Configuration Management Program Plan (open access)

Configuration Management Program Plan

Westinghouse Savannah River Company (WSRC) has established a configuration management (CM) plan to execute the SRS CM Policy and the requirements of the DOE Order 4700.1. The Reactor Restart Division (RRD) has developed its CM Plan under the SRS CM Program and is implementing it via the RRD CM Program Plan and the Integrated Action Plan. The purpose of the RRD CM program is to improve those processes which are essential to the safe and efficient operation of SRS production reactors. This document provides details of this plan.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical study of the structure, energetics, and dynamics of silicon and carbon systems using tight-binding approaches (open access)

Theoretical study of the structure, energetics, and dynamics of silicon and carbon systems using tight-binding approaches

Semiempirical interatomic potentials are developed for silicon and carbon by modeling the total energy of the system using tight-binding approaches. The parameters of the models were obtained by fitting to results from accurate first-principles Local Density Functional calculations. Applications to the computation of phonons as a function of volume for diamond-structured silicon and carbon and the thermal expansions for silicon and diamond yields results which agree well with experiment. The physical origin of the negative thermal expansion observed in silicon is explained. A tight-binding total energy model is generated capable of describing carbon systems with a variety of atomic coordinations and topologies. The model reproduces the total energy versus volume curves of various carbon polytypes as well as phonons and elastic constants of diamond and graphite. The model has also been used in the molecular-dynamics simulation of the properties of carbon clusters. The calculated ground-state geometries of small clusters (C{sub 2}--C{sub 10}) correlates well with results from accurate quantum chemical calculations, and the structural trend of clusters from C{sub 2} to C{sub 60} are investigated. 67 refs., 19 figs.
Date: October 25, 1991
Creator: Xu, Chunhui.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A cryogenic system design for the international thermonuclear experimental reactor (ITER) (open access)

A cryogenic system design for the international thermonuclear experimental reactor (ITER)

A conceptual design for ITER was completed last year. The author developed a suitable cryogenic system for ITER as part of this conceptual design effort. An overview of the design is reported. Emphasis is on the fact that cryogenics is a mature science, and a system supporting ITER needs can be made from time-proven components without loss of efficiency or reliability. Because of the large size of the ITER cryogenic system, large numbers of compressors and expanders must be used. Very high reliability is assured by arranging these components in parallel banks where servicing of individual components can be done without interruption of operations. This and other ideas based on the author's experience with Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF) operations are described. 5 refs., 3 figs.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Slack, D.S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monthly energy review, October 1991. [Contains glossary] (open access)

Monthly energy review, October 1991. [Contains glossary]

This report presents current data on production, consumption, stocks, imports, exports, and prices of the principal energy commodities in the United States. Also included are data on international production of crude oil, consumption of petroleum products, petroleum stocks, and production of electricity from nuclear-powered facilities. 36 figs., 57 tabs.
Date: October 25, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced nuclear reactor public opinion project (open access)

Advanced nuclear reactor public opinion project

This Interim Report summarizes the findings of our first twenty in-depth interviews in the Advanced Nuclear Reactor Public Opinion Project. We interviewed 6 industry trade association officials, 3 industry attorneys, 6 environmentalists/nuclear critics, 3 state officials, and 3 independent analysts. In addition, we have had numerous shorter discussions with various individuals concerned about nuclear power. The report is organized into the four categories proposed at our April, 1991, Advisory Group meeting: safety, cost-benefit analysis, science education, and communications. Within each category, some change of focus from that of the Advisory Group has been required, to reflect the findings of our interviews. This report limits itself to describing our findings. An accompanying memo draws some tentative conclusions.
Date: July 25, 1991
Creator: Benson, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Luminosity evolution at the SSC (open access)

Luminosity evolution at the SSC

A realistic'' model for the time evolution of the SSC luminosity is given. The SDC instrumentation and physics strategy should be informed by this profile. 1 ref.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Kirk, T.B.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Algebraic calculation of stroboscopic maps of ordinary, nonlinear differential equations (open access)

Algebraic calculation of stroboscopic maps of ordinary, nonlinear differential equations

The relation between the parameters of a differential equation and corresponding discrete maps are becoming increasingly important in the study of nonlinear dynamical systems. Maps are well adopted for numerical computation and several universal properties of them are known. Therefore some perturbation methods have been proposed to deduce them for physical systems, which can be modeled by an ordinary differential equation (ODE) with a small nonlinearity. A new iterative, rigorous algebraic method for the calculation of the coefficients of a Taylor expansion of a stroboscopic map from ODE's with not necessarily small nonlinearities is presented. It is shown analytically that most of the coefficients are small for a small integration time and grow slowly in the course of time if the flow vector field of the ODE is polynomial and if the ODE has fixed point in the origin. Approximations of different orders respectively of the rest term are investigated for several nonlinear systems. 31 refs., 16 figs.
Date: July 25, 1991
Creator: Wackerbauer, R. (Max-Planck-Institut fuer Extraterrestrische Physik, Garching (Germany)); Huebler, A. (Illinois Univ., Urbana, IL (United States). Center for Complex Systems Research) & Mayer-Kress, G. (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (United States) California Univ., Santa Cruz, CA (United States). Dept. of Mathematics)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement and Modeling of Advanced Coal Conversion Processes (open access)

Measurement and Modeling of Advanced Coal Conversion Processes

The objectives of this study are to establish the mechanisms and rates of basic steps in coal conversion processes, to integrate and incorporate this information into comprehensive computer models for coal conversion processes, to evaluate these models and to apply them to gasification, mild gasification and combustion in heat engines. (VC)
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Solomon, P. R.; Serio, M. A.; Hamblen, D. G.; Smoot, L. D. & Brewster, B. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical simulation of the stability in a cable-in-conduit conductor developed for fusion-magnet applications (open access)

Numerical simulation of the stability in a cable-in-conduit conductor developed for fusion-magnet applications

The stability margins of the US-Demonstration Poloidal Coil (US-DPC) and the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) TF coils have been modeled numerically using the computer program CICC. The computed US-DPC limiting current, I{sub lim}, compares favorably with the values determined experimentally. Using the detailed program CICC output, we investigated the DPC quench initiation mechanism in each of the three stability regions. In the ill-cooled region, the imposed heat pulse heats the conductor to the current-sharing temperature, T{sub cs}. In the transition region, the resistance heating after the pulse must be strong enough to overcome the induced flow reversal. In the well-cooled region, good heat transfer heats the helium during the pulse. After the pulse, these high helium temperatures along with poor heat transfer cause the conductor to quench. Changes in I{sub lim} agree with Dresner's relationship. I{sub lim} can be improved by decreasing the copper resistivity, the helium fraction, or the conductor diameter. Preliminary results show the ITER and TF coil operating point is in the well-cooled region. 10 refs., 7 figs., 1 tab.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Wong, R.L.; Shen, S.S. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (United States)); Yeaw, C.T. (Wisconsin Univ., Madison, WI (United States)) & Miller, J.R. (National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University (USA))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Current drive and heating systems for an ITER HARD option (open access)

Current drive and heating systems for an ITER HARD option

A conceptual design has been developed for a reference current drive and heating system for a HARD (High Aspect Ratio Design) option for ITER. Twelve neutral beam modules, each rated at 1.3MeV and 9.2MW, perform plasma heating and current drive. An electron cyclotron system is used for initiating the plasma and for disruption control. An alternate system has been defined which is comprised of a lower hybrid and ion cyclotron system for heating and current drive, augmented by the same electron cyclotron system proposed for the reference system. 7 refs., 8 figs., 1 tab.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Lindquist, W.; Bulmer, R.; Fenstermacher, M.; Nevins, W.; Parker, J.; Smith, G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
New tools using the hardware performance monitor to help users tune programs on the Cray X-MP (open access)

New tools using the hardware performance monitor to help users tune programs on the Cray X-MP

The performance of a Cray system is highly dependent on the tuning techniques used by individuals on their codes. Many of our users were not taking advantage of the tuning tools that allow them to monitor their own programs by using the Hardware Performance Monitor (HPM). We therefore modified UNICOS to collect HPM data for all processes and to report Mflop ratings based on users, programs, and time used. Our tuning efforts are now being focused on the users and programs that have the best potential for performance improvements. These modifications and some of the more striking performance improvements are described.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Engert, D. E.; Rudsinski, L. (Argonne National Lab., IL (United States)) & Doak, J. (Cray Research, Inc., Minneapolis, MN (United States))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Staff management of security personnel at Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc. , Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant (open access)

Staff management of security personnel at Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc. , Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant

The Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant Security and Police Operations Department is responsible for protecting the US Department of Energy interests at the Portsmouth Plant from theft, sabotage, and other hostile acts that may adversely affect national security, the public health and safety, or property at the Department of Energy facility. This audit's purpose was to evaluate Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc.'s staff management at the Portsmouth Plant Security Department. The Portsmouth Plant Security Department could reduce operating cost up to an estimated $4.4 million over 5 years by: (1) Eliminating up to 14 unnecessary staff positions, and (2) reducing the length of relief breaks. These economies could be realized through implementing written operating procedures and negotiating removal of certain labor union restrictions. 2 tabs.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
(Basic properties of coals and other solids) (open access)

(Basic properties of coals and other solids)

This report discusses basic properties of bituminous, subbituminous, and lignite coals. Properties of coal liquids are also investigated. Heats of immersion in strong acids are found for Pittsburgh {number sign}8, Illinois {number sign}6, and Wyodak coals. Production of coal liquids by distillation is discussed. Heats of titration of coal liquids and coal slurries are reported. (VC)
Date: November 25, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
NFS, Kerberos, and UNICOS (open access)

NFS, Kerberos, and UNICOS

The Network File System (NFS) is used in UNIX-based networks to provide transparent file sharing between heterogeneous systems. Although NFS is well-known for being weak in security, it is widely used and has become a de facto standard. This paper examines the user authentication shortcomings of NFS and the approach Sandia National Laboratories has taken to strengthen it with Kerberos. The implementation on a Cray Y-MP8/864 running UNICOS is described and resource/performance issues are discussed. 4 refs., 4 figs.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Haynes, R.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effluent Treatment Facility tritium emissions monitoring (open access)

Effluent Treatment Facility tritium emissions monitoring

An Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approved sampling and analysis protocol was developed and executed to verify atmospheric emissions compliance for the new Savannah River Site (SRS) F/H area Effluent Treatment Facility. Sampling equipment was fabricated, installed, and tested at stack monitoring points for filtrable particulate radionuclides, radioactive iodine, and tritium. The only detectable anthropogenic radionuclides released from Effluent Treatment Facility stacks during monitoring were iodine-129 and tritium oxide. This paper only examines the collection and analysis of tritium oxide.
Date: July 25, 1991
Creator: Dunn, D.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Iraq-Kuwait: United Nations Security Council Resolutions Test and Votes -- 1991 (open access)

Iraq-Kuwait: United Nations Security Council Resolutions Test and Votes -- 1991

This report lists the 12 adopted United Nations Security Council resolutions relating to the Iraq-Kuwait situation through October 1991. The texts of these resolutions, along with the votes by members of the Council, are included in this report.
Date: October 25, 1991
Creator: Browne, Marjorie Ann
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monthly energy review, January 1991. [Contains Glossary] (open access)

Monthly energy review, January 1991. [Contains Glossary]

This report presents current data on production, consumption, stocks, imports, exports, and prices of the principal energy commodities in the United States. Also included are data on international production of crude oil, consumption of petroleum products, petroleum stocks, and production of electricity from nuclear-powered facilities.
Date: January 25, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics possibilities at LHC/SSC (open access)

Physics possibilities at LHC/SSC

This document reviews some recent work on physics simulations for SSC/LHC. Included are reviews of some of the recent developments in physics simulations for the SSC/LHC and comments upon the requirements that are placed upon detectors by the need to extract specific physics signatures. The material in the various EOI/LOI documents submitted to the SCC Laboratory and the work done at the Aachen LHC workshop are discussed. In the following discussion 1 SSC (LHC) year corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 10 (100) fb{sup {minus}1}. 41 refs., 14 figs.
Date: April 25, 1991
Creator: Hinchliffe, I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Testing proton spin models with polarized beams (open access)

Testing proton spin models with polarized beams

We review models for spin-weighted parton distributions in a proton. Sum rules involving the nonsinglet components of the structure function xg{sub 1}{sup p} help narrow the range of parameters in these models. The contribution of the {gamma}{sub 5} anomaly term depends on the size of the integrated polarized gluon distribution and experimental predictions depend on its size. We have proposed three models for the polarized gluon distributions, whose range is considerable. These model distributions give an overall range is considerable. These model distributions give an overall range of parameters that can be tested with polarized beam experiments. These are discussed with regard to specific predictions for polarized beam experiments at energies typical of UNK.
Date: November 25, 1991
Creator: Ramsey, G.P. (Loyola Univ., Chicago, IL (United States). Dept. of Physics Argonne National Lab., IL (United States))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental Studies of Water Pretreatment of Coal (open access)

Fundamental Studies of Water Pretreatment of Coal

During the seventh quarter, water pretreatment experiments were done at lower pressures (1000 psig), with early H{sub 2}O injection or continuous H{sub 2}O injection, and with demineralized coals. In addition, a set of blank experiments was done with all four coals in helium at the following conditions: 350{degrees}C; 4000 psig; 20 minutes. An additional experiment was done with the Zap lignite at atmospheric pressure. Helium was used instead of nitrogen since it can be obtained in highly pure grades. The purpose of the blank experiments is to determine how much of the water pretreatment process is a thermal and/or pressure effort. The residues from the standard water pretreatment experiments with Illinois and Pittsburgh coals were subjected to analysis by TG-FTIR, solvent extraction, solvent swelling, oxygen reactivity index and donor solvent liquefaction. The pyridine extractables were analyzed. With regard to liquefaction behavior, improvements in the yields of oils and toluene solubles are observed for selected Illinois and Pittsburgh coals at longer pretreatment times ({ge} 60 minutes).
Date: October 25, 1991
Creator: Serio, M. A.; Solomon, P. R.; Kroo, E.; Charpenay, S. & Bassilakis, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Topics in theoretical surface science (open access)

Topics in theoretical surface science

The energetics and structures of clean and adsorbate covered surfaces are investigated in this dissertation. First, the formalism, within the Corrected Effective Medium (CEM) method, for calculating the surface energy of a clean surface is derived. The surface energies for many different metals and their low index surfaces are presented. The minimization of the surface energy is then used to predict the multilayer relaxation of the Al(111), (100), Ni(100), (110) and Fe(100) surfaces. Extensions of the surface CEM formalism to calculate the binding energies of ordered adsorbates on metals surfaces are also derived. The minimization of the binding energy allowed determination of the binding heights, sites and the extent of induced multilayer relaxation for H and N atoms on the Fe(110), (100) and W(110) surfaces. The last topic deals with the dynamics of the epitaxial growth of metals on metal surfaces. The CEM method was first modified by making approximations to enable faster evaluations of the potential and its corresponding forces for molecular dynamics simulations. The goal of these simulations was to identify the important steps in the formation of equilibrium epitaxial structures. 180 refs., 31 figs., 18 tabs.
Date: October 25, 1991
Creator: Todd, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low energy ion-molecule reactions and chemiionization kinetics (open access)

Low energy ion-molecule reactions and chemiionization kinetics

Our research program is devoted to understanding the dynamics of elementary ionic collisions at the level of the underlying potential surface by measuring energy and angular distributions of reactively scattered products with crossed beam methods over the relative center-of-mass energy range from 0.3 to several eV. We have performed reactive and non-reactive scattering studies on the proton and hydrogen atom transfer systems listed below: O + NH{sub 3} {yields} OH + NH{sub 2} {delta}H = {minus}0.2 eV O + H{sub 2}O {yields} OH + OH {delta}H = +0.4 eV. In both of these systems, the reactions are hypothesized to occur on potential energy surfaces having two minima. The first minimum corresponds to the formation of an electrostatically bound complex, e.g., O(H{sub 2}O), followed by an intramolecular hydrogen atom/proton transfer to yield OH{center dot}OH, which may then form the products by cleavage of the complex.
Date: September 25, 1991
Creator: Farrar, J.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pulsed laser kinetic studies of liquids under high pressure (open access)

Pulsed laser kinetic studies of liquids under high pressure

A high pressure apparatus constructed for measuring the rates of reactions in liquids under pressures ranging from 1 atm to 2000 atm has been used to measure the complexation kinetics of molybdenum hexacarbonyl reacting with 2,2-bipyridine, 4,4{prime}-dimethyl-2-2{prime}-bipyridine and 4,4{prime}-diphenyl-2-2{prime} bipyridine in toluene. Pentacarbonyl reaction intermediates are created by a 10 nsec flash of frequency tripled Nd:YAG laser light. Measured activation volumes for chelate ligand ring closure indicate a change in mechanism from associative interchange to dissociative interchange as steric hindrance increases. A similar high pressure kinetics study of molybdenum carbonyl complexation by several substituted phenanthrolines is now well advanced that indicates that with the more rigid phenanthroline ligands steric effects from bulky substituents have less effect on the ring closure mechanism than in the case of the bipyridine ligands. An experimental concentration dependence of the fluorescence quantum yield of cresyl violet has been harmonized with previously published contradictory reports. Fluorescence of cresyl violet in various solvents and in micellar systems has also been systematically explored.
Date: November 25, 1991
Creator: Eyring, E.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical techniques for measurement of high temperatures (open access)

Optical techniques for measurement of high temperatures

The availability of instrumentation to measure the high outlet gas temperature of a particle bed reactor is a topic of some concern. There are a number of possible techniques with advantages and disadvantages. In order to provide some baseline choice of instrumentation, a review has been conducted of these various technologies. This report summarizes the results of this review for a group of technologies loosely defined as optical techniques (excluding optical pyrometry). The review has concentrated on a number of questions for each technology investigated. These are: (1) Description of the technology, (2) Anticipated sensitivity and accuracy, (3) Requirements for implementation, (4) Necessary development time and costs, (5) Advantages and disadvantages of the technology. Each of these areas was considered for a technology and a large number of technologies were considered in a review of the literature. Based upon this review it was found that a large number of methods exist to measure temperatures in excess of 2000 K. None of the methods found were ideal. Four methods, however, appeared to warrant further consideration: opto-mechanical expansion thermometry, surface Raman spectroscopy, gas-phase Raman spectroscopy and coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopy (CARS). These techniques will be discussed further in this document.
Date: October 25, 1991
Creator: Veligdan, J.T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library