Health effects in women exposed to low levels of ionizing radiation (open access)

Health effects in women exposed to low levels of ionizing radiation

There are three delayed health effects of radiation which appear at the present time to have importance to women in radiation protection. These are: (1) the probability of cancer-induction at low doses and low-dose rates; (2) the consideration of those cancers in women, notably the breast and the thyroid, attributable to radiation exposure; and (3) the probability of induction of developmental abnormalities in the newborn following low-dose exposure in utero. The bases for the concern over these effects are discussed. (ACR)
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Fabrikant, Jacob I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health physics and industrial hygiene aspects of decontamination as a precursor to decontamination (open access)

Health physics and industrial hygiene aspects of decontamination as a precursor to decontamination

The Pacific Northwest Laboratory is conducting a comprehensive study of the impacts, benefits and effects of decontamination as a precursor to decommissioning for the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The program deals primarily with chemical cleaning of light-water reactor (LWR) systems that will not be returned to operation. A major section of this study defines the health physics and industrial hygiene and safety concerns during decontamination operations. The primary health physics concerns include providing adequate protection for workers from radiation sources which are transported by the decontamination processes, estimating and limiting radioactive effluents to the environment and maintaining operations in accordance with the ALARA philosophy. Locating and identifying the areas of contamination and measuring the radiation exposure rates throughout the reactor primary system are fundamental to implementing these health physics goals. The principal industrial hygiene and safety concerns stem from the fact that a nuclear power plant is being converted for a time to a chemical plant which will contain large volumes of chemical solutions.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Card, C.J.; Hoenes, G.R.; Munson, L.F. & Halseth, G.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heavy charged-particle beam dosimetry (open access)

Heavy charged-particle beam dosimetry

A computational description of the physical properties and the beam composition of a heavy charged-particle beam is presented. The results with this beam model has been compared with numerous sets of experimental data and it appears to provide an adequate representation of the major features of a heavy charged-particle beam. Knowledge of the beam composition aids in the identification of regions of the beam where special dosimetry problems may be encountered.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Lyman, J.T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Burnup Effects Program A State-of-the-Technology Assessment (open access)

High Burnup Effects Program A State-of-the-Technology Assessment

Various analytical models and empirical correlations describing the fission gas release phenomenon were examined. An evaluation was made of the current pertinent experimental data on the subject of high burnup fission gas release. Data reported by individual investigators were compared and evaluated in relation to their applicability to the content and scope of the High Burnup Effects Program. These evaluations then form the bases for defining the data needs, and the selection of variables to be studied in this program.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Rising, K. H.; Bradley, E. R.; Williford, R. E. & Freshley, M D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Honey Lake hybrid geothermal wood residue power plant, Lassen County, California (open access)

Honey Lake hybrid geothermal wood residue power plant, Lassen County, California

The feasibility of a proposed 50 MW (gross) electric power project located near Wendel, California about 25 miles east of Susanville was studied. The project would be the first commercial power plant to combine the use of geothermal energy and wood fuel for power production. Wood fuel consisting primarily of various forms of forest management residues would be processed and partially dehydrated with geothermal energy prior to combustion. Geothermal energy would also be used for boiler feedwater heating and combustion air preheating. The study defines the range of site-specific benefits and economics of using wood fuel and moderate temperature geothermal energy, both of which are abundant and often located in proximity at many locations in the western United States. The study results document conclusively that overall project economics can be very favorable and that in addition to providing an important source of electric power, many benefits to forest land managers, local communities, project developers and the state of the environment can be derived from the combined use of moderate temperature geothermal energy and wood fuel.
Date: June 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hoosac tunnel geothermal heat source. Final report (open access)

Hoosac tunnel geothermal heat source. Final report

The Hoosac Rail Tunnel has been analyzed as a central element in a district heating system for the City of North Adams. The tunnel has been viewed as a collector of the earth's geothermal heat and a seasonal heat storage facility with heat piped to the tunnel in summer from existing facilities at a distance. Heated fluid would be transported in winter from the tunnel to users who would boost the temperature with individual heat pumps. It was concluded the tunnel is a poor source of geothermal heat. The maximum extractable energy is only 2200 million BTU (20000 gallons of oil) at 58/sup 0/F. The tunnel is a poor heat storage facility. The rock conductivity is so high that 75% of the heat injected would escape into the mountain before it could be recaptured for use. A low temperature system, with individual heat pumps for temperature boost could be economically attractive if a low cost fuel (byproduct, solid waste, cogeneration) or a cost effective seasonal heat storage were available.
Date: June 10, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hot-electron-ring physics (open access)

Hot-electron-ring physics

Separate abstracts were prepared for each of the 16 included papers. (MOW)
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Uckan, N.A. (ed.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hot-electron-ring physics (open access)

Hot-electron-ring physics

Separate abstracts were prepared for each of the 24 included papers. The remaining paper appeared previously in ERA. (MOW)
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Uckan, N.A. (ed.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Houtexan, Volume 3, Number 12, June 1982 (open access)

Houtexan, Volume 3, Number 12, June 1982

Monthly publication of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston documenting news, events, and information of interest to health science professionals.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Hybrid Staging of a Lysholm Positive Displacement Engine With Two Westinghouse Two Stage Impulse Curtis Turbines (open access)

Hybrid Staging of a Lysholm Positive Displacement Engine With Two Westinghouse Two Stage Impulse Curtis Turbines

The University of California at Berkeley has tested and modeled satisfactorly a hybrid staged Lysholm engine (positive displacement) with a two stage Curtis wheel turbine. The system operates in a stable manner over its operating range (0/1-3/1 water ratio, 120 psia input). Proposals are made for controlling interstage pressure with a partial admission turbine and volume expansion to control mass flow and pressure ratio for the Lysholm engine.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Parker, D. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogen and oxygen isotope geochemistry of cold and warm springs from the Tuscarora, Nevada thermal area (open access)

Hydrogen and oxygen isotope geochemistry of cold and warm springs from the Tuscarora, Nevada thermal area

Eighteen cold and warm spring water samples from the Tuscarora, Nevada KGRA have been analyzed for hydrogen and oxygen isotope composition and fluid chemistry. Warm springs have deltaD values (-128 to -137 permil) significantly lower than those of cold springs to the north and east of the area, but similar to the deltaD values of cold springs to the west and south (-131 to -135 permil). The recharge area for the warm springs is unlikely to be to the immediate north, which is the local topographic highland in the area. The hydrogen isotope data would permit recharge from areas to the southwest or from high elevations to the southeast (Independence Mountains), a sector consistent with electrical resistivity evidence of fluid flow. Warm springs are HCO/sub 3//sup -/-rich waters, enriched by a factor of 3 to 10 in Na, HCO{sub 3}/{sup -} and SiO{sub 2} relative to local cold springs. Average quartz (no steam loss) and Na/K/Ca geothermometer estimates suggest subsurface temperatures of 145{sup 0} and 196{sup 0}C, respectively. The warm springs exhibit poor correlations between either hydrogen or oxygen isotope composition and water temperature or chemistry. The absence of such correlations suggests that there is no single coherent pattern of …
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Bowman, J.R. & Cole, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hysteresis of sextupole and ac loss in Energy Doubler dipole magnets (open access)

Hysteresis of sextupole and ac loss in Energy Doubler dipole magnets

A simple model gave utilized for calculation of magnetization effects on ac loss and sextupole for Energy Doubler dipole magnets. The calculation in the simple model gave an underestimation of ac loss by about 30%. Results of computation on ac harmonics were also described.
Date: June 18, 1982
Creator: Ishibashi, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Imperial County geothermal development. Quarterly report, April 1-June 30, 1982 (open access)

Imperial County geothermal development. Quarterly report, April 1-June 30, 1982

The activities of the Geothermal Office during the quarter are discussed, including: important geothermal events, geothermal waste disposal, a grant award by the California Energy Commission, the geothermal development meeting, and the current status of geothermal development in Imperial County. Activities of the Geothermal Planner are addressed, including permits, processing of EIR's, and other planning activities. Progress on the direct heat study is reported.
Date: June 30, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impurity diffusion in transition-metal oxides (open access)

Impurity diffusion in transition-metal oxides

Intrinsic tracer impurity diffusion measurements in ceramic oxides have been primarily confined to CoO, NiO, and Fe/sub 3/O/sub 4/. Tracer impurity diffusion in these materials and TiO/sub 2/, together with measurements of the effect of impurities on tracer diffusion (Co in NiO and Cr in CoO), are reviewed and discussed in terms of impurity-defect interactions and mechanisms of diffusion. Divalent impurities in divalent solvents seem to have a weak interaction with vacancies whereas trivalent impurities in divalent solvents strongly influence the vacancy concentrations and significantly reduce solvent jump frequencies near a trivalent impurity. Impurities with small ionic radii diffuse more slowly with a larger activation energy than impurities with larger ionic radii for all systems considered in this review. Cobalt ions (a moderate size impurity) diffuse rapidly along the open channels parallel to the c-axis in TiO/sub 2/ whereas chromium ions (a smaller-sized impurity) do not. 60 references, 11 figures.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Peterson, N. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Index to Nuclear Safety: a technical progress review by chronology, permuted title, and author, Volume 18 (1) through Volume 22 (6) (open access)

Index to Nuclear Safety: a technical progress review by chronology, permuted title, and author, Volume 18 (1) through Volume 22 (6)

This index to Nuclear Safety covers articles published in Nuclear Safety, Volume 18, Number 1 (January-February 1977) through Volume 22, Number 6 (November-December 1981). The index is divided into three section: a chronological list of articles (including abstracts), a permuted-title (KWIC) index, and an author index. Nuclear Safety, a bimonthly technical progress review prepared by the Nuclear Safety Information Center, covers all safety aspects of nuclear power reactors and associated facilities. Over 300 technical articles published in Nuclear Safety in the last 5 years are listed in this index.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Cottrell, W. B. & Passiakos, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial performance parameters on FXR (open access)

Initial performance parameters on FXR

Construction of the new flash x-ray induction LINAC (FXR) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has been completed. Initial tuning of the machine has produced stable current pulses in excess of 2 kA at the design energy of 20 MeV, with an 80 ns FWHM pulse width, producing single-pulse radiation doses near 500 Roentgen at one meter from the target. The electronic spot size on the bremsstrahlung target is estimated at 3 to 5 mm. In this paper we will discuss the basic FXR design; running-in and tuning of the machine; emittance measurements; beam stability; switch gap synchronization; and measurements of the radiation dose and angular distribution.
Date: June 11, 1982
Creator: Kulke, Bernhard; Innes, Thomas G.; Kihara, Ronald & Scarpetti, Raymond D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Innovative Rates Program. Final report (open access)

Innovative Rates Program. Final report

Title II of the Energy Conservation and Production Act (ECPA) as amended by the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) provided financial assistance to state utility regulatory commissions, nonregulated electric utilities, and the Tennessee Valley Authority through the Innovative Rates Program. The financial assistance was to be used to plan or carry out electric utility regulatory rate reform initiatives relating to innovative rate structures that encourage conservation of energy, electric utility efficiency and reduced costs, and equitable rates to consumers. The Federal and local objectives of the project are described. Activities planned and accomplishments are summarized for the following: project management, data collection, utility bill evaluation, billing enclosure/mailing evaluation, media program evaluation, display evaluation, rate study sessions evaluation, speakers bureau evaluation, and individual customer contacts. A timetable/milestone chart and financial information are included. (MHR)
Date: June 21, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Installation of water-to-air heat pump heating/cooling systems in structures at Leroy Percy State Park. Final technical report (open access)

Installation of water-to-air heat pump heating/cooling systems in structures at Leroy Percy State Park. Final technical report

The project involved the installation of water-to-air heat pump heating/cooling systems in three structures at Leroy Percy State Park. The three structures include the Assistant Manager's residence, Cabin No. 1 and Cabin No. 2. The project is now completed and the three structures are successfully heated by the natural hot artesian water source and are cooled by cold water available from the park's water system.
Date: June 18, 1982
Creator: Rozzell, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated approach to economical, reliable, safe nuclear power production (open access)

Integrated approach to economical, reliable, safe nuclear power production

An Integrated Approach to Economical, Reliable, Safe Nuclear Power Production is the latest evolution of a concept which originated with the Defense-in-Depth philosophy of the nuclear industry. As Defense-in-Depth provided a framework for viewing physical barriers and equipment redundancy, the Integrated Approach gives a framework for viewing nuclear power production in terms of functions and institutions. In the Integrated Approach, four plant Goals are defined (Normal Operation, Core and Plant Protection, Containment Integrity and Emergency Preparedness) with the attendant Functional and Institutional Classifications that support them. The Integrated Approach provides a systematic perspective that combines the economic objective of reliable power production with the safety objective of consistent, controlled plant operation.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
International energy workshop, 1981. Addendum to appendix. Workshop materials (open access)

International energy workshop, 1981. Addendum to appendix. Workshop materials

Materials presented at the workshop are included here: International Petroleum Exchange Model: Nazli Choucri; Gas Research Institute, 1983 Baseline Projection: Daniel A. Dreyfus; Energy Information Administration, Annual Report to Congress, 1981: W. Calvin Kilgore; PILOT Oil Import Demand Scenario Results: George Dantzig; and DRI Energy Review, Summer 1981: Roger Brinner.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Manne, A.S. (ed.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interstitial-Phase Precipitation in Iron-Base Alloys: A Comparative Study (open access)

Interstitial-Phase Precipitation in Iron-Base Alloys: A Comparative Study

Recent developments have elucidated the atomistic mechanisms of precipitation of interstitial elements in simple alloy systems. However, in the more technologically important iron base alloys, interstitial phase precipitation is generally not well understood. The present experimental study was therefore designed to test the applicability of these concepts to more complex ferrous alloys. Hence, a comparative study was made of interstitial phase precipitation in ferritic Fe-Si-C and in austenitic phosphorus-containing Fe-Cr-Ni steels. These systems were subjected to a variety of quench-age thermal treatments, and the microstructural development was subsequently characterized by transmission electron microscopy.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Pelton, Alan Roy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intrinsic-damage-threshold study. Final report for the period ending November 15, 1979 (open access)

Intrinsic-damage-threshold study. Final report for the period ending November 15, 1979

We have prepared bare fused silica surfaces by subjecting the mechanically polished surface to a rastered cw CO/sub 2/ laser beam. Analysis shows that this processing causes: (1) removal of a uniform layer of fused silica; and (2) a probable re-fusing or healing of existing subsurface fractures. The fused silica removal rate is found to be a function of the laser intensity and scan rate. These surfaces are seen to have very low scatter and to be very smooth. In addition, they have exhibited entrance surface damage thresholds at 1.06 ..mu..m and 1 nsec, which are substantially above those seen on the mechanically polished surface. When damage does occur, it tends to be at a few isolated points rather than the general uniform damage seen on the mechanically polished part. In addition to the damage results, we will discuss an observational technique used for viewing these surfaces which employs dark-field illumination.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Temple, P. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of hydrogen-burn damage in the Three Mile Island Unit 2 reactor building (open access)

Investigation of hydrogen-burn damage in the Three Mile Island Unit 2 reactor building

About 10 hours after the March 28, 1979 Loss-of-Coolant Accident began at Three Mile Island Unit 2, a hydrogen deflagration of undetermined extent occurred inside the reactor building. Examinations of photographic evidence, available from the first fifteen entries into the reactor building, yielded preliminary data on the possible extent and range of hydrogen burn damage. These data, although sparse, contributed to development of a possible damage path and to an estimate of the extent of damage to susceptible reactor building items. Further information gathered from analysis of additional photographs and samples can provide the means for estimating hydrogen source and production rate data crucial to developing a complete understanding of the TMI-2 hydrogen deflagration. 34 figures.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Alvares, N. J.; Beason, D. G. & Eidem, G. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An iterative algorithm to produce a positive definite correlation matrix from an approximate correlation matrix (with a program user's guide) (open access)

An iterative algorithm to produce a positive definite correlation matrix from an approximate correlation matrix (with a program user's guide)

This report contains an explanation of an algorithm that, when executed, will operate on any symmetric approximate correlation matrix by iteratively adjusting the eigenvalues of this matrix. The objective of this algorithm is to produce a valid, positive definite, correlation matrix. Also a description of a program (called POSDEF) which implements the algorithm is given.
Date: June 1, 1982
Creator: Iman, R.L. & Davenport, J.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library