An automated tool for evaluating compliance and providing assistance with building energy standards during design (open access)

An automated tool for evaluating compliance and providing assistance with building energy standards during design

In an effort to encourage the maximum cost-effective level of energy efficiency in new building design, energy-efficiency standards have become more location-specific and performance-based. As a result, standards often provide more than one path for ensuring and demonstrating that a design complies, but at the cost of increased complexity. In addition, the burden of remedying a noncompliant design rests on the designers' knowledge and experience, with only general guidance provided by the standards. As part of efforts in the US Department of Energy's (DOE's) Advanced Energy Design and Operation Technologies (AEDOT) project, a team at DOE's Pacific Northwest Laboratory is developing a computer program known as the Energy Standards Intelligent Design Tool (ES-IDT). The ES-IDT is one component of a prototype computer-based building design environment. It performs automatic compliance checking for parts of ASHRAE/IES Standard 90.1-1989 and provides designers assistance in bringing noncomplying designs into compliance. This paper describes the ES-IDT, the functions it provides, and how it is integrated into the design process via the AEDOT prototype building design environment. 9 refs.
Date: April 30, 1992
Creator: Quadrel, R.W.; Brambley, M.R. & Stratton, R.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An automated tool for evaluating compliance and providing assistance with building energy standards during design (open access)

An automated tool for evaluating compliance and providing assistance with building energy standards during design

In an effort to encourage the maximum cost-effective level of energy efficiency in new building design, energy-efficiency standards have become more location-specific and performance-based. As a result, standards often provide more than one path for ensuring and demonstrating that a design complies, but at the cost of increased complexity. In addition, the burden of remedying a noncompliant design rests on the designers` knowledge and experience, with only general guidance provided by the standards. As part of efforts in the US Department of Energy`s (DOE`s) Advanced Energy Design and Operation Technologies (AEDOT) project, a team at DOE`s Pacific Northwest Laboratory is developing a computer program known as the Energy Standards Intelligent Design Tool (ES-IDT). The ES-IDT is one component of a prototype computer-based building design environment. It performs automatic compliance checking for parts of ASHRAE/IES Standard 90.1-1989 and provides designers assistance in bringing noncomplying designs into compliance. This paper describes the ES-IDT, the functions it provides, and how it is integrated into the design process via the AEDOT prototype building design environment. 9 refs.
Date: April 30, 1992
Creator: Quadrel, R. W.; Brambley, M. R. & Stratton, R. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determining a cost/effectiveness/safety tradeoff methodology for strategic nuclear warheads (open access)

Determining a cost/effectiveness/safety tradeoff methodology for strategic nuclear warheads

Department of Energy national laboratories are charged with anticipating with a long leadtime which technologies for nuclear warheads should be developed. The Safe Warhead System Study was constituted to provide Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory management with information and suggestions for making such decisions for enhanced safety warheads. The Minuteman III replacement warheads were analyzed as a test case and that information was used to identify and describe the dominant issues, to develop a methodology and to make initial recommendations. The test case work resulted in several insights into how ongoing design and engineering interacts with the technology ranking and on how to cope with the ubiquitous uncertainties relating to our current ICBM force.
Date: April 27, 1992
Creator: Erickson, S. A. Jr. & Hall, C. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Westinghouse Waste Isolation Division Management and Supervisor Training Program (open access)

The Westinghouse Waste Isolation Division Management and Supervisor Training Program

The Westinghouse Waste Isolation Division (WID) is the management and operating contractor (MOC) for the Department of Energy`s (DOE`s) Waste Isolation Plant (WIPP). Managers and supervisors at DOE facilities such as the WIPP are required to complete extensive training. To meet this requirement, WID created a self-paced, self-study program known as Management and Supervisor Training (MAST). All WID managers and supervisors are required to earn certification through the MAST program. Selected employees are permitted to participate in MAST with prior approval from their manager and the Human Resources Manager. Initial MAST certification requires the completion of 31 modules. MAST participants check out modules and read them when convenient. When they are prepared, participants take module examinations. To receive credit for a given module, participants must score at least 80 percent on the examination. Lessons learned from the development, implementation, and administration are presented in this paper.
Date: April 23, 1992
Creator: Gilbreath, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of U-5 prototype undulator effects on the beam dynamics (open access)

Simulation of U-5 prototype undulator effects on the beam dynamics

The APS prototype undulator U-5 has been installed at NSLS VUV ring. Its effects on the beam behaviour have been simulated with tracking codes TEAPOT and RACETRACK. The tune shift, the distortion of betatron function, the chromaticity, the transverse coupling, and some of the amplitude-dependent effects on the VUV ring have been compared and are presented in this paper.
Date: April 6, 1992
Creator: Qian, Y. L. & Turner, L. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of U-5 Prototype Undulator Effects on the Beam Dynamics (open access)

Simulation of U-5 Prototype Undulator Effects on the Beam Dynamics

The APS prototype undulator U-5 has been installed at NSLS VUV ring. Its effects on the beam behaviour have been simulated with tracking codes TEAPOT and RACETRACK. The tune shift, the distortion of betatron function, the chromaticity, the transverse coupling, and some of the amplitude-dependent effects on the VUV ring have been compared and are presented in this paper.
Date: April 6, 1992
Creator: Qian, Y. L. & Turner, L. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerosols released during large-scale integral MCCI tests in the ACE Program (open access)

Aerosols released during large-scale integral MCCI tests in the ACE Program

As part of the internationally sponsored Advanced Containment Experiments (ACE) program, seven large-scale experiments on molten core concrete interactions (MCCIs) have been performed at Argonne National Laboratory. One of the objectives of these experiments is to collect and characterize all the aerosols released from the MCCIs. Aerosols released from experiments using four types of concrete (siliceous, limestone/common sand, serpentine, and limestone/limestone) and a range of metal oxidation for both BWR and PWR reactor core material have been collected and characterized. Release fractions were determined for UO{sup 2}, Zr, the fission-products: BaO, SrO, La{sub 2}O{sub 3}, CeO{sub 2}, MoO{sub 2}, Te, Ru, and control materials: Ag, In, and B{sub 4}C. Release fractions of UO{sub 2} and the fission products other than Te were small in all tests. However, release of control materials was significant.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Fink, J. K.; Thompson, D. H.; Spencer, B. W. & Sehgal, B. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alternate manufacturing processes and materials for the SSC dipole magnet coil end parts (open access)

Alternate manufacturing processes and materials for the SSC dipole magnet coil end parts

Modern magnet designs such as the SSC dipole utilize smaller bore diameter and wider superconducting cable. Challenging winding techniques place greater emphasis on the role of the coil end parts. Their complex configuration is derived from their function of confining the conductors to a consistent given shape and location. Present end parts, made of G-10 composite, are manufactured utilizing complex and expensive 5-axis machining techniques. Several alternate manufacturing processes and materials described in this paper will result in a substantial cost reduction for mass producing the end parts. The alternate processes are divided into two major groups. The composite group consists of Resin Transfer Molding (RAM), Compound Transfer Mold (CAM), Injection Molded Composite (IMP) and Compression Molded Composite (CC). The base metal coated group consists of Chemical Vapor Deposition (CAD) dip coating and hard coatings/anodizing. The paper will provide an overview of the various processes and compare test performance and cost to that of the process currently used.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Lipski, A.; Bossert, R.; Brandt, J.; Hoffman, J.; Kobliska, G.; Zweibohmer, J. (Fermi National Accelerator Lab., Batavia, IL (United States)) et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alternate manufacturing processes and materials for the SSC dipole magnet coil end parts (open access)

Alternate manufacturing processes and materials for the SSC dipole magnet coil end parts

Modern magnet designs such as the SSC dipole utilize smaller bore diameter and wider superconducting cable. Challenging winding techniques place greater emphasis on the role of the coil end parts. Their complex configuration is derived from their function of confining the conductors to a consistent given shape and location. Present end parts, made of G-10 composite, are manufactured utilizing complex and expensive 5-axis machining techniques. Several alternate manufacturing processes and materials described in this paper will result in a substantial cost reduction for mass producing the end parts. The alternate processes are divided into two major groups. The composite group consists of Resin Transfer Molding (RAM), Compound Transfer Mold (CAM), Injection Molded Composite (IMP) and Compression Molded Composite (CC). The base metal coated group consists of Chemical Vapor Deposition (CAD) dip coating and hard coatings/anodizing. The paper will provide an overview of the various processes and compare test performance and cost to that of the process currently used.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Lipski, A.; Bossert, R.; Brandt, J.; Hoffman, J.; Kobliska, G.; Zweibohmer, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analog neural networks in an upgraded muon trigger for the DZero detector (open access)

Analog neural networks in an upgraded muon trigger for the DZero detector

The use of analog neural networks as part of the DZero muon detector is considered. A study was made of tracking through a single muon chamber using neural network techniques. A hardware application based on Intel's ETANN ship was designed and used in a test beam at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Plans to implement a neural network trigger in DZero are also discussed.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Fortner, M. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analog neural networks in an upgraded muon trigger for the DZero detector (open access)

Analog neural networks in an upgraded muon trigger for the DZero detector

The use of analog neural networks as part of the DZero muon detector is considered. A study was made of tracking through a single muon chamber using neural network techniques. A hardware application based on Intel`s ETANN ship was designed and used in a test beam at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Plans to implement a neural network trigger in DZero are also discussed.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Fortner, M. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of individual microscopic particles by means of synchrotron radiation induced x-ray micro fluorescence (open access)

Analysis of individual microscopic particles by means of synchrotron radiation induced x-ray micro fluorescence

None
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Janssens, K.H.; Adams, F.C. (Antwerp Univ., Wilrijk (Belgium)); Rivers, M.L. (Chicago Univ., IL (United States)) & Jones, K.W. (Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, NY (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aspects of strangeness production with 15 -- 30 GeV proton beams (open access)

Aspects of strangeness production with 15 -- 30 GeV proton beams

We discuss the spectrum of physics questions related to strangeness which could be addressed with a 15--30 GeV proton storage ring. We focus on various aspects of strangeness production, including hyperon production in pp collisions, studies of hyperon-nucleon scattering, production of hyper-fragments in p-nucleus collisions, and hyperon spin observables in inclusive production.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Dover, C. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aspects of strangeness production with 15 -- 30 GeV proton beams (open access)

Aspects of strangeness production with 15 -- 30 GeV proton beams

We discuss the spectrum of physics questions related to strangeness which could be addressed with a 15--30 GeV proton storage ring. We focus on various aspects of strangeness production, including hyperon production in pp collisions, studies of hyperon-nucleon scattering, production of hyper-fragments in p-nucleus collisions, and hyperon spin observables in inclusive production.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Dover, C. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Balance in machine architecture: Bandwidth on board and offboard, integer/control speed and flops versus memory (open access)

Balance in machine architecture: Bandwidth on board and offboard, integer/control speed and flops versus memory

The issues to be addressed here are those of balance'' in machine architecture. By this, we mean how much emphasis must be placed on various aspects of the system to maximize its usefulness for physics. There are three components that contribute to the utility of a system: How the machine can be used, how big a problem can be attacked, and what the effective capabilities (power) of the hardware are like. The effective power issue is a matter of evaluating the impact of design decisions trading off architectural features such as memory bandwidth and interprocessor communication capabilities. What is studied is the effect these machine parameters have on how quickly the system can solve desired problems. There is a reasonable method for studying this: One selects a few representative algorithms and computes the impact of changing memory bandwidths, and so forth. The only room for controversy here is in the selection of representative problems. The issue of how big a problem can be attacked boils down to a balance of memory size versus power. Although this is a balance issue it is very different than the effective power situation, because no firm answer can be given at this time. The …
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Fischler, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Balance in Machine Architecture: Bandwidth on board and offboard, integer/control speed and flops versus memory (open access)

Balance in Machine Architecture: Bandwidth on board and offboard, integer/control speed and flops versus memory

The issues to be addressed here are those of ``balance`` in machine architecture. By this, we mean how much emphasis must be placed on various aspects of the system to maximize its usefulness for physics. There are three components that contribute to the utility of a system: How the machine can be used, how big a problem can be attacked, and what the effective capabilities (power) of the hardware are like. The effective power issue is a matter of evaluating the impact of design decisions trading off architectural features such as memory bandwidth and interprocessor communication capabilities. What is studied is the effect these machine parameters have on how quickly the system can solve desired problems. There is a reasonable method for studying this: One selects a few representative algorithms and computes the impact of changing memory bandwidths, and so forth. The only room for controversy here is in the selection of representative problems. The issue of how big a problem can be attacked boils down to a balance of memory size versus power. Although this is a balance issue it is very different than the effective power situation, because no firm answer can be given at this time. The …
Date: April 1992
Creator: Fischler, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Baroclinic Model of turbulent dusty flows (open access)

A Baroclinic Model of turbulent dusty flows

The problem considered here is the numerical simulation of the turbulent dusty flow induced by explosions over soil surfaces. Some of the unresolved issues are: (1) how much dust is scoured from such surfaces; (2) where does the dust go in the boundary layer; (3) what is the dusty boundary layer height versus time; (4) what are the dusty boundary layer profiles; (5) how much of the dust mass becomes entrained into the dust stem; and (6) where does the dust go in the buoyant cloud? The author proposes a Baroclinic Model for flows with large density variations that actually calculates the turbulent mixing and transport of dust on an adaptive grid. The model is based on the following idealizations: (1) a loose dust bed; (2) an instantaneous shock fluidization of the dust layer; (3) the dust and air are in local equilibrium (so air viscosity enforces the no-slip condition); (4) the dust-air mixture is treated as a continuum dense fluid with zero viscosity; and (5) the turbulent mixing is dominated by baroclinically-generated vorticity. These assumptions lead to an inviscid set of conservation laws for the mixture, which are solved by means of a high-order Godunov algorithm for gasdynamics. Adaptive …
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Kuhl, A. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beamstrahlung spectra in next generation linear colliders (open access)

Beamstrahlung spectra in next generation linear colliders

For the next generation of linear colliders, the energy loss due to beamstrahlung during the collision of the e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} beams is expected to substantially influence the effective center-of-mass energy distribution of the colliding particles. In this paper, we first derive analytical formulae for the electron and photon energy spectra under multiple beamstrahlung processes, and for the e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} and {gamma}{gamma} differential luminosities. We then apply our formulation to various classes of 500 GeV e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} linear collider designs currently under study.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Barklow, T.; Chen, P. (Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Menlo Park, CA (United States)) & Kozanecki, W. (DAPNIA-SPP, CEN-Saclay (France))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beamstrahlung spectra in next generation linear colliders. Revision (open access)

Beamstrahlung spectra in next generation linear colliders. Revision

For the next generation of linear colliders, the energy loss due to beamstrahlung during the collision of the e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} beams is expected to substantially influence the effective center-of-mass energy distribution of the colliding particles. In this paper, we first derive analytical formulae for the electron and photon energy spectra under multiple beamstrahlung processes, and for the e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} and {gamma}{gamma} differential luminosities. We then apply our formulation to various classes of 500 GeV e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} linear collider designs currently under study.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Barklow, T.; Chen, P. & Kozanecki, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
BNL ALARA Center experience with an information exchange system on dose control at nuclear power plants (open access)

BNL ALARA Center experience with an information exchange system on dose control at nuclear power plants

The essential elements of an international information exchange system on dose control at nuclear power plants are summarized. Information was collected from literature abstracting services, by attending technical meetings, by circulating data collection forms, and through personal contacts. Data are assembled in various databases and periodically disseminated to several hundred interested participants through a variety of publications and at technical meetings. Immediate on-line access to the data is available to participants with modems, commercially available communications software, and a password that is provided by the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) ALARA Center to authorized users of the system. Since January 1992, rapid access also has been provided to persons with fax machines. Some information is available for ``polling`` the BNL system at any time, and other data can be installed for polling on request. Most information disseminated to data has been through publications; however, new protocols, simplified by the ALARA Center staff, and the convenience of fax machines are likely to make the earlier availability of information through these mechanisms increasingly important.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Baum, J. W. & Khan, T. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Building performance analysis using interactive multimedia concepts (open access)

Building performance analysis using interactive multimedia concepts

We describe LBL's involvement with multimedia concepts by discussing several modules of an advanced computer-based building envelope design tool. The qualitative and quantitative aspects of the building design process are accommodated within the same design tool which uses object-oriented programming procedures. This computer-based concept utilizes images (buildings, landscapes, models, documents, etc.), expert systems (knowledge bases, i.e., lighting design, site planning, HVAC design, etc.), and data bases (design criteria, utility rates, climatic data, etc.) in addition to more traditional simulation models to evaluate building design alternatives.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Selkowitz, S.; Beltran, L.; Osterhaus, W.; Papamichael, K.; Schuman, J.; Sullivan, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Building performance analysis using interactive multimedia concepts (open access)

Building performance analysis using interactive multimedia concepts

We describe LBL`s involvement with multimedia concepts by discussing several modules of an advanced computer-based building envelope design tool. The qualitative and quantitative aspects of the building design process are accommodated within the same design tool which uses object-oriented programming procedures. This computer-based concept utilizes images (buildings, landscapes, models, documents, etc.), expert systems (knowledge bases, i.e., lighting design, site planning, HVAC design, etc.), and data bases (design criteria, utility rates, climatic data, etc.) in addition to more traditional simulation models to evaluate building design alternatives.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Selkowitz, S.; Beltran, L.; Osterhaus, W.; Papamichael, K.; Schuman, J.; Sullivan, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of coals, other kerogens, and their extracts by thermal mass spectrometry (open access)

Characterization of coals, other kerogens, and their extracts by thermal mass spectrometry

The objective of this study is to elucidate the nature of the medium size molecules derived from coals by a succession of stronger extraction conditions. The Argonne Premium Coals have been extracted with pyridine, binary solvents and with KOH/ethylene glycol at 250{degrees}C. Thermal desorption and pyrolysis mass spectrometry were the major approaches chosen to provide detailed information on structure and heteroatom composition. Soft ionization techniques including desorption chemical ionization (DCI) and fast atom bombardment (FAB) were combined with high resolution and tandem MS techniques. This paper will focus on the comparison of the nature of the unextracted coals, the pyridine extract and the extracted coal residue. With this approach the desorption-pyrolysis yields of the extracts and residues combined were greater than the yields from the starting material. Although molecule weight distributions had a monitor dependence on rank, the nature of molecules with the same nominal mass varied greatly with rank.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Winans, R. E.; Melnikov, P. E. & McBeth, R. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Charge-sensitive poly-silicon TFT amplifiers for a-Si:H pixel particle detectors (open access)

Charge-sensitive poly-silicon TFT amplifiers for a-Si:H pixel particle detectors

Prototype charge-sensitive poly-Si TFT amplifiers have been made for the amplification of signals (from an a-Si:H pixel diode used as an ionizing particle detector). They consist of a charge-sensitive gain stage, a voltage gain stage and a source follower output stage. The gain-bandwidth product of the amplifier is {approximately} 300 MHz. When the amplifier is connected to a pixel detector of 0.2 pF, it gives a charge-to-voltage gain of {approximately} 0.02 mV/electrons with a pulse rise time less than 100 nsec. An equivalent noise charge of the front-end TFT is {approximately} 1000 electrons for a shaping time of 1 {mu}sec.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Cho, G.; Perez-Mendez, V.; Hack, M. & Lewis, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library