States

Simulation of underwater explosion benchmark experiments with ALE3D (open access)

Simulation of underwater explosion benchmark experiments with ALE3D

Some code improvements have been made during the course of this study. One immediately obvious need was for more flexibility in the constitutive representation for materials in shell elements. To remedy this situation, a model with a tabular representation of stress versus strain and rate dependent effects was implemented. This was required in order to obtain reasonable results in the IED cylinder simulation. Another deficiency was in the ability to extract and plot variables associated with shell elements. The pipe whip analysis required the development of a scheme to tally and plot time dependent shell quantities such as stresses and strains. This capability had previously existed only for solid elements. Work was initiated to provide the same range of plotting capability for structural elements that exist with the DYNA3D/TAURUS tools. One of the characteristics of these problems is the disparity in zoning required in the vicinity of the charge and bubble compared to that needed in the far field. This disparity can cause the equipotential relaxation logic to provide a less than optimal solution. Various approaches were utilized to bias the relaxation to obtain more optimal meshing during relaxation. Extensions of these techniques have been developed to provide more powerful …
Date: May 19, 1997
Creator: Couch, R. & Faux, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measuring Gas Composition and Pressure Within Sealed Containers Using Acoustic Resonance Spectroscopy (open access)

Measuring Gas Composition and Pressure Within Sealed Containers Using Acoustic Resonance Spectroscopy

Interim and long-term storage of carefully prepared plutonium material within hermetically sealed containers may generate dangerous gas pressures and compositions. The authors have been investigating the application of acoustic resonance spectroscopy to non-intrusively monitor changes in these parameters within sealed containers. In this approach a drum-like gas cavity is formed within the storage container which is excited using a piezoelectric transducer mounted on the outside of the container. The frequency response spectrum contains a series of peaks whose positions and widths are determined by the composition of the gas and the geometry of the cylindrical resonator; the intensities are related to the gas pressure. Comparing observed gas frequencies with theory gives excellent agreement. Small changes in gas composition, better than 1:1000, are readily measurable.
Date: May 19, 1997
Creator: Veirs, D. K.; Heiple, C. R.; Rosenblatt, G. M. & Baiardo, J. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering task plan for rotary mode core sampling exhausters CAM high radiation interlock (open access)

Engineering task plan for rotary mode core sampling exhausters CAM high radiation interlock

The Rotary Mode Core Sampling (RMCS) system is primarily made up of the Rotary Mode Core Sample Trucks (RMCST) and the RMCS Exhausters. During RMCS operations an Exhauster is connected to a tank riser and withdraws gases from the tank dome vapor space at approximately 200 Standard Cubic Feet per Minute (SCFM). The gases are passed through two High Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) filters before passing out the exhaust stack to the atmosphere. A Continuous Air Monitor (CAM) monitors the exhaust gases in the exhaust stack for beta particle and gamma radiation. The CAM has a high radiation alarm output and a detector fail alarm output. The CAM alarms are currently connected to the data logger only. The CAM alarms require operator response per procedure LMHC 1998 but no automatic functions are initiated by the CAM alarms. Currently, there are three events that can cause an automatic shut down of the Exhauster. These are, Low Tank Pressure, Highnow Stack Flow and High HEPA Filter Differential Pressure (DP).
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Boger, R. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cable Hot Shorts and Circuit Analysis in Fire Risk Assessment (open access)

Cable Hot Shorts and Circuit Analysis in Fire Risk Assessment

Under existing methods of probabilistic risk assessment (PRA), the analysis of fire-induced circuit faults has typically been conducted on a simplistic basis. In particular, those hot-short methodologies that have been applied remain controversial in regards to the scope of the assessments, the underlying methods, and the assumptions employed. To address weaknesses in fire PRA methodologies, the USNRC has initiated a fire risk analysis research program that includes a task for improving the tools for performing circuit analysis. The objective of this task is to obtain a better understanding of the mechanisms linking fire-induced cable damage to potentially risk-significant failure modes of power, control, and instrumentation cables. This paper discusses the current status of the circuit analysis task.
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: LaChance, Jeffrey; Nowlen, Steven P. & Wyant, Frank
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Audit of Administration of Cooperative Research and Development Agreements at DOE National Laboratories (open access)

Audit of Administration of Cooperative Research and Development Agreements at DOE National Laboratories

DOE established policies to ensure that Cooperative Research and Development Agreements (CRADAS) enhance US competitiveness in the world economy, provide a reasonable return on resources invested, and enable successful commercialization of technologies developed. DOE`s Office of Technology Partnerships issued a General Guidance Memorandum to DOE operations offices establishing policy goals for technology transfer programs, including CRADAS. Our audit disclosed that efforts to manage CRADAs at three national laboratories did not fully achieve DOE`s policy goals outlined in the General Guidance Memorandum. Specifically, the audit showed that: (1) joint work statements did not always contain clearly defined information that allowed DOE to facilitate technology transfer or to evaluate CRADAs potential benefits; (2) CRADA statements of work did not always contain adequate documentation or address potential benefits; (3) the national laboratories reviewed did not have effective mechanisms for continuous self-appraisal or measures of overall program success; and (4) CRADA provisions did not exist to ensure an accurate evaluation of partner contributions.
Date: May 19, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Synthesis and Characterization of a New Perhalogenated Porphyrin (open access)

Synthesis and Characterization of a New Perhalogenated Porphyrin

The first synthesis of an octahalotetraalkylporphyrin [2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18 -octabromo-5,10,15,20- tetrakis(trifluoromethyl)porphinato nickel(II)] is reported; this perhalogenated porphyrin has several novel properties including a very nonplanar ruffled structure with an unusually short Ni- N distance, an extremely red-shifted optical spectrum, and hindered rotation of the trifluoromethyl groups ({Delta}G<sub>278K</sub> =47 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>).
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Jia, Songling; Medforth, Craig J.; Nelson, Nora Y.; Nurco, Daniel J.; Shelnutt, John & Smith, Kevin M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Epitaxially-Grown GaN Junction Field Effect Transistors (open access)

Epitaxially-Grown GaN Junction Field Effect Transistors

Junction field effect transistors (JFET) are fabricated on a GaN epitaxial structure grown by metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). The DC and microwave characteristics of the device are presented. A junction breakdown voltage of 56 V is obtained corresponding to the theoretical limit of the breakdown field in GaN for the doping levels used. A maximum extrinsic transconductance (g<sub>m</sub>) of 48 mS/mm and a maximum source-drain current of 270 mA/mm are achieved on a 0.8 &micro; m gate JFET device at V<sub>GS</sub>= 1 V and V<sub>DS</sub>=15 V. The intrinsic transconductance, calculated from the measured g<sub>m</sub> and the source series resistance, is 81 mS/mm. The f<sub>T</sub> and f<sub>max</sub> for these devices are 6 GHz and 12 GHz, respectively. These JFETs exhibit a significant current reduction after a high drain bias is applied, which is attributed to a partially depleted channel caused by trapped hot-electrons in the semi-insulating GaN buffer layer. A theoretical model describing the current collapse is described, and an estimate for the length of the trapped electron region is given.
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Baca, A. G.; Chang, P. C.; Denbaars, S. P.; Lester, L. F.; Mishra, U. K.; Shul, R. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of Hanford Tank 241-C-106 Waste Release into Tank 241-Y-102 (open access)

Simulation of Hanford Tank 241-C-106 Waste Release into Tank 241-Y-102

Waste stored in Hdord single-shell Tank 241-C-106 will be sluiced with a supernatant liquid from doubIe-shell Tank 241 -AY- 102 (AY-1 02) at the U.S. Department of Energy's Har@ord Site in Eastern Washington. The resulting slurry, containing up to 30 wtYo solids, will then be transferred to Tank AY-102. During the sluicing process, it is important to know the mass of the solids being transferred into AY- 102. One of the primary instruments used to measure solids transfer is an E+ densitometer located near the periphery of the tank at riser 15S. This study was undert.dcen to assess how well a densitometer measurement could represent the total mass of soiids transferred if a uniform lateral distribution was assumed. The study evaluated the C-1 06 slurry mixing and accumulation in Tank AY- 102 for the following five cases: Case 1: 3 wt'%0 slurry in 6.4-m AY-102 waste Case 2: 3 w-t% slurry in 4.3-m AY-102 waste Case 3: 30 wtYo slurry in 6.4-m AY-102 waste Case 4: 30 wt% slurry in 4.3-m AY-102 waste Case 5: 30 wt% slurry in 5. O-m AY-102 waste. The tirne-dependent, three-dimensional, TEMPEST computer code was used to simulate solid deposition and accumulation during the injection …
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Recknagle, KP & Onishi, Y
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of Electron Backscattered Diffraction (EBSD) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) to Determine Texture, Microtexture, and Grain Boundary Energies in Ceramics (open access)

Application of Electron Backscattered Diffraction (EBSD) and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) to Determine Texture, Microtexture, and Grain Boundary Energies in Ceramics

Crystallographic orientations in alumina (Al<sub>2</sub>0<sub>3</sub>) and magnesium aluminate spinel (MgAl<sub>2</sub>0<sub>4</sub>) were obtained using electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) patterns. The texture and mesotexture (grain boundary misorientations) were random and no special boundaries were observed. The relative grain boundary energies were determined by thermal groove geometries using atomic force microscopy (AFM) to identify relationships between the grain boundary energies and misorientations.
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Glass, S. J.; Rohrer, G. S.; Saylor, D. M. & Vedula, V. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste retrieval sluicing system vapor sampling and analysis plan for evaluation of organic emissions, process test phase III. (open access)

Waste retrieval sluicing system vapor sampling and analysis plan for evaluation of organic emissions, process test phase III.

This sampling and analysis plan identifies characterization objectives pertaining to sample collection, laboratory analytical evaluation, and reporting requirements for vapor samples obtained to address vapor issues related to the sluicing of tank 241-C-106. Sampling will be performed in accordance with Waste Retrieval Sluicing System Emissions Collection Phase III (Jones 1999) and Process Test Plan Phase III, Waste Retrieval Sluicing System Emissions Collection (Powers 1999). Analytical requirements include those specified in Request for Ecology Concurrence on Draft Strategy/Path Forward to Address Concerns Regarding Organic Emissions from C-106 Sluicing Activities (Peterson 1998). The Waste Retrieval Sluicing System was installed to retrieve and transfer high-heat sludge from tank 241-C-106 to tank 241-AY-102, which is designed for high-heat waste storage. During initial sluicing of tank 241-C-106 in November 1998, operations were halted due to detection of unexpected high volatile organic compounds in emissions that exceeded regulatory permit limits. Several workers also reported smelling sharp odors and throat irritation. Vapor grab samples from the 296-C-006 ventilation system were taken as soon as possible after detection; the analyses indicated that volatile and semi-volatile organic compounds were present. In December 1998, a process test (phase I) was conducted in which the pumps in tanks 241-C-106 and 241-AY-102 …
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Sasaki, L. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fermi surfaces, Fermi patches, and Fermi arcs in high T{sub c} superconductors. (open access)

Fermi surfaces, Fermi patches, and Fermi arcs in high T{sub c} superconductors.

A defining property of metals is the existence of a Fermi surface: for two dimensions, a continuous contour in momentum space which separates occupied from unoccupied states. In this paper, I discuss angle resolved photoemission data on the cuprate superconductor BSCCO and argue that it is not best thought of in this conventional picture. Rather, the data are consistent with patches of finite area connected by more conventional arcs. Novel physics is associated with the patches, in that the states contained in a patch are dispersionless and thus interaction dominated. In the pseudogap phase, the patches are gapped out, leaving the Fermi arcs disconnected. This unusual situation may be the key to understanding the microscopic physics of the high temperature superconductors, in that the pairing correlations are strongest in the patches, yet the superfluid density lives only on the arcs.
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Norman, M. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical investigations of silver clusters and silver-ligand systems. (open access)

Theoretical investigations of silver clusters and silver-ligand systems.

Studies directed at understanding structural and electronic properties of silver clusters have been and remain the subject of an active theoretical [1-22] and experimental [23- 38] effort. One of the reasons is the (still) important role these systems play in the photographic process. Investigations of interactions of silver clusters with different atoms and molecules are motivated primarily by a possible utility of these clusters in catalytic processes. The important role of silver in the selective oxidation of ethylene into ethylene oxide, the feedstock for polyester production, is well-known [39]. Possible variations in chemical reactivity with the cluster size and understanding of the mechanisms of interactions with different ligands may lead to new and more efficient applications. Investigations of cluster-ligand systems also contribute a great deal to a better understanding of gas-surface interactions. Accordingly, theoretical studies of silver clusters and cluster-ligand systems [40-44] fall into two categories--those that use clusters as models for silver surfaces [40], and those that target clusters and cluster-ligand interactions as subjects in their own right [41-44]. The common goal of all these studies is to elucidate the nature of the interatomic interactions and bonding at the microscopic level and thereby arrive at a fundamental understanding and …
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Jellinek, J.; Salian, U. & Srinivas, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solution exchange corrosion testing with the glass-zeolite ceramic waste form in demineralized water at 90{degree}C. (open access)

Solution exchange corrosion testing with the glass-zeolite ceramic waste form in demineralized water at 90{degree}C.

A ceramic waste form of glass-bonded zeolite is being developed for the long-term disposition of fission products and transuranic elements in wastes from the U.S. Department of Energy's spent nuclear fuel conditioning activities. Solution exchange corrosion tests were performed on the ceramic waste form and its potential base constituents of glass, zeolite 5A, and sodalite as part of an effort to qualify the ceramic waste form for acceptance into the Civilian Radioactive Waste Management System. Solution exchange tests were performed at 90 C by replacing 80 to 90% of the leachate with fresh demineralized water after set time intervals. The results from these tests provide information about corrosion mechanisms and the ability of the ceramic waste form and its constituent materials to retain waste components. The results from solution exchange tests indicate that radionuclides will be preferentially retained in the zeolites without the glass matrix and in the ceramic waste form, with respect to cations like Li, K, and Na. Release results have been compared for simulated waste from candidate ceramic waste forms with zeolite 5A and its constituent materials to determine the corrosion behavior of each component.
Date: May 19, 1998
Creator: Simpson, L. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Elemental mercury removal using a wet scrubber. (open access)

Elemental mercury removal using a wet scrubber.

Mercury (Hg) is a toxic metal that is emitted into the environment by both natural and human activities. Acute and chronic exposure to mercury and methyl mercury in humans results in central nervous system damage, kidney damage, and even death. Although some Hg emission sources have been regulated, coal-fired utilities have not been. In anticipation of federal regulations on mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants, Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) has designed a flue gas simulation system to study the removal of elemental mercury. The simulated flue gas enters the system and combines with the inlet mercury vapor (from a calibrated permeation tube), carried by nitrogen gas. This combined gas continues past the flow meter and the pressure gage to the reactor inlet. Inside the reactor chamber, the flue gas is sprayed with NOXSORB{reg_sign}, a chloric acid solution, which reacts with elemental mercury. The amount of reaction (oxidation) of elemental mercury is important since mercury in an oxidized form is highly soluble, In this form, the Hg can be picked up downstream by a wet scrubber from fossil-fuel burning utilities. Experiments on mercury removal from flue gases have been conducted at ANL, with the participation of a senior design team from …
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Gonzalez, E.; Livengood, C. D.; Martin, K.; Mendelsohn, M. H. & Zhou, C. Q.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Toward a fourth-generation x-ray source. (open access)

Toward a fourth-generation x-ray source.

The field of synchrotron radiation research has grown rapidly over the last 25 years due to both the push of the accelerator and magnet technology that produces the x-ray beams and the pull of the extraordinary scientific research that is possible with them. Three successive generations of synchrotrons radiation facilities have resulted in beam brilliances 11 to 12 orders of magnitude greater than the standard laboratory x-ray tube. However, greater advances can be easily imagined given the fact that x-ray beams from present-day facilities do not exhibit the coherence or time structure so familiar with the optical laser. Theoretical work over the last ten years or so has pointed to the possibility of generating hard x-ray beams with laser-like characteristics. The concept is based on self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) in flee-electron lasers. A major facility of this type based upon a superconducting linac could produce a cost-effective facility that spans wave-lengths from the ultraviolet to the hard x-ray regime, simultaneously servicing large numbers experimenters from a wide range of disciplines. As with each past generation of synchrotrons facilities, immense new scientific opportunities would result from fourth-generation sources.
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Monction, D. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Criticality Safety Organization training implementation. Revision 4 (open access)

Nuclear Criticality Safety Organization training implementation. Revision 4

The Nuclear Criticality Safety Organization (NCSO) is committed to developing and maintaining a staff of qualified personnel to meet the current and anticipated needs in Nuclear Criticality Safety (NCS) at the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant. This document provides a listing of the roles and responsibilities of NCSO personnel with respect to training and details of the Training Management System (TMS) programs, Mentoring Checklists and Checksheets, as well as other documentation utilized to implement the program. This Training Implementation document is applicable to all technical and managerial NCSO personnel, including temporary personnel, sub-contractors and/or LMES employees on loan to the NCSO, who are in a qualification program.
Date: May 19, 1997
Creator: Carroll, K.J.; Taylor, R.G. & Worley, C.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetic resonance imaging of polymer electrolytes and insertion electrodes. (open access)

Magnetic resonance imaging of polymer electrolytes and insertion electrodes.

This program seeks to better define electrode-electrolyte interfaces and solid-state ion transport mechanisms that are a central feature of fuel cells and advanced electrochemical systems. The goal is to develop a new generation of materials with enhanced energy efficiency and reduced tendency toward dendrite or passive film formation at the electrode-electrolyte interface.
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Gerald, R. E., II; Klingler, R. J. & Rathke, J. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford facility dangerous waste permit application, general information portion (open access)

Hanford facility dangerous waste permit application, general information portion

The Hanford Facility Dangerous Waste Permit Application is considered to be a single application organized into a General Information Portion (document number DOE/RL-91-28) and a Unit-Specific Portion. Both the General Information and Unit-Specific portions of the Hanford Facility Dangerous Waste Permit Application address the content of the Part B permit application guidance prepared by the Washington State Department of Ecology (Ecology 1996) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (40 Code of Federal Regulations 270), with additional information needed by the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments and revisions of Washington Administrative Code 173-303. Documentation contained in the General Information Portion is broader in nature and could be used by multiple treatment, storage, and/or disposal units (e.g., the glossary provided in this report).
Date: May 19, 1998
Creator: Hays, C.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
First quarter chemical borehole studies in the drift scale test (open access)

First quarter chemical borehole studies in the drift scale test

The chemistry boreholes of the Drift Scale Test (DST) have been designed to gather geochemical information and assess the impact of thermal perturbations on gas and liquid phases present in pore spaces and fractures within the rock. There are a total of ten boreholes dedicated to these chemical studies. Two arrays of five boreholes each were drilled from the access/observation drift (AOD) in planes which run normal to the heater drift and which are located approximately 15 and 45% of the way along the length of the drift as measured from the bulkhead. The boreholes each have a length of about 40 meters and have been drilled at low angles directed just above or just below the heater plane. In each array, three boreholes are directed at increasingly steeper angles (< 25-) above the line of wing heaters and two are directed at shallow angles below the wing heater plane.
Date: May 19, 1998
Creator: DeLoach, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wet Oxidation of High-Al-Content III-V Semiconductors: Important Materials Considerations for Device Applications (open access)

Wet Oxidation of High-Al-Content III-V Semiconductors: Important Materials Considerations for Device Applications

Wet oxidation of high-Al-content AIGaAs semiconductor layers in vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELS) has produced devices with record low threshold currents and voltages and with wall-plug efficiencies greater than 50%. Wet oxidation of buried AlGaAs layers has been employed to reduce the problems associated with substrate current leakage in GaAs-on- insulator (GOI) MESFETS. Wet oxidation of high-Al-content AlGaAs semiconductor layers in vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELS) has produced devices with record low threshold currents and voltages and with wall-plug efficiencies greater than 50%. Wet oxidation of buried AlGaAs layers has been employed to reduce the problems associated with substrate current leakage in GaAs-on- insulator (GOI) MESFETS. Wet oxidation has also been considered as a route to the long-sought goal of a IH-V MIS technology. To continue improving device designs for even higher performance and to establish a truly manufacturable technology based on wet oxidation, the effect of oxidation of a given layer on the properties of the entire device structure must be understood. The oxidation of a given layer can strongly affect the electrical and chemical properties of adjacent layers. Many of these effects are derived from the production of large amounts of elemental As during the oxidation …
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Ashby, Carol I.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Porphyrin Interactions with Wild Type and Mutant Mouse Ferrochelatase (open access)

Porphyrin Interactions with Wild Type and Mutant Mouse Ferrochelatase

Ferrochelatase (EC 4.99.1.1), the terminal enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway, catalyzes Fe<sup>2+</sup> chelation into protoporphyrin IX. Resonance Raman and W-visible absorbance spectroscopes of wild type and engineered variants of murine ferrochelatase were used to examine the proposed structural mechanism for iron insertion into protoporphyrin by ferrochelatase. The recombinant variants (i.e., H207N and E287Q) are enzymes in which the conserved amino acids histidine-207 and glutamate-287 of murine ferrochelatase were substituted with asparagine and glutamine, respectively. Both of these residues are at the active site of the enzyme as deduced from the Bacillus subtilis ferrochelatase three-dimensional structure. Addition of free base or metalated porphyrins to wild type ferrochelatase and H207N variant yields a quasi 1:1 complex, possibly a monomeric protein-bound species. In contrast, the addition of porphyrin (either free base or metalated) to E287Q is sub-stoichiometric, as this variant retains bound porphyrin in the active site during isolation and purification. The specificity of porphyrin binding is confirmed by the narrowing of the structure-sensitive resonance Raman lines and the vinyl vibrational mode. Resonance Raman spectra of free base and metalated porphyrins bound to the wild type ferrochelatase indicate a nonplanar distortion of the porphyrin macrocycle, although the magnitude of the distortion cannot …
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: Ferreira, Gloria C.; Franco, Ricardo; Lu, Yi; Ma, Jian-Guo & Shelnutt, John A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of worst case projected source term in tank 241-SY-102 (open access)

Determination of worst case projected source term in tank 241-SY-102

This document describes the methodology used to determine the worst case projected source term that could be in double-shell tank 241-SY-102 for the cross-site waste transfer to tank 241-AP-107. The worst case projected source term given in Table 4-1 is the weighted average of the tank waste sources with the addition of sufficient waste from a defined worst source tank to fill the tank to 416 inches. The projected source term in this document is not intended to represent what will be in tank 241-SY-102. Rather, it is a conservative bounding composition considering that the volume of waste that will be added from each current source is unknown.
Date: May 19, 1999
Creator: FOWLER, K.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetized Target Fusion. A Proof-of-Principle Research Proposal (open access)

Magnetized Target Fusion. A Proof-of-Principle Research Proposal

None
Date: May 19, 1998
Creator: Schoenberg, K.F. & Siemon, R.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test procedure for the 105-KW isolation barrier leak rate (open access)

Acceptance test procedure for the 105-KW isolation barrier leak rate

This acceptance test procedure shall be used to: First establish a basin water loss rate prior to installation of the two isolation barriers between the main basin and the discharge chute in K-Basin West. Second, perform an acceptance test to verify an acceptable leakage rate through the barrier seals. This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) has been prepared in accordance with CM-6-1 EP 4.2, Standard Engineering Practices.
Date: May 19, 1995
Creator: McCracken, K. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library