigators.
Date: February 22, 2010
Creator: Eugene Clothiaux, Johannes Verlinde, Jerry Harrington
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical Appendix to Cryogenic Pressure Vessels (open access)

Technical Appendix to Cryogenic Pressure Vessels

The 20,000 gls. Liquid Argon dewar stores up to 15,000 gls. of high purity (<1.0 ppm O{sub 2}, 0.999995) LAr for use in the Liquid Argon calorimeters of E740, the D0 collider detector, at elevation 707-feet. The dewar provides for the total detector volume of 11,000 gls and a 4,000 gls. storage inventory. The large gas volume ({ge}5,000 gls.) serves operational needs and guards against overfill concerns. The LAr dewar functions in two modes: (1) low pressure (16 psi relief) storage, and liquid and gas transfer operations to and from the low pressure (13 psi relief) detector cryostats, and (2) high pressure (65 psi relief) liquid transfer operations to and from a delivery trailer at elevation 743-feet. The storage function is intended to be long term and nonventing. The dewar is equipped with a 40 kW LN{sub 2} condenser that operates to maintain the pressure constant in the storage mode. This service exactly parallels the NeH{sub 2} and D{sub 2} storage dewar services provided at the 15-feet bubble chamber for its operation.
Date: February 22, 1990
Creator: Mulholland, G. T. & Rucinski, R. A
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Program for calculating x-ray powder diffraction interplanar (d) spacings with a Tektronix-31 desk top programmable calculator (open access)

Program for calculating x-ray powder diffraction interplanar (d) spacings with a Tektronix-31 desk top programmable calculator

A Tektronix-31 (Tektronix Inc. Beaverton, Oregon) desk top calculator program, which is used as a backup to the PDP-8/I computer program, is described. The program yields interplanar (d) spacings and (2theta) angle values from measurements made on an x-ray diffraction film of a powdered sample of a crystalline material. Use of the calculator provides accurate computations in a relatively rapid time interval when the PDP-8/I is not functioning because of downtime for repairs, maintenance, etc.
Date: February 22, 1977
Creator: Eckstein, R. R. & Ishida, Y. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Understanding Size Effect in Cleavage Cracking in Thin Materials (open access)

Understanding Size Effect in Cleavage Cracking in Thin Materials

In a specially designed tensile fracture experiment on bicrysal thin films, it was discovered that the fracture toughness of a thin film is not a material constant; rather, as the film becomes thinner it decreases much faster than the prediction of conventional theory. A detailed analysis revealed that this is caused by the mismatch of crystalline structures and, more importantly, with an appropriate crystalline orientation distribution the decrease may be suppressed. This result shed light on the fundamentals of crystal behaviors in pressurized matters. It also provides a promising solution to minimize unexpected failures in nano/micro-electromechanical systems, and therefore is of immense technological importance.
Date: February 22, 2013
Creator: Qiao, Yu
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Performance Buildings – Value, Messaging, Financial and Policy Mechanisms (open access)

High-Performance Buildings – Value, Messaging, Financial and Policy Mechanisms

At the request of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, an in-depth analysis of the rapidly evolving state of real estate investments, high-performance building technology, and interest in efficiency was conducted by HaydenTanner, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Building Technologies Program. The analysis objectives were • to evaluate the link between high-performance buildings and their market value • to identify core messaging to motivate owners, investors, financiers, and others in the real estate sector to appropriately value and deploy high-performance strategies and technologies across new and existing buildings • to summarize financial mechanisms that facilitate increased investment in these buildings. To meet these objectives, work consisted of a literature review of relevant writings, examination of existing and emergent financial and policy mechanisms, interviews with industry stakeholders, and an evaluation of the value implications through financial modeling. This report documents the analysis methodology and findings, conclusion and recommendations. Its intent is to support and inform the DOE Building Technologies Program on policy and program planning for the financing of high-performance new buildings and building retrofit projects.
Date: February 22, 2011
Creator: McCabe, Molly
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pediatric Clinical Proteomics Center (open access)

Pediatric Clinical Proteomics Center

None
Date: February 22, 2013
Creator: Klein, Jon B
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Award Nomination Information for Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory SkillSoft Perspectives Conference 2012 (open access)

Award Nomination Information for Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory SkillSoft Perspectives Conference 2012

None
Date: February 22, 2012
Creator: Positeri, L A & Molyneaux, B R
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Facts About XLDB-2011 (open access)

Facts About XLDB-2011

This note provides details of the 5th Extremely Large Databases Conference and Invitational Workshop that were held in 2011 on 18-19 October and 20 October, respectively, at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Menlo Park, California. The main goals of the conference were: (1) Encourage and accelerate the exchange of ideas between users trying to build extremely large databases worldwide and database solution providers; (2) Share lessons, trends, innovations, and challenges related to building extremely large databases; (3) Facilitate the development and growth of practical technologies for extremely large databases; and (4) Strengthen, expand, and engage the XLDB community.
Date: February 22, 2012
Creator: Becla, Jacek; Lim, Kian-Tat & Wang, Daniel L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Range of investigation of a borehole gravimeter (open access)

Range of investigation of a borehole gravimeter

Concepts of the range of investigation of a borehole gravimeter are reviewed. It is shown that the maximum sensitivity to a mass point at a horizontal distance R from a borehole occurs at a vertical distance Z = R/..sqrt..2. Thus, the angle of maximum sensitivity is about 55/sup 0/ from the vertical. It is also shown that the absolute value of the gravitational effect decreases with increasing R. There are two maxima of the vertical gradient of gravity (at Z = 0 and at Z = ..sqrt../sup 3///sub 2/ R). The minimum distance required between gravimeter stations to obtain a usable measurement can be determined. The slab radius R for which the gravitational effect of a horizontal slab is equal to 45%, 90%, etc., of that of an infinite horizontal slab is a function of the measurement spacing. The closer the measurement spacing, the more information obtained.
Date: February 22, 1977
Creator: Hearst, J. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library