Lead-bismuth spallation target design of the accelerator-driven test facility (ADTF). (open access)

Lead-bismuth spallation target design of the accelerator-driven test facility (ADTF).

A design methodology for the lead-bismuth eutectic (LBE) spallation target has been developed and applied for the accelerator-driven test facility (ADTF) target. This methodology includes the target interface with the subcritical multiplier (SCM) of the ADTF and the different engineering aspects of the target design, physics, heat-transfer, hydraulics, structural, radiological, and safety analyses. Several design constrains were defined and utilized for the target design process to satisfy different engineering requirements and to minimize the time and the cost of the design development. Interface requirements with the subcritical multiplier were defined based on target performance parameters and material damage issues to enhance the lifetime of the target structure. Different structural materials were considered to define the most promising candidate based on the current database including radiation effects. The developed target design has a coaxial geometrical configuration to minimize the target footprint and it is installed vertically along the SCM axis. LBE is the target material and the target coolant with ferritic steel (HT-9 alloy) structural material. The proton beam has 8.33-mA current uniformly distributed and 8.14-cm beam radius resulting in a current density of 40 {micro}A/cm{sup 2}. The beam power is 5 MW and the proton energy is 600 MeV. The …
Date: May 6, 2002
Creator: Gohar, Y.; Finck, P.; Hanson, A.; Herceg, J.; Koploy, M.; Krajtl, L. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quantum Kinematics of Bosonic Vortex Loops (open access)

Quantum Kinematics of Bosonic Vortex Loops

Poisson structure for vortex filaments (loops and arcs) in 2D ideal incompressible fluid is analyzed in detail. Canonical coordinates and momenta on coadjoint orbits of the area-preserving diffeomorphism group, associated with such vortices, are found. The quantum space of states in the simplest case of ''bosonic'' vortex loops is built within a geometric quantization approach to the description of a quantum fluid. Fock-like structure and non-local creation and annihilation operators of quantum vortex filaments are introduced.
Date: May 6, 1999
Creator: Goldin, G. A.; Owczarek, R. & Sharp, D. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Role of Hydrate Films in the Effectiveness of Direct CO2 Injection as an Ocean Carbon Sequestration Strategy (open access)

The Role of Hydrate Films in the Effectiveness of Direct CO2 Injection as an Ocean Carbon Sequestration Strategy

About one-third of the carbon dioxide (2 Pg C/yr of 6 Pg C/yr) we emit into the atmosphere is already being sequestered naturally by the ocean by the process of CO{sub 2} gas transfer across the air-sea interface. Over twenty years ago Brewer (1978) and Chen and Millero (1979) presented the first fundamental estimates of anthropogenic CO{sub 2} in the ocean based the hypothesis of CO{sub 2} penetration along isopycnal surfaces and observations of total inorganic carbon (TCO2) and total alkalinity (TA). At that time the anthropogenic CO{sub 2} signal was not as large as today and given the uncertainty of the approach, the uncertainties of the results were generally regarded as relatively large. However, since then, variations of this approach have been used to estimate anthropogenic CO{sub 2} in many areas of the world ocean. A recent modeling study using the DOCS model, confirms that penetration along isopycnal surfaces is the dominate mode of natural carbon sequestration by the ocean.
Date: May 6, 2004
Creator: Goyet, C
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbon Sequestration on Surface Mine Lands Quarterly Report (open access)

Carbon Sequestration on Surface Mine Lands Quarterly Report

An authorized budget was unavailable during this first 3-month working period of this project. Our ability to use the $100K that DOE had dedicated to the project was frustrated by the internal problem of getting an account number issued to bill our expenses to. This has delayed the initiation of a portion of the tasks to be performed. However, enough has been accomplished to allow the project to meet the first years planting goals. This will also allow the initiation of several start-up activities that could not have been possible without established tree plantations.
Date: May 6, 2003
Creator: Graves, Donald H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety Experience: Reactor and Critical Facilities (open access)

Safety Experience: Reactor and Critical Facilities

This document provides a discussion of reactor safety of the Hanford production reactor and critical facilities. A description of each facility is provided and details of significant safety incidents are provided.
Date: May 6, 1955
Creator: Greager, O. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Role of Superconductivity and Cryogenics in the Neutrinofactory (open access)

The Role of Superconductivity and Cryogenics in the Neutrinofactory

The proposed neutrino factory will produce a defined beam of neutrinos from the decay of muons in a storage ring[1,2,3]. The storage ring will be oriented so that the neutrinos can be detected at one or more detectors several thousand kilometers from the storage ring. This report presents an overview of the proposed neutrino factory and its subsystems that use cryogenics. Superconducting magnets will be used in the following ways in the neutrino factory; (1) the outsert solenoid for the 20 T pion capture system, (2) the decay channel where pions decay to muons, (3) the muon phase rotation system, (4) the muon cooling system, (5) focusing during the first stage of muon acceleration, (6) bending and focusing magnets in the re-circulating linac accelerator and (7) bending and focusing magnets in the muon storage ring where the neutrino beams are generated. Low temperature superconducting RF cavities will be used to accelerate the muons from about 200 MeV to 20 GeV. The muon cooling system uses liquid hydrogen absorbers at 20 K to reduce the emittance of the muon beam before it is accelerated to full energy.
Date: May 6, 2001
Creator: Green, M. A.; Black, E. L.; Gupta, R. C.; Iarocci, M. A.; Lebedev, V.; Miller, J. R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proof-of-Concept Experiments for Negative Ion Driver Beams for Heavy Ion Fusion (open access)

Proof-of-Concept Experiments for Negative Ion Driver Beams for Heavy Ion Fusion

Negative halogen ion beams have recently been proposed as heavy ion fusion drivers. They would avoid the problem of electron accumulation in positive ion beams, and could be efficiently photo-detached to neutrals if desired. Initial experiments using chlorine produced a current density of 45 mA/cm{sup 2} of 99.5% atomic negative Cl with an e/Cl- ratio as low as 7:1 and good emittance.
Date: May 6, 2003
Creator: Grisham, L. R.; Hahto, S. K.; Hahto, S. T.; Kwan, J. W. & Leung, K. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aircraft Cabin Environmental Quality Sensors (open access)

Aircraft Cabin Environmental Quality Sensors

The Indoor Environment Department at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) teamed with seven universities to participate in a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Center of Excellence (COE) for research on environmental quality in aircraft. This report describes research performed at LBNL on selecting and evaluating sensors for monitoring environmental quality in aircraft cabins, as part of Project 7 of the FAA's COE for Airliner Cabin Environmental Research (ACER)1 effort. This part of Project 7 links to the ozone, pesticide, and incident projects for data collection and monitoring and is a component of a broader research effort on sensors by ACER. Results from UCB and LBNL's concurrent research on ozone (ACER Project 1) are found in Weschler et al., 2007; Bhangar et al. 2008; Coleman et al., 2008 and Strom-Tejsen et al., 2008. LBNL's research on pesticides (ACER Project 2) in airliner cabins is described in Maddalena and McKone (2008). This report focused on the sensors needed for normal contaminants and conditions in aircraft. The results are intended to complement and coordinate with results from other ACER members who concentrated primarily on (a) sensors for chemical and biological pollutants that might be released intentionally in aircraft; (b) integration of sensor systems; and …
Date: May 6, 2010
Creator: Gundel, Lara; Kirchstetter, Thomas; Spears, Michael & Sullivan, Douglas
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Definitive process design, Redox multi-purpose dissolver installation (open access)

Definitive process design, Redox multi-purpose dissolver installation

This document provides the required definitive scope design for dissolver equipment capable of nuclear safe processing by geometry of E-Metal and certain other fuels enriched to a maximum of one per cent U-235 equivalent. Using only a single dissolver installation of this design, it will be possible to process the current E-Metal monthly commitment in less than two weeks (five-day week). The proposed dissolver system is to incorporate design flexibility required to permit conversion to Zirflex processing of NPR fuels.
Date: May 6, 1959
Creator: Gustafson, L. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Energy Neutron Imaging at LLNL (open access)

High-Energy Neutron Imaging at LLNL

LLNL is currently engaged in the development of high-energy (10 MeV) neutron imaging technology to complement existing x-ray diagnostic tools in U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) nondestructive evaluation (NDE) applications. Our goal is to develop and deploy a nonintrusive imaging system capable of detecting cubic-mm-scale voids, cracks or other significant structural defects in heavily-shielded low-Z materials within very thick objects. The final production-line system that we envision will be relatively compact (suitable for use in existing facilities within the DOE complex) and capable of acquiring both radiographic and tomographic (CT) images. In this paper, the design status of the high-intensity, accelerator-driven neutron source and large-format imaging detector associated with the system will be discussed and results from one recent neutron imaging experiment conducted at the Ohio University Accelerator Laboratory (OUAL) in Athens, OH will be presented.
Date: May 6, 2007
Creator: Hall, J; Rusnak, B & Fitsos, P
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rare-earth transition-metal intermetallics: Structure-bonding-property relationships (open access)

Rare-earth transition-metal intermetallics: Structure-bonding-property relationships

The explorations of rare-earth, transition metal intermetallics have resulted in the synthesis and characterization, and electronic structure investigation, as well as understanding the structure-bonding property relationships. The work has presented the following results: (1) Understanding the relationship between compositions and properties in LaFe{sub 13-x}Si{sub x} system: A detailed structural and theoretical investigation provided the understanding of the role of a third element on stabilizing the structure and controlling the transformation of cubic NaZn{sub 13}-type structures to the tetragonal derivative, as well as the relationship between the structures and properties. (2) Synthesis of new ternary rare-earth iron silicides Re{sub 2-x}Fe{sub 4}Si{sub 14-y} and proposed superstructure: This compound offers complex structural challenges such as fractional occupancies and their ordering in superstructure. (3) Electronic structure calculation of FeSi{sub 2}: This shows that the metal-semiconductor phase transition depends on the structure. The mechanism of band gap opening is described in terms of bonding and structural distortion. This result shows that the electronic structure calculations are an essential tool for understanding the relationship between structure and chemical bonding in these compounds. (4) Synthesis of new ternary rare-earth Zinc aluminides Tb{sub 3}Zn{sub 3.6}Al{sub 7.4}: Partially ordered structure of Tb{sub 3}Zn{sub 3.6}Al{sub 7.4} compound provides new insights …
Date: May 6, 2006
Creator: Han, M.K.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mini-conference on Angular Momentum Transport in Laboratory and Nature (open access)

Mini-conference on Angular Momentum Transport in Laboratory and Nature

This paper provides a concise summary of the current status of the research and future perspectives discussed in the Mini-Conference on Angular Momentum Transport in Laboratory and Nature. This Mini-conference, sponsored by the Topical Group on Plasma Astrophysics, was held as part of the American Physical Society's Division of Plasma Physics 2007 Annual Meeting (November 12{16, 2007). This Mini-conference covers a wide range of phenomena happening in fluids and plasmas, either in laboratory or in nature. The purpose of this paper is not to comprehensively review these phenomena, but to provide a starting point for interested readers to refer to related research in areas other than their own.
Date: May 6, 2008
Creator: Hantao Ji, Philipp Kronberg, Stewart C. Prager, and Dmitri A. Uzdensky
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Increasing heavy oil reserves in the Wilmington oil field through advanced reservoir characterization and thermal production technologies. Technical progress report (open access)

Increasing heavy oil reserves in the Wilmington oil field through advanced reservoir characterization and thermal production technologies. Technical progress report

The project involves improving thermal recovery techniques in a slope and basin clastic (SBC) reservoir in the Wilmington field, Los Angeles Co., California using advanced reservoir characterization and thermal production technologies. This is the third quarterly technical progress report for the project. Significant technical achievements accomplished include the drilling of four horizontal wells (two producers and two steam injectors) utilizing a new and lower cost drilling program, the drilling of five observation wells to monitor the horizontal steamflood pilot, the installation of a subsurface harbor channel crossing for delivering steam to an island location, and a geochemical study of the scale minerals being created in the wellbore. Cyclic steam injection into the two horizontal injection wells began in mid-December 1995 utilizing the new 2400 ft steam line under the Cerritos channel and the wells will be placed on production in May. Cyclic steam injection into the two horizontal producers will start in May. Work on the basic reservoir engineering is expected to be completed in March 1996. The deterministic geologic model was improved to add eight layers to the previous ten.
Date: May 6, 1996
Creator: Hara, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Elastic-Wavefield Seismic Stratigraphy: A New Seismic Imaging Technology Progress Report (open access)

Elastic-Wavefield Seismic Stratigraphy: A New Seismic Imaging Technology Progress Report

The focus of elastic-wavefield seismic stratigraphy research shifted from onshore prospects to marine environments during this report period. Four-component ocean-bottom-cable (4-C OBC) seismic data acquired in water depths of 2400 to 2500 feet across Green Canyon Block 237 in the Gulf of Mexico were processed and analyzed. The P-P and P-SV images of strata immediately below the seafloor exhibit amazing differences in P-P and P-SV seismic facies. These data may be one of the classic examples of the basic concepts of elastic-wavefield seismic stratigraphy.
Date: May 6, 2004
Creator: Hardage, Bob A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wireless Sensors and Networks for Advanced Energy Management (open access)

Wireless Sensors and Networks for Advanced Energy Management

Numerous national studies and working groups have identified low-cost, very low-power wireless sensors and networks as a critical enabling technology for increasing energy efficiency, reducing waste, and optimizing processes. Research areas for developing such sensor and network platforms include microsensor arrays, ultra-low power electronics and signal conditioning, data/control transceivers, and robust wireless networks. A review of some of the research in the following areas will be discussed: (1) Low-cost, flexible multi-sensor array platforms (CO{sub 2}, NO{sub x}, CO, humidity, NH{sub 3}, O{sub 2}, occupancy, etc.) that enable energy and emission reductions in applications such as buildings and manufacturing; (2) Modeling investments (energy usage and savings to drive capital investment decisions) and estimated uptime improvements through pervasive gathering of equipment and process health data and its effects on energy; (3) Robust, self-configuring wireless sensor networks for energy management; and (4) Quality-of-service for secure and reliable data transmission from widely distributed sensors. Wireless communications is poised to support technical innovations in the industrial community, with widespread use of wireless sensors forecasted to improve manufacturing production and energy efficiency and reduce emissions. Progress being made in wireless system components, as described in this paper, is helping bring these projected improvements to reality.
Date: May 6, 2005
Creator: Hardy, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of Air Ingress Across the Duct During the Accident Conditions (open access)

Study of Air Ingress Across the Duct During the Accident Conditions

The goal of this project is to study the fundamental physical phenoena associated with air ingress in very high temperature reactors (VHTRs). Air ingress may occur due to a nupture of primary piping and a subsequent breach in the primary pressure boundary in helium-cooled and graphite-moderated VHTRs. Significant air ingress is a concern because it introduces potential to expose the fuel, graphite support rods, and core to a risk of severe graphite oxidation. Two of the most probable air ingress scenarios involve rupture of a control rod or fuel access standpipe, and rupture in the main coolant pipe on the lower part of the reactor pressure vessel. Therefor, establishing a fundamental understanding of air ingress phenomena is critical in order to rationally evaluate safety of existing VHTRs and develop new designs that mimimize these risks. But despite this importance, progress toward development these predictive capabilities has been slowed by the complex nature of the underlaying phenomena. The combination of interdiffusion among multiple species, molecular diffusion, natural convection, and complex geometries, as well as the multiple chemical reactions involved, impose significant roadblocks to both modeling and experiment design. The project team will employ a coordinated experimental and computational effort that will …
Date: May 6, 2013
Creator: Hassan, Yassin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plutonium metal burning facility (open access)

Plutonium metal burning facility

A glove-box facility was designed to convert plutonium skull metal or unburned oxide to an oxide acceptable for plutonium recovery and purification. A discussion of the operation, safety aspects, and electrical schematics are included.
Date: May 6, 1977
Creator: Hausburg, D. E. & Leebl, R. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Outline of status of national seismic stations (NSS) in CTB negotiations (open access)

Outline of status of national seismic stations (NSS) in CTB negotiations

The paper discusses two treaties that are being negotiated: Multilateral Treaty, which bans all nuclear weapon tests and establishes a moratorium on PNEs (Peaceful Nuclear Explosions) for the life of the treaty, and a separate verification agreement, which provides for much more extensive verification measures that does the Multilateral Treaty and to which only the US, UK, and USSR will adhere. On the latter treaty, agreement has been reached that there will be improved seismic stations (NSS) in each country. Discussed are the outstanding general points of agreement or disagreement on NSS; technical characteristics of NSS; and a joint cooperative program for NSS.
Date: May 6, 1980
Creator: Heckrotte, W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Content and structure of MCF files (open access)

Content and structure of MCF files

None
Date: May 6, 1997
Creator: Hedstrom, G. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microfluidic gas flow profiling using remote detection NMR (open access)

Microfluidic gas flow profiling using remote detection NMR

Miniaturized fluid handling devices have recently attracted considerable interest in many areas of science1. Such microfluidic chips perform a variety of functions, ranging from analysis of biological macromolecules2,3 to catalysis of reactions and sensing in the gas phase4,5. To enable precise fluid handling, accurate knowledge of the flow properties within these devices is important. Due to low Reynolds numbers, laminar flow is usually assumed. However, either by design or unintentionally, the flow characteristic in small channels is often altered, for example by surface interactions, viscous and diffusional effects, or electrical potentials. Therefore, its prediction is not always straight-forward6-8. Currently, most microfluidic flow measurements rely on optical detection of markers9,10, requiring the injection of tracers and transparent devices. Here, we show profiles of microfluidic gas flow in capillaries and chip devices obtained by NMR in the remote detection modality11,12. Through the transient measurement of dispersion13, NMR is well adaptable for non-invasive, yet sensitive determination of the flow field and provides a novel and potentially more powerful tool to profile flow in capillaries and miniaturized flow devices.
Date: May 6, 2005
Creator: Hilty, Christian; McDonnell, Erin; Granwehr, Josef; Pierce,Kimberly; Han, Song-I Han & Pines, Alexander
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production test IP-677-A: Hot-die-sized tube cladding (open access)

Production test IP-677-A: Hot-die-sized tube cladding

The incentives, objectives, and previous test results of the hot-die- sizing program have been presented in recent documents. The test described in this report is one additional step in the evaluation of an alternate fuel fabrication process.
Date: May 6, 1964
Creator: Hladek, K. L. & Baars, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanical and thermophysical properties of hot-pressed SYNROC B (open access)

Mechanical and thermophysical properties of hot-pressed SYNROC B

The optimal SYNROC compositons for use with commercial waste are reviewed. Large amounts of powder (about 2.5 kg) were prepared by convention al ceramic operations to test the SYNROC concept on a processing scale. Samples, 15.2 cm in diameter, were hot pressed in graphite, and representative samples were cut for microstructural evaluations. Measured mechanical and thermophysical properties did not vary significantly as a function of sample location and were typical of titanate ceramic materials.
Date: May 6, 1981
Creator: Hoenig, C. L.; Newkirk, H. W.; Otto, R. A.; Brady, R. L.; Brown, A. E.; Ulrich, A. R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiation safety at the West Valley Demonstration Project (open access)

Radiation safety at the West Valley Demonstration Project

This is a report on the Radiation Safety Program at the West Valley Demonstration Project (WVDP). This Program covers a number of activities that support high-level waste solidification, stabilization of facilities, and decontamination and decommissioning activities at the Project. The conduct of the Program provides confidence that all occupational radiation exposures received during operational tasks at the Project are within limits, standards, and program requirements, and are as low as reasonably achievable.
Date: May 6, 1997
Creator: Hoffman, R.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cell surface glycoconjugates of Rhizobium and symbiosis (open access)

Cell surface glycoconjugates of Rhizobium and symbiosis

This report describes key findings on the characterization of the structure and function of Rhizobium polysaccharides and how they relate to the symbiosis between these bacteria and legume plants.
Date: May 6, 2001
Creator: Hollingsworth, Rawle
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library