244-CR Vault Interim Stabilization Project Plan (open access)

244-CR Vault Interim Stabilization Project Plan

The 244-CR Vault is a two-level, multi-cell structure of reinforced concrete constructed below grade. The lower cell contains four individual compartments, each containing a steel process storage tank and equipped with a concrete sump. The upper cell contains the piping and support equipment, and has two compartments for each of the tanks. The ''pump pit'' is accessed by the removal of concrete cover blocks, while the smaller ''riser pit'' is accessed by steel cover plates. The facility most recently was used as a double-contained receiver tank (DCRT). A DCRT is a type of waste transfer tank that together with its related equipment constitutes a short-term storage area for liquid waste and has a pump pit for waste transfer operations. This vault most recently was used for short-term storage and waste routing for saltwell liquid pumped from the 241-C Tank Farm in the 200 East Area. Waste transfer lines are connected inside the pump pit by a jumper installed between connecting nozzles. An active ventilation system is in operation at the 244-CR vault. Ventilation supply air enters the upper vault section through an inlet header with some leakage through the spaces between the cell cover blocks. The upper and lower vaults …
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: PARKMAN, D.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Stress Waves Generated in Water Using Ultrashort Laser Pulses (open access)

Analysis of Stress Waves Generated in Water Using Ultrashort Laser Pulses

A Mach-Zehnder interferometer was used for analysis of pressure waves generated by ultrashort laser pulse ablation of water. It was found that the shock wave generated by plasma formation rapidly decays to an acoustic wave. Both experimental and theoretical studies demonstrated that the energy transfer to the mechanical shock was less than 1%.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Kim, B. M.; Feit, M. D.; Rubenchik, A. M.; Komashko, A. M.; Reidt, S.; Eichler, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of finite element, global polynomial, and kriging response surfaces in Progressive Lattice Sampling designs (open access)

Application of finite element, global polynomial, and kriging response surfaces in Progressive Lattice Sampling designs

This paper examines the modeling accuracy of finite element interpolation, kriging, and polynomial regression used in conjunction with the Progressive Lattice Sampling (PLS) incremental design-of-experiments approach. PLS is a paradigm for sampling a deterministic hypercubic parameter space by placing and incrementally adding samples in a manner intended to maximally reduce lack of knowledge in the parameter space. When combined with suitable interpolation methods, PLS is a formulation for progressive construction of response surface approximations (RSA) in which the RSA are efficiently upgradable, and upon upgrading, offer convergence information essential in estimating error introduced by the use of RSA in the problem. The three interpolation methods tried here are examined for performance in replicating an analytic test function as measured by several different indicators. The process described here provides a framework for future studies using other interpolation schemes, test functions, and measures of approximation quality.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Romero, Vincent J.; Swiler, Laura Painton & Giunta, Anthony A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization and decant of Tank 42H sludge sample ESP-200 (open access)

Characterization and decant of Tank 42H sludge sample ESP-200

DWPF Engineering requested that the Savannah River Technology Center (SRTC) provide a demonstration of the DWPF flowsheet on sludge from Tank 42H in the Shielded Cell facility. A 5 liter sample of the Tank 42H sludge (ESP-200), obtained with the tank contents fully mixed, arrived at SRTC on January 20, 1998. This report details receipt of the 5 liter sample at SRTC, the decant of the sample, and the characterization of the pre- and post-decant Tank 42H sludge. Evaluation of the measured composition of the supernate indicates Sample ESP-200 became diluted approximately 20 percent by volume prior to receipt. This dilution complicates the relationship of the characterization of Post-Decant ESP-200 to the current contents of Tank 42H. For the purposes of modeling the current tank contents of Tank 42H, this report provides an estimated composition based on analytical data of recent samples from Tank 42H.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Hay, M.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) Facility Diesel Generator Fire Protection (open access)

Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) Facility Diesel Generator Fire Protection

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) has been prepared to demonstrate that the Fire Protection and Detection System installed by Project W-441 (Cold Vacuum Drying Facility and Diesel Generator Building) functions as required by project specifications.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Singh, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrosion detection in multi-layered rotocraft structures (open access)

Corrosion detection in multi-layered rotocraft structures

Rotorcraft structures do not readily lend themselves to quantifiable inspection methods due to airframe construction techniques. Periodic visual inspections are a common practice for detecting corrosion. Unfortunately, when the telltale signs of corrosion appear visually, extensive repair or refurbishment is required. There is a need to nondestructively evaluate airframe structures in order to recognize and quantify corrosion before visual indications are present. Nondestructive evaluations of rotorcraft airframes face inherent problems different from those of the fixed wing industry. Most rotorcraft lap joints are very narrow, contain raised fastener heads, may possess distortion, and consist of thinner gage materials ({approximately}0.012--0.125 inches). In addition the structures involve stack-ups of two and three layers of thin gage skins that are separated by sealant of varying thickness. Industry lacks the necessary data techniques, and experience to adequately perform routine corrosion inspection of rotorcraft. In order to address these problems, a program is currently underway to validate the use of eddy current inspection on specific rotorcraft lap joints. Probability of detection (POD) specimens have been produced that simulate two lap joint configurations on a model TH-57/206 helicopter. The FAA's Airworthiness Assurance Center (AANC) at Sandia Labs and Bell Helicopter have applied single and dual frequency …
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: ROACH,DENNIS P.; WALKINGTON,PHILLIP D.; HOHMAN,ED & MARSHALL,GREG
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Current issues in prompt photon production (open access)

Current issues in prompt photon production

The authors give a brief account of recent theoretical developments in prompt photon production.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Laenen, E.; Sterman, G. & Vogelsang, W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data analysis and radionuclide scaling factor for the B-Cell waste stream (open access)

Data analysis and radionuclide scaling factor for the B-Cell waste stream

This report documents a statistical data analysis of radiological data obtained to characterize the 324 Facility B-Cell decontamination and decommissioning waste stream.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: HILL, R.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Double Shell Tank (DST) Process Waste Sampling Subsystem Definition Report (open access)

Double Shell Tank (DST) Process Waste Sampling Subsystem Definition Report

This report defines the Double-Shell Tank (DST) Process Waste Sampling Subsystem (PWSS). This subsystem definition report fully describes and identifies the system boundaries of the PWSS. This definition provides a basis for developing functional, performance, and test requirements (i.e., subsystem specification), as necessary, for the PWSS. The resultant PWSS specification will include the sampling requirements to support the transfer of waste from the DSTs to the Privatization Contractor during Phase 1 of Waste Feed Delivery.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: RASMUSSEN, J.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Fault Displacement on Emplacement Drifts (open access)

Effects of Fault Displacement on Emplacement Drifts

The purpose of this analysis is to evaluate potential effects of fault displacement on emplacement drifts, including drip shields and waste packages emplaced in emplacement drifts. The output from this analysis not only provides data for the evaluation of long-term drift stability but also supports the Engineered Barrier System (EBS) process model report (PMR) and Disruptive Events Report currently under development. The primary scope of this analysis includes (1) examining fault displacement effects in terms of induced stresses and displacements in the rock mass surrounding an emplacement drift and (2 ) predicting fault displacement effects on the drip shield and waste package. The magnitude of the fault displacement analyzed in this analysis bounds the mean fault displacement corresponding to an annual frequency of exceedance of 10{sup -5} adopted for the preclosure period of the repository and also supports the postclosure performance assessment. This analysis is performed following the development plan prepared for analyzing effects of fault displacement on emplacement drifts (CRWMS M&O 2000). The analysis will begin with the identification and preparation of requirements, criteria, and inputs. A literature survey on accommodating fault displacements encountered in underground structures such as buried oil and gas pipelines will be conducted. For a …
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Duan, F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrical conductivity of fluid oxygen at high pressures (open access)

Electrical conductivity of fluid oxygen at high pressures

Electrical conductivities of fluid oxygen were measured between 30 and 80 GPa at a few 1000 K. These conditions were achieved with a reverberating shock wave technique. The measured conductivities were several orders of magnitude lower than measured previously on the single shock Hugoniot because of lower temperatures achieved under shock reverberation. Extrapolation of these data suggests that the minimum metallic conductivity of a metal will be reached near 100 GPa.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Bastea, M; Mitchell, A C & Nellis, W J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrohydraulic Valve-trains for Direct Injection Compression Ignition Camless Engine Operations - Phase I Project Final Report (open access)

Electrohydraulic Valve-trains for Direct Injection Compression Ignition Camless Engine Operations - Phase I Project Final Report

None
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Tsao, T-C.; Tai, C.; Stubbs, A. & Hanson, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Assessment and Finding of No Significant Impact: Transfer of the Department of Energy Grand Junction Office to Non-DOE Ownership (open access)

Environmental Assessment and Finding of No Significant Impact: Transfer of the Department of Energy Grand Junction Office to Non-DOE Ownership

The scope of this environmental assessment (EA) is to analyze the potential consequences of the Proposed Action on human health and the environment. Accordingly, this EA contains an introduction to the site and the history of the Grand Junction Office (Chapter One), a description of the Purpose and Need for Agency Action (Chapter Two), a description of the Proposed Action and Alternatives (Chapter Three), and the description of the Affected Environment and the Environmental Consequences (Chapter Four). Resource categories addressed in this EA include geology, soils and topography, groundwater and surface water, floodplains and wetlands, land use and infrastructure, human health, ecological resources, cultural resources, air quality, noise, visual resources, solid and hazardous waste management, transportation, and socioeconomic and environmental justice.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
European Security: The Debate in NATO and the European Union (open access)

European Security: The Debate in NATO and the European Union

This report reviews progress within NATO to develop a European Security and Defense Identity (ESDI), and the initiative within the European Union to create a common European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP). The report considers both European and U.S. perspectives on these developments. It will be updated as events warrant.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Donfried, Karen & Gallis, Paul E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Federal Research: DOE Is Providing Independent Review of the Scientific Merit of Its Research (open access)

Federal Research: DOE Is Providing Independent Review of the Scientific Merit of Its Research

A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO provided information on the Department of Energy's (DOE) merit review practices, focusing on: (1) what procedures DOE has established for performing merit reviews; and (2) whether DOE could document that it has followed the merit review procedures it has established."
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Global Modeling Initiative Assessment Model: Model Description, Integration and Testing of the Transport Shell (open access)

The Global Modeling Initiative Assessment Model: Model Description, Integration and Testing of the Transport Shell

We describe the three dimensional global stratospheric chemistry model developed under the NASA Global Modeling Initiative (GMI) to assess the possible environmental consequences from the emissions of a fleet of proposed high speed civil transport aircraft. This model was developed through a unique collaboration of the members of the GMI team. Team members provided computational modules representing various physical and chemical processes, and analysis of simulation results through extensive comparison to observation. The team members' modules were integrated within a computational framework that allowed transportability and simulations on massively parallel computers. A unique aspect of this model framework is the ability to interchange and intercompare different submodules to assess the sensitivity of numerical algorithms and model assumptions to simulation results. In this paper, we discuss the important attributes of the GMI effort, describe the GMI model computational framework and the numerical modules representing physical and chemical processes. As an application of the concept, we illustrate an analysis of the impact of advection algorithms on the dispersion of a NO{sub y}-like source in the stratosphere which mimics that of a fleet of commercial supersonic transports (High-Speed Civil Transport (HSCT)) flying between 17 and 20 kilometers.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Rotman, D. A.; Tannahill, J. R.; Kinnison, D. E.; Connell, P. S.; Bergmann, D.; Proctor, D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrostatic Mooring System (open access)

Hydrostatic Mooring System

This report is a summary of the following topics of the first quarter of 2000: (1) Han Padron Associates (HPA) provided conceptual structural design of the mooring buoy; and (2) they completed partial review of the HPA design and designed the sealing elements.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Jens Korsgaard
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
IRIS Program. Second quarterly report (open access)

IRIS Program. Second quarterly report

None
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Carelli, M. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Medical Records Confidentiality (open access)

Medical Records Confidentiality

None
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Minimum-time control of systems with Coloumb friction: Near global optima via mixed integer linear programming (open access)

Minimum-time control of systems with Coloumb friction: Near global optima via mixed integer linear programming

This work presents a method of finding near global optima to minimum-time trajectory generation problem for systems that would be linear if it were not for the presence of Coloumb friction. The required final state of the system is assumed to be maintainable by the system, and the input bounds are assumed to be large enough so that they can overcome the maximum static Coloumb friction force. Other than the previous work for generating minimum-time trajectories for non redundant robotic manipulators for which the path in joint space is already specified, this work represents, to the best of the authors' knowledge, the first approach for generating near global optima for minimum-time problems involving a nonlinear class of dynamic systems. The reason the optima generated are near global optima instead of exactly global optima is due to a discrete-time approximation of the system (which is usually used anyway to simulate such a system numerically). The method closely resembles previous methods for generating minimum-time trajectories for linear systems, where the core operation is the solution of a Phase I linear programming problem. For the nonlinear systems considered herein, the core operation is instead the solution of a mixed integer linear programming problem.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Driessen, Brian & Sadegh, Nader
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Model-Based Nonrigid Motion Analysis Using Natural Feature Adaptive Mesh (open access)

Model-Based Nonrigid Motion Analysis Using Natural Feature Adaptive Mesh

The success of nonrigid motion analysis using physical finite element model is dependent on the mesh that characterizes the object's geometric structure. We suggest a deformable mesh adapted to the natural features of images. The adaptive mesh requires much fewer number of nodes than the fixed mesh which was used in our previous work. We demonstrate the higher efficiency of the adaptive mesh in the context of estimating burn scar elasticity relative to normal skin elasticity using the observed 2D image sequence. Our results show that the scar assessment method based on the physical model using natural feature adaptive mesh can be applied to images which do not have artificial markers.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Zhang, Y.; Goldgof, D.B.; Sarkar, S. & Tsap, L.V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling of transient ionizing radiation effects in bipolar devices at high dose-rates (open access)

Modeling of transient ionizing radiation effects in bipolar devices at high dose-rates

To optimally design circuits for operation at high intensities of ionizing radiation, and to accurately predict their a behavior under radiation, precise device models are needed that include both stationary and dynamic effects of such radiation. Depending on the type and intensity of the ionizing radiation, different degradation mechanisms, such as photoelectric effect, total dose effect, or single even upset might be dominant. In this paper, the authors consider the photoelectric effect associated with the generation of electron-hole pairs in the semiconductor. The effects of low radiation intensity on p-II diodes and bipolar junction transistors (BJTs) were described by low-injection theory in the classical paper by Wirth and Rogers. However, in BJTs compatible with modem integrated circuit technology, high-resistivity regions are often used to enhance device performance, either as a substrate or as an epitaxial layer such as the low-doped n-type collector region of the device. Using low-injection theory, the transient response of epitaxial BJTs was discussed by Florian et al., who mainly concentrated on the effects of the Hi-Lo (high doping - low doping) epilayer/substrate junction of the collector, and on geometrical effects of realistic devices. For devices with highly resistive regions, the assumption of low-level injection is often …
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Fjeldly, T. A.; Deng, Y.; Shur, M. S.; Hjalmarson, Harold P. & Muyshondt, Arnoldo
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
New capabilities in the HENP grand challenge storage access systemand its application at RHIC (open access)

New capabilities in the HENP grand challenge storage access systemand its application at RHIC

The High Energy and Nuclear Physics Data Access GrandChallenge project has developed an optimizing storage access softwaresystem that was prototyped at RHIC. It is currently undergoingintegration with the STAR experiment in preparation for data taking thatstarts in mid-2000. The behavior and lessons learned in the RHIC MockData Challenge exercises are described as well as the observedperformance under conditions designed to characterize scalability. Up to250 simultaneous queries were tested and up to 10 million events across 7event components were involved in these queries. The system coordinatesthe staging of "bundles" of files from the HPSS tape system, so that allthe needed components of each event are in disk cache when accessed bythe application software. The caching policy algorithm for thecoordinated bundle staging is described in the paper. The initialprototype implementation interfaced to the Objectivity/DB. In this latestversion, it evolved to work with arbitrary files and use CORBA interfacesto the tag database and file catalog services. The interface to the tagdatabase and the MySQL-based file catalog services used by STAR aredescribed along with the planned usage scenarios.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Bernardo, L.; Gibbard, B.; Malon, D.; Nordberg, H.; Olson, D.; Porter, R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A note on the transition from coupled plasticity and damage to decohesion in the evolution of solder failure (open access)

A note on the transition from coupled plasticity and damage to decohesion in the evolution of solder failure

A key issue of solder joint reliability is joint failure due to thermomechanical fatigue (TMF). TMF is caused by different coefficients of thermal expansion (CTEs) of the materials in an electronic package, combined with changes in the ambient temperature. Different CTEs result in cyclical strain in the assembly, and this strain is concentrated almost entirely in the solder because it is the most deformable portion of the package. Since solder alloy is at a significant fraction of its melting point even at room temperature, the cyclical strain enhances mass diffusion and causes dramatic changes in the alloy microstructure over time. As the microstructure changes and becomes coarser, the solder alloy weakens and eventually microcracks nucleate and grow in the joint, leading to component failure. the failure of solder joints is difficult to detect due to the inert nature of the electrical system. If the system is not on for extended periods then failures can not be observed. Therefore it is important to develop an advanced predictive capability which allows scientists and engineers to predict solder degradation and identify reliability problems in aging electronics early.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Chen, Zhen & Fang, Huei Eliot
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library