GSA's Effort to Develop Year 2000 Business Continuity and Contingency Plans for Telecommunications Systems (open access)

GSA's Effort to Develop Year 2000 Business Continuity and Contingency Plans for Telecommunications Systems

Correspondence issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "GAO provided information on the General Services Administration's (GSA) efforts to ensure that the telecommunications systems it manages for the federal government are year 2000 compliant."
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Department of Defense: Improving the DOD Payment Process, Using Recovery Auditing and Changing the Prompt Payment Act (open access)

Department of Defense: Improving the DOD Payment Process, Using Recovery Auditing and Changing the Prompt Payment Act

Testimony issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed the Department of Defense's (DOD) payment problems and how recovery auditing is being used to identify and recover overpayments."
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Military Readiness: Readiness Reports Do Not Provide a Clear Assessment of Army Equipment (open access)

Military Readiness: Readiness Reports Do Not Provide a Clear Assessment of Army Equipment

A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the equipment readiness in active duty Army units, focusing on whether the active duty units: (1) have the equipment required to conduct their wartime missions; (2) are keeping their equipment in good condition; and (3) can sustain the equipment in a two major theater war as required by the National Military Strategy."
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Analysis of LANL Ion Exchange Column (open access)

Thermal Analysis of LANL Ion Exchange Column

This document reports results from an ion exchange column heat transfer analysis requested by Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). The object of the analysis is to demonstrate that the decay heat from the Pu-238 will not cause resin bed temperatures to increase to a level where the resin significantly degrades.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Laurinat, J.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Software Quality-Control Guidelines for Codes Developed for the NWTC (open access)

Software Quality-Control Guidelines for Codes Developed for the NWTC

Members in the wind-energy research, development, deployment, and production communities use computer codes for many things. They base important decisions on the results from the codes. It is important that the developers of these codes scrutinize them to assure an appropriate level for quality. The National Wind Technology Center (NWTC) and its subcontractors have developed many computer codes now in use in the United States and around the world. This document will present some guidelines for ensuring the quality of programs that are developed for the NWTC.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Buhl, M. L., Jr. & Green, H. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Rocky Flats Decontamination and Decommissioning (D and D) Challenge (open access)

The Rocky Flats Decontamination and Decommissioning (D and D) Challenge

At the Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site (RFETS), the D&D task is enormous. Tons of plutonium has been processed over the years in approximately 1,000 gloveboxes, This represents nearly half of the gloveboxes in the DOE complex. In addition, more than a thousand tanks of various designs, with miles of associated piping, supported the processes. A wide variety of operations were performed at RFETS, including aqueous processing, pyrophoric processing, hydriding and dehydriding, metal casting, and machining of plutonium. Various materials have been handled at the facility, including plutonium, uranium, americium, tantalum, beryllium, chloride salts, and various acids and solvents. Significant amounts of plutonium residues remain in inaccessible equipment in the facilities, which create criticality safety issues. Some of the plutonium has been at RFETS for many years, and there is significant in-growth of americium, a decay product that emits gamma radiation, which potentially increases exposure to the workers. The size reduction portion of the D&D will be difficult and costly. The gloveboxes and tanks are constructed of stainless steel, frequently with lead shielding or double walls that hold water for neutron shielding. Window mountings, glove port rings, site gages, bolted flanges, and various penetrations reinforce the walls. Tanks may be …
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Parker, A. M.; Mathis, B. W. & Stevens, J. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cast Polycrystalline Photovoltaic Module Manufacturing Technology Improvements; Final Subcontract Report, 8 December 1993-30 April 1998 (open access)

Cast Polycrystalline Photovoltaic Module Manufacturing Technology Improvements; Final Subcontract Report, 8 December 1993-30 April 1998

This report summarizes work performed by Solarex, A Business Unit of Amoco/Enron Solar, under this subcontract. Among the accomplishments during the program are the following: Converting all of the production casting stations to increase ingot size, operating them at equivalent yields and cell efficiencies, and thus doubling the casting capacity at a 20% lower cost than the cost of new equipment. Developing a wire-saw process and transferring the process to production; as a result, more than 80% of wafering is now done using wire saws, at higher yields and lower costs than achieved on the internal diameter saws. Developing an aluminum paste back-surface field (BSF) process to increase cell efficiency by 5%; researchers also designed, procured, and transferred to manufacturing a fully automated printing system to produce the BSF cells. Fabricating 15.2-cm by 15.2-cm polycrystalline silicon solar cells and building modules using these cells. Modifying the module assembly area to increase capacity by a factor of three. Implementing a single-layer Tedlar backsheet that reduced backsheet cost by $0.50/ft2. Selecting, testing, and qualifying a low-cost (< $1.00 per module) electrical termination system. Qualifying the structure and adhesive system for mounting frameless modules and using the system to build several large arrays.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Wohlgemuth, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Analysis of LANL Ion Exchange Column (open access)

Thermal Analysis of LANL Ion Exchange Column

This document reports results from an ion exchange column heat transfer analysis requested by Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). The object of the analysis is to demonstrate that the decay heat from the Pu-238 will not cause resin bed temperatures to increase to a level where the resin significantly degrades.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Laurinat, J.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance testing of hydrogen transport membranes at elevated temperatures and pressures. (open access)

Performance testing of hydrogen transport membranes at elevated temperatures and pressures.

The development of hydrogen transport ceramic membranes offers increased opportunities for hydrogen gas separation and utilization. Commercial application of such membranes will most likely take place under conditions of elevated temperature and pressure, where industrial processes producing and or utilizing hydrogen occur, and where such membranes are theoretically expected to have the greatest permeability. Hydrogen separation membrane performance data at elevated temperature is quite limited, and data at elevated pressures is conspicuously lacking. This paper will describe the design, construction, and recent experimental results obtained from a membrane testing unit located at the U.S. Department of Energy's Federal Energy Technology Center (FETC). The membrane testing unit is capable of operating at temperatures up to 900 C and pressures up to 500 psi. Mixed-oxide ceramic ion-transport membranes, fabricated at Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), were evaluated for hydrogen permeability and characterized for surface changes and structural integrity using scanning electron microscopy/X-ray microanalysis (SEM/EDS), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and atomic force microscopy (AFM), as a function of temperature, pressure, and hydrogen exposure.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Balachandran, U.; Cugini, A. V.; Dorris, S. E.; Fisher, E. P.; Graham, W. J.; Martello, D. V. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-Body Breakup Dynamics in Dissociative Recombination (open access)

Three-Body Breakup Dynamics in Dissociative Recombination

Using the CRYRing Facility in Stockholm Coupled with an MCP-CCD detector, and a differential stopping foil, we have determined dynamic parameters in the three-body dissociative recombination of H<sub>2</sub>O<sup>+</sup>. These include the distribution between the O(<sup>3</sup>P) and O(<sup>1</sup>D) channels, the distribution of H atom recoil energies in the O(<sup>3</sup>P) channel and the distribution of angles between the two departing H atoms.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Al-Khalili, A.; Datz, S.; Derkatch, A.; Larsson, M.; Rosén, S.; Shi, W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Global Climate Change: Coal Use in China and Other Asian Developing Countries (open access)

Global Climate Change: Coal Use in China and Other Asian Developing Countries

Report discussing factors behind China's planned reliance on coal for future energy growth, including background information, factors in Asian coal use trends, Asian and world energy demands, the Asian coal and world markets, CO2 emissions trends, projected energy supply and emissions from other sources, and general conclusions regarding the issues.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Humphries, Marc
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interstate Waste Transport: Legislative Issues (open access)

Interstate Waste Transport: Legislative Issues

This report discusses ten issues raised by proposed legislation to allow controls on interstate commerce in solid waste. Such legislation has been considered in every Congress since 1990.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: McCarthy, James E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aqueous complexation of trivalent lanthanide and actinide cations by N,N,N'{sub 2},N'-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine. (open access)

Aqueous complexation of trivalent lanthanide and actinide cations by N,N,N'{sub 2},N'-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine.

The aqueous complexation reactions of trivalent lanthanide and actinide cations with the hexadentate ligand N,N,N{prime},N{prime}-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine (TPEN), have been characterized using potentiometric and spectroscopic techniques in 0.1 M NaClO{sub 4} At 25 C, the stability constant of Am(TPEN){sup 3+} is two orders of magnitude larger than that of Sm(TPEN){sup 3+}, reflecting the stronger interactions of the trivalent actinide cations with softer ligands as compared to lanthanide cations.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Beitz, J. V.; Ensor, D. D.; Jensen, M. P. & Morss, L. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Capacity High Speed Optical Data Storage System Based on Diffraction-Free Nanobeam. Final Report, 09-02-98 to 03-17-99 (open access)

High Capacity High Speed Optical Data Storage System Based on Diffraction-Free Nanobeam. Final Report, 09-02-98 to 03-17-99

Physical Optics Corporation (POC) investigated the development of an optical data storage system built around a current well-engineered high-speed optical disk system with an innovative diffraction-free micro-optical element to produce a beam {approximately}250 nm wide with {approximately}4-5 mm depth of focus, allowing the system to address data at {approximately}100 Mbits/second and to store it 100 to 1,000 times more densely ({approximately}10 Gbit/in.{sup 2}) than in present systems. In Phase 1 of this project POC completed a thorough feasibility study by system design and analysis, successfully demonstrated fabrication of the key components, and conducted a proof-of-principle experimental demonstration. Specifically, production of a subwavelength ({approximately}380 nm) large depth of focus ({approximately}4-5 mm) addressing beam was demonstrated by fabricating a special microdiffractive optical element and recording this beam on a standard optical recording disk coated with a photopolymer material.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Aye, Tin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Speaker Recognition Through NLP and CWT Modeling (open access)

Speaker Recognition Through NLP and CWT Modeling

The objective of this research is to develop a system capable of identifying speakers on wiretaps from a large database (>500 speakers) with a short search time duration (<30 seconds), and with better than 90% accuracy. Much previous research in speaker recognition has led to algorithms that produced encouraging preliminary results, but were overwhelmed when applied to populations of more than a dozen or so different speakers. The authors are investigating a solution to the "large population" problem by seeking two completely different kinds of characterizing features. These features are he techniques of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) and the continuous wavelet transform (CWT). NLP extracts precise neurological, verbal and non-verbal information, and assimilates the information into useful patterns. These patterns are based on specific cues demonstrated by each individual, and provide ways of determining congruency between verbal and non-verbal cues. The primary NLP modalities are characterized through word spotting (or verbal predicates cues, e.g., see, sound, feel, etc.) while the secondary modalities would be characterized through the speech transcription used by the individual. This has the practical effect of reducing the size of the search space, and greatly speeding up the process of identifying an unknown speaker. The wavelet-based line of …
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Brown-VanHoozer, S. A.; Kercel, S. W. & Tucker, R. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isentropic Compression Experiments on the Z Accelerator (open access)

Isentropic Compression Experiments on the Z Accelerator

This paper provides a brief review of experimental techniques for producing dynamic isentropic compression of samples to pressures of several hundred GPa. Traditional gun launch techniques include use of buffer plates, such as fused silica, that exhibit negative curvature to their stress-strain response and graded-density impactors. Graded-density impactors have been used to study isentropic compression of specimens to pressures exceeding 2 Mbar on high-impedance materials. A recent development includes the use of the Sandia Z Accelerator to produce magnetic compression in planar specimens to pressures of a few hundred kbar over time scales of 100 ns. These techniques have been successfully applied to isentropic compression of iron to 300 kbar and copper to 130 kbar. The iron results indicate that it is possible to study the polymorphic phase change that occurs at 130 kbar and also the kinetic properties of the transformation. The copper results indicate that with further improvements in progress it should be possible to measure continuous isentropic compression curves in materials of interest to pressures exceeding 1 Mbar. The Z accelerator is limited to peak currents of about 20 MA. By reconfiguring the anode-cathode geometry it should be possible to obtain constant current density and thus driving …
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Asay, J.R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Open Access Transmission Tariff: Effective December 18, 1998 (Revised June 16, 1999). (open access)

Open Access Transmission Tariff: Effective December 18, 1998 (Revised June 16, 1999).

Bonneville will provide Network Integration Transmission Service pursuant to the terms and conditions contained in this Tariff and Service Agreement. The service that Bonneville will provide under this Tariff allows a Transmission Customer to integrate, economically dispatch and regulate its current and planned Network Resources to serve its Network Load. Network Integration Transmission Service also may be used by the Transmission Customer to deliver nonfirm energy purchases to its Network Load without additional charge. To the extent that the transmission path for moving power from a Network Resource to a Network Load includes the Eastern and Southern Interties, the terms and conditions for service over such intertie facilities are provided under Part 2 of this Tariff. Also, transmission service for third-party sales which are not designated as Network Load will be provided under Bonneville's Point-to-Point Transmission Service (Part 2 of this Tariff).
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: United States. Bonneville Power Administration.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Z-Pinch Generated X-Rays Demonstrate Indirect-Drive ICF Potential (open access)

Z-Pinch Generated X-Rays Demonstrate Indirect-Drive ICF Potential

Hohlraums (measuring 6-mm in diameter by 7-mm in height) have been heated by x-rays from a z-pinch. Over measured x-ray input powers P of 0.7 to 13 TW, the hohlraum radiation temperature T increases from {approximately}55 to {approximately}130 eV, and is in agreement with the Planckian relation P-T{sup 4}. The results suggest that indirect-drive ICF studies involving NIF relevant pulse shapes and &lt;2-mm diameter capsules can he studied using this arrangement.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Bowers, R. L.; Chandler, G. A.; Derzon, M. S.; Hebron, D. E.; Leeper, R. J.; Matzen, M. K. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Errata to RISKIND - a computer program for calculating radiological consequences and health risks from transportation of spent nuclear fuel. (open access)

Errata to RISKIND - a computer program for calculating radiological consequences and health risks from transportation of spent nuclear fuel.

None
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Biwer, B. M.; Chen, S. Y.; LePoire, D. J. & Yuan, Y. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ab initio Monte Carlo investigation of small lithium clusters. (open access)

Ab initio Monte Carlo investigation of small lithium clusters.

Structural and thermal properties of small lithium clusters are studied using ab initio-based Monte Carlo simulations. The ab initio scheme uses a Hartree-Fock/density functional treatment of the electronic structure combined with a jump-walking Monte Carlo sampling of nuclear configurations. Structural forms of Li{sub 8} and Li{sub 9}{sup +} clusters are obtained and their thermal properties analyzed in terms of probability distributions of the cluster potential energy, average potential energy and configurational heat capacity all considered as a function of the cluster temperature. Details of the gradual evolution with temperature of the structural forms sampled are examined. Temperatures characterizing the onset of structural changes and isomer coexistence are identified for both clusters.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Srinivas, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of phase assemblage and distribution in titanate ceramics with SEM/EDS and x-ray mapping. (open access)

Characterization of phase assemblage and distribution in titanate ceramics with SEM/EDS and x-ray mapping.

Titanate ceramics have been selected for the immobilization of excess plutonium. The baseline ceramic formulation leads to a multi-phase assemblage, which consists of a majority pyrochlore phase plus secondary phases. The phase distribution depends on processing conditions and impurity loading. In this paper, we report on the characterization of the phase assemblage and distribution in titanate ceramics using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDS), and x-ray dot mapping. Two titanate ceramics were studied a baseline ceramic and a ceramic with impurities. In the baseline ceramic, the secondary phases that were observed include zirconolite, brannerite, and rutile. Additional phases, such as perovskite, an Al-Ti-Ca phase, and a silicate phase, formed in the impurity ceramic. The distribution of these phases was characterized with backscattered electron (BSE) imaging, except for zirconolite. While the zirconolite exhibited weak contrasts in BSE images and could not be easily distinguished from the pyrochlore matrix, its distribution was effectively characterized with x-ray mapping. Quantitative analyses of BSE images and x-ray maps reveal that the impurity ceramic contains less brannerite, rutile, and pores than the baseline ceramic.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Luo, J. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Harnessing the power of the new SMP cluster architecture (open access)

Harnessing the power of the new SMP cluster architecture

In 1993, members of our team collaborated with Silicon Graphics to perform the first full-scale demonstration of the computational power of the SMP cluster supercomputer architecture. That demonstration involved the simulation of homogeneous, compressible turbulence on a uniform grid of a billion cells, using our PPM gas dynamics code. This computation was embarrassingly parallel, the ideal test case, and it achieved only 4.9 Gflop/s performance, slightly over half that achievable by this application on the most expensive supercomputers of that day. After four to five solid days of computation, when the prototype machine had to be dismantled, the simulation was only about 20% completed. Nevertheless, this computation gave us important new insights into compressible turbulence and also into a powerful new mode of cost-effective, commercially sustainable supercomputing [S]. In the intervening 6 years, the SMP cluster architecture has become a fundamental strategy for several large supercomputer centers in the US, including the DOE's ASCI centers at Los Alamos National Laboratory and at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the NSF's center NCSA at the University of Illinois. This SMP cluster architecture now underlies product offerings at the high-end of performance from SGI, IBM, and HP, among others. Nevertheless, despite many …
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Anderson, S. E.; Cohen, R. H.; Curtis, B. C.; Dannevik, W. P.; Dimits, A. M.; Dinge, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cs, Sr, and Ba Sorption on Clays and Fe-Oxides (open access)

Cs, Sr, and Ba Sorption on Clays and Fe-Oxides

Technical guidance for performance assessment (PA) of low-level radioactive waste (LLRW) sites is currently dependent upon experimental retardation factors (K{sub D}'s) to predict radionuclide transport. Accurate predictions of waste transport or retardation will require mechanistic models of radionuclide sorption so as to be applicable to a wide range of soil/groundwater environments. To that end, we have investigated Cs{sup +}, Sr{sup +}, and Ba{sup 2+} sorption on several clay and Fe-oxide minerals. Relative metal binding strengths for montmorillonite clay decrease from Ba{sup 2+} to Sr{sup +}, which is similar to that sorption trend noticed for kaolinite. Molecular dynamics simulations for kaolinite suggest that Cs{sup +} is sorbed at aluminol (010) edge sites as an inner-sphere complex and weakly sorbed as an outer-sphere complex on (001) basal surfaces. Sorption is thought to occur on similar sites for smectite clays, however, the basal plane residual charge and its increased basal plane exposure should have a greater influence on metal sorption. On the other hand, phase transformation kinetics (e.g., ferrihydrite to goethite) is a very important control of metal sorption and resorption for Fe-oxides/hydroxides. These results provide a basis for understanding and predicting metal sorption on complex soil minerals.
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: Anderson, H. L.; Brady, P. V.; Cygan, R. T.; Gruenhagen, S. E.; Nagy, K. L. & Westrich, H. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
DEVELOPMENT OF AN ON-LINE, REAL-TIME ALPHA RADIATION MEASURING INSTRUMENT FOR LIQUID STREAMS (open access)

DEVELOPMENT OF AN ON-LINE, REAL-TIME ALPHA RADIATION MEASURING INSTRUMENT FOR LIQUID STREAMS

Thermo Power Corporation has proven the technical viability of an on-line, real-time alpha radionuclide instrument for aqueous sample analysis through laboratory and initial field tests of the instrument. The instrument has been shown to be isotonically sensitive to extremely low (ten parts per trillion, or femto Curies per liter) levels of a broad range of radioisotopes. Performance enhancement and other scaling data obtained during the course of this investigation have shown that on-line, real-time operation is possible, with a sub 30-minute response time analyzing 20 ppb (30 pCi/1) natural uranium. Now that these initial field tests in Oak Ridge, Tennessee have been successfully completed, Thermo Power plans to conduct comprehensive field tests of the instrument. The purpose of these endurance tests will be to determine the endurance characteristics of the Thermo Alpha Monitor for Water when it is used by non-Thermo Power personnel in a series of one or more extended field tests. Such endurance testing is the vital next step towards the commercialization of the Alpha Monitor. Subsequently, it will be possible to provide the DOE with an instrument that has the capability of obtaining rapid feedback about the concentrations of alpha-emitting isotope contamination in effluent water streams (Subsurface …
Date: June 16, 1999
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library