States

Separating the Minor Actinides Through Advances in Selective Coordination Chemistry (open access)

Separating the Minor Actinides Through Advances in Selective Coordination Chemistry

This report describes work conducted at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) in Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 under the auspices of the Sigma Team for Minor Actinide Separation, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Energy. Researchers at PNNL and Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) are investigating a simplified solvent extraction system for providing a single-step process to separate the minor actinide elements from acidic high-level liquid waste (HLW), including separating the minor actinides from the lanthanide fission products.
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Lumetta, Gregg J.; Braley, Jenifer C.; Sinkov, Sergey I. & Carter, Jennifer C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a Low Cost Insulated Foil Substrate for Cu(InGaSe)2 Photovoltaics (open access)

Development of a Low Cost Insulated Foil Substrate for Cu(InGaSe)2 Photovoltaics

The project validated the use of stainless steel flexible substrate coated with silicone-based resin dielectric, developed by Dow Corning Corporation, for Cu(InGa)Se2 based photovoltaics. The projects driving force was the high performance of Cu(InGa)Se2 based photovoltaics coupled with potential cost reduction that could be achieved with dielectric coated SS web substrate.
Date: January 22, 2012
Creator: Eser, Erten
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Micro-Analysis of Actinide Minerals for Nuclear Forensics and Treaty Verification (open access)

Micro-Analysis of Actinide Minerals for Nuclear Forensics and Treaty Verification

Micro-Raman spectroscopy has been demonstrated to be a viable tool for nondestructive determination of the crystal phase of relevant minerals. Collecting spectra on particles down to 5 microns in size was completed. Some minerals studied were weak scatterers and were better studied with the other techniques. A decent graphical software package should easily be able to compare collected spectra to a spectral library as well as subtract out matrix vibration peaks. Due to the success and unequivocal determination of the most common mineral false positive (zircon), it is clear that Raman has a future for complementary, rapid determination of unknown particulate samples containing actinides.
Date: March 22, 2012
Creator: M. Morey, M. Manard, R. Russo, G. Havrilla
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2012 CHEMISTRY & PHYSICS OF GRAPHITIC CARBON MATERIALS GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, JUNE 17-22, 2012 (open access)

2012 CHEMISTRY & PHYSICS OF GRAPHITIC CARBON MATERIALS GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, JUNE 17-22, 2012

This conference will highlight the urgency for research on graphitic carbon materials and gather scientists in physics, chemistry, and engineering to tackle the challenges in this field. The conference will focus on scalable synthesis, characterization, novel physical and electronic properties, structure-properties relationship studies, and new applications of the carbon materials. Contributors
Date: June 22, 2012
Creator: Fertig, Herbert
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary Report for the Radiation Detection for Nuclear Security Summer School 2012 (open access)

Summary Report for the Radiation Detection for Nuclear Security Summer School 2012

The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) hosted students from across the United States at the inaugural Radiation Detection for Nuclear Security Summer School from June 11 – 22, 2012. The summer school provided students with a unique understanding of nuclear security challenges faced in the field and exposed them to the technical foundations, analyses, and insight that will be required by future leaders in technology development and implementation. The course heavily emphasized laboratory and field demonstrations including direct measurements of special nuclear material. The first week of the summer school focused on the foundational knowledge required by technology practitioners; the second week focused on contemporary applications. Student evaluations and feedback from student advisors indicates that the summer school achieved its objectives of 1) exposing students to the range of nuclear security applications for which radiation detection is necessary, 2) articulating the relevance of student research into the broader context, and 3) exciting students about the possibility of future careers in nuclear security.
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Runkle, Robert C.; Baciak, James E. & Stave, Jean A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
California GAMA Special Study: Examination of Water Quality of Tritium-Dead Drinking Water Wells (open access)

California GAMA Special Study: Examination of Water Quality of Tritium-Dead Drinking Water Wells

None
Date: May 22, 2012
Creator: Visser, A.; Moran, J. E.; Singleton, M. J.; Hillegonds, D. J.; Belitz, K.; Kulongoski, J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Foundations of Feature Selection and Classification for Non-Gaussian Distributed Targets (open access)

Foundations of Feature Selection and Classification for Non-Gaussian Distributed Targets

None
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Clark, G. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lessons Re-learned: The Little Things (open access)

Lessons Re-learned: The Little Things

This slide show discusses: connector choices; polishing technique (manual vs. machine); fiber interconnect construction; and deployment of fiber in the field.
Date: October 22, 2012
Creator: Perez, C., Lewis, T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cascade Reverse Osmosis Air Conditioning System (open access)

Cascade Reverse Osmosis Air Conditioning System

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the Building Energy Efficiency Through Innovative Thermodevices (BEETIT) program including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet discusses air conditioning that has increased electrical efficiency as part of the "Cascade Reverse Osmosis and the Absorption Osmosis Cycle" project.
Date: February 22, 2012
Creator: Batelle Memorial Institute
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plot/SurfW: Plotting Utility for EDGE2D Output (open access)

Plot/SurfW: Plotting Utility for EDGE2D Output

This report describes a utility that was developed to display EDGE2D results. The utility is focused on results that relate to impurity density, velocity, and particle fluxes in the SOL and divertor. Due to the complicated nature of 2D impurity sources, the concentration of the thermal force near the separatrix and near the divertor entrance, the impurity flow pattern and impurity densities are not necessarily easy to visualize. Thus, we wanted a utility that allowed simple and quick visualization of the impurity behavior. In order to achieve this we overlaid the divertor hardware for plots inside the divertor and we expanded the appearance of the main chamber SOL by plotting distance along the field lines vs. SOL depth with the density (or velocity or flux or other quantity) the false colour. Also, we allowed for the plotted variable to be a function of the other EDGE2D result variables. __________________________________________________
Date: June 22, 2012
Creator: Strachan, W.M. Davis and J.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Green Prison: The Santa Rita Jail Campus Microgrid (open access)

A Green Prison: The Santa Rita Jail Campus Microgrid

A large microgrid project is nearing completion at Alameda County’s twenty-two-year-old 45 ha 4,000-inmate Santa Rita Jail, about 70 km east of San Francisco. Often described as a green prison, it has a considerable installed base of distributed energy resources (DER) including an eight-year old 1.2 MW PV array, a five-year old 1 MW fuel cell with heat recovery, and considerable efficiency investments. A current US$14 M expansion adds a 2 MW-4 MWh Li-ion battery, a static disconnect switch, and various controls upgrades. During grid blackouts, or when conditions favor it, the Jail can now disconnect from the grid and operate as an island, using the on-site resources described together with its back-up diesel generators. In other words, the Santa Rita Jail is a true microgrid, or μgrid, because it fills both requirements, i.e. it is a locally controlled system, and it can operate both grid connected and islanded. The battery’s electronics includes Consortium for Electric Reliability Technology (CERTS) Microgrid technology. This enables the battery to maintain energy balance using droops without need for a fast control system.
Date: January 22, 2012
Creator: Marnay, Chris; DeForest, Nicholas & Lai, Judy
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Components of the dilepton continuum in Pb+Pb collisions at sqrt s = 2.76 TeV (open access)

Components of the dilepton continuum in Pb+Pb collisions at sqrt s = 2.76 TeV

None
Date: February 22, 2012
Creator: Vogt, R; Shukla, P & Kumar, V
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear PDFs (open access)

Nuclear PDFs

N/A
Date: October 22, 2012
Creator: D., De Florian; M., Stratmann; Zurita, P. & Sassot, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
LAB-SCALE DEMONSTRATION OF PLUTONIUM PURIFICATION BY ANION EXCHANGE, PLUTONIUM (IV) OXALATE PRECIPITATION, AND CALCINATION TO PLUTONIUM OXIDE TO SUPPORT THE MOX FEED MISSION (open access)

LAB-SCALE DEMONSTRATION OF PLUTONIUM PURIFICATION BY ANION EXCHANGE, PLUTONIUM (IV) OXALATE PRECIPITATION, AND CALCINATION TO PLUTONIUM OXIDE TO SUPPORT THE MOX FEED MISSION

H-Canyon and HB-Line are tasked with the production of PuO{sub 2} from a feed of plutonium metal. The PuO{sub 2} will provide feed material for the MOX Fuel Fabrication Facility. After dissolution of the Pu metal in H-Canyon, the solution will be transferred to HB-Line for purification by anion exchange. Subsequent unit operations include Pu(IV) oxalate precipitation, filtration and calcination to form PuO{sub 2}. This report details the results from SRNL anion exchange, precipitation, filtration, calcination, and characterization tests, as requested by HB-Line1 and described in the task plan. This study involved an 80-g batch of Pu and employed test conditions prototypical of HB-Line conditions, wherever feasible. In addition, this study integrated lessons learned from earlier anion exchange and precipitation and calcination studies. H-Area Engineering selected direct strike Pu(IV) oxalate precipitation to produce a more dense PuO{sub 2} product than expected from Pu(III) oxalate precipitation. One benefit of the Pu(IV) approach is that it eliminates the need for reduction by ascorbic acid. The proposed HB-Line precipitation process involves a digestion time of 5 minutes after the time (44 min) required for oxalic acid addition. These were the conditions during HB-line production of neptunium oxide (NpO{sub 2}). In addition, a series …
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Crowder, M. & Pierce, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Response to Comment on "Geometric Phase of the Gyromotion for Charged Particles in a Time-dependent Magnetic Field (open access)

Response to Comment on "Geometric Phase of the Gyromotion for Charged Particles in a Time-dependent Magnetic Field

The reformulation of our analysis on the geometric phase of the gyromotion [J. Liu and H. Qin, Phys. Plasmas 18, 072505 (2011)] in terms of spatial angles presented in the comment by Brizard and Guillebon is interesting and correct. The subtlety of whether the adiabatic term associated with the long term average of the variation of pitch angle completely disappears after the gyrophase average is related to where valid approximations are applied. But it has no impact on the main conclusions.
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Qin, Jian Liu and Hong
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Results for SimFuels (open access)

Experimental Results for SimFuels

Assessing the performance of Spent (or Used) Nuclear Fuel (UNF) in geological repository requires quantification of time-dependent phenomena that may influence its behavior on a time-scale up to millions of years. A high-level waste repository environment will be a dynamic redox system because of the time-dependent generation of radiolytic oxidants and reductants and the corrosion of Fe-bearing canister materials. One major difference between used fuel and natural analogues, including unirradiated UO2, is the intense radiolytic field. The radiation emitted by used fuel can produce radiolysis products in the presence of water vapor or a thin-film of water that may increase the waste form degradation rate and change radionuclide behavior. To study UNF, we have been working on producing synthetic UO2 ceramics, or SimFuels that can be used in testing and which will contain specific radionuclides or non-radioactive analogs so that we can test the impact of radiolysis on fuel corrosion without using actual spent fuel. Although, testing actual UNF would be ideal for understanding the long term behavior of UNF, it requires the use of hot cells and is extremely expensive. In this report, we discuss, factors influencing the preparation of SimFuels and the requirements for dopants to mimic the …
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Buck, Edgar C.; Casella, Andrew M.; Skomurski, Frances N.; MacFarlan, Paul J.; Soderquist, Chuck Z.; Wittman, Richard S. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A REALISTIC EXAMINATION OF COLD FUSION CLAIMS 24 YEARS LATER (open access)

A REALISTIC EXAMINATION OF COLD FUSION CLAIMS 24 YEARS LATER

On March 29, 1989, chemists Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons announced they had discovered an effect whose explanation was required to lie in the realm of nuclear reactions. Their claim, and those subsequent to it of roughly similar nature, became known as ‘cold fusion’. Research continues to this day on this effect, but what has become clear is that whatever it is, it is not a conventional fusion process. Thus the ‘cold fusion’ moniker is somewhat inappropriate and many current researchers in the field prefer the term “Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (LENR)”, although other terms have been coined for it as well. the results developed out of the LENR research do in fact show something is happening to produce signals which might be interpreted as supporting nuclear reactions (which is what encourages and sustains LENR researchers), but which can also be interpreted via a set of unique and interesting conventional processes. The focus of this document is to describe and address recent objections to such processes so that subsequent LENR research can be guided to develop information that will determine whether either set of explanations has merit. It is hoped that criteria delineated herein will aid the USDOE and other …
Date: October 22, 2012
Creator: Shanahan, K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laboratory Directed Research and Development FY2011 Annual Report (open access)

Laboratory Directed Research and Development FY2011 Annual Report

A premier applied-science laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has earned the reputation as a leader in providing science and technology solutions to the most pressing national and global security problems. The LDRD Program, established by Congress at all DOE national laboratories in 1991, is LLNL's most important single resource for fostering excellent science and technology for today's needs and tomorrow's challenges. The LDRD internally directed research and development funding at LLNL enables high-risk, potentially high-payoff projects at the forefront of science and technology. The LDRD Program at Livermore serves to: (1) Support the Laboratory's missions, strategic plan, and foundational science; (2) Maintain the Laboratory's science and technology vitality; (3) Promote recruiting and retention; (4) Pursue collaborations; (5) Generate intellectual property; and (6) Strengthen the U.S. economy. Myriad LDRD projects over the years have made important contributions to every facet of the Laboratory's mission and strategic plan, including its commitment to nuclear, global, and energy and environmental security, as well as cutting-edge science and technology and engineering in high-energy-density matter, high-performance computing and simulation, materials and chemistry at the extremes, information systems, measurements and experimental science, and energy manipulation. A summary of each project was submitted by the principal investigator. …
Date: March 22, 2012
Creator: Craig, W; Sketchley, J & Kotta, P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetic Guiding for Electron Fast Ignition (open access)

Magnetic Guiding for Electron Fast Ignition

None
Date: June 22, 2012
Creator: Strozzi, D. J.; Tabak, M.; Larson, D. J.; Shay, H. D.; Divol, L.; Kemp, A. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Estimating the Bias of Local Polynomial Approximations Using the Peano Kernel (open access)

Estimating the Bias of Local Polynomial Approximations Using the Peano Kernel

These presentation visuals define local polynomial approximations, give formulas for bias and random components of the error, and express bias error in terms of the Peano kernel. They further derive constants that give figures of merit, and show the figures of merit for 3 common weighting functions. The Peano kernel theorem yields estimates for the bias error for local-polynomial-approximation smoothing that are superior in several ways to the error estimates in the current literature.
Date: March 22, 2012
Creator: Blair, J., and Machorro, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Predictive Sclence Panel Unclassified Report (open access)

Predictive Sclence Panel Unclassified Report

None
Date: October 22, 2012
Creator: Adams, M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance Characterization and Validation of mocfe_bone (open access)

Performance Characterization and Validation of mocfe_bone

None
Date: October 22, 2012
Creator: Bhatele, A & Schulz, M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Demonstration of LED Retrofit Lamps at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC (open access)

Demonstration of LED Retrofit Lamps at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC

This report documents observations and results obtained from a lighting demonstration project conducted under the U.S. Department of Energy GATEWAY Solid-State Lighting (SSL) Technology Demonstration Program at the Smithsonain American Art Museum in Washington, DC. LED Lamp samples were tested in the museum workshop, temporarily installed in a gallery for feedback, and ultimately replaced all traditional incandescent lamps in one gallery of modernist art at the American Art Museum and partially replacing lamps in two galleries at the Musesum's Renwick Gallery. This report describes the selection and testing process, technology challenges, perceptions, economics, energy use, and mixed results of usign LED replacement lamps in art galleries housing national treasures.
Date: June 22, 2012
Creator: Miller, Naomi J. & Rosenfeld, Scott M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZeCalc Algorithm Details (open access)

ZeCalc Algorithm Details

None
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Bond, K. C.; Smith, J. A.; Treuer, J. N.; Azevedo, S. G.; Kallman, J. S. & Martz, H. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library