Alternatives Generation and Analysis for Heat Removal from High Level Waste Tanks (open access)

Alternatives Generation and Analysis for Heat Removal from High Level Waste Tanks

This document addresses the preferred combination of design and operational configurations to provide heat removal from high-level waste tanks during Phase 1 waste feed delivery to prevent the waste temperature from exceeding tank safety requirement limits. An interim decision for the preferred method to remove the heat from the high-level waste tanks during waste feed delivery operations is presented herein.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: WILLIS, W.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Chemistry Laboratory progress report for FY 1999 (open access)

Analytical Chemistry Laboratory progress report for FY 1999

This report summarizes the activities of the Analytical Chemistry Laboratory (ACL) at Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) for Fiscal Year (FY) 1999 (October 1998 through September 1999). This annual progress report, which is the sixteenth in this series for the ACL, describes effort on continuing projects, work on new projects, and contributions of the ACL staff to various programs at ANL.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Green, D. W.; Boparai, A. S.; Bowers, D. L. & Graczyk, D. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Architectural Design Criteria for f- Block Metal Ion Sequestering Agents--Final Report (open access)

Architectural Design Criteria for f- Block Metal Ion Sequestering Agents--Final Report

The objective of this project is to facilitate the ligand development process for f-block metal ions, i.e., the actinides and lanthanides, by developing an accurate set of criteria for the design of ligand architectures. To achieve this objective we first combine theory and experiment to understand the nature of fundamental interactions in selected metal-ligand systems. These design criteria provide a basis for proposing improved Ligand architectures. We then incorporate this understanding within the framework of a molecular mechanics force field to allow the rapid calculation of geometries and energies for ligands and their metal complexes. This computational model provides a method for quickly screening proposed architectures to identify the best candidates for subsequent synthesis and testing.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Hay, Benjamin P.; Dixon, David A.; Lumetta, Gregg J.; Rapko, Brian M.; Roundhill, David M.; Rogers, R D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Architectural Design Criteria for f-Block Metal Ion Sequestering Agents Final Report (open access)

Architectural Design Criteria for f-Block Metal Ion Sequestering Agents Final Report

None
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Hay, B. P.; Dixon, D. A.; Lumetta, G. J.; Rapko, B. M.; Roundhill, D. M.; Rogers, R. D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Borocarbide thin films and tunneling measurements. (open access)

Borocarbide thin films and tunneling measurements.

The results obtained by their group in thin film fabrication and STM tunneling on superconducting borocarbides YNi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C have been be briefly reviewed. Results concerning the microwave surface impedance and the S/N planar junctions on LuNi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C thin films have been also presented and analyzed. These new data unambiguously confirm the full BCS nature of the superconducting gap in borocarbides and the absence of significant pair-breaking effects in LuNi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Iavarone, M.; Andreone, A.; Cassinese, A.; Dicapual, R.; Giannil, L.; Vagliol, R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration Facilities for NIF (open access)

Calibration Facilities for NIF

The calibration facilities will be dynamic and will change to meet the needs of experiments. Small sources, such as the Manson Source should be available to everyone at any time. Carrying out experiments at Omega is providing ample opportunity for practice in pre-shot preparation. Hopefully, the needs that are demonstrated in these experiments will assure the development of (or keep in service) facilities at each of the laboratories that will be essential for in-house preparation for experiments at NIF.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Perry, T. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Canister Cleaning System Final Design Report Project A-2A (open access)

Canister Cleaning System Final Design Report Project A-2A

Approximately 2,300 metric tons Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) are currently stored within two water filled pools, the 105 K East (KE) fuel storage basin and the 105 K West (KW) fuel storage basin, at the U.S. Department of Energy, Richland Operations Office (RL). The SNF Project is responsible for operation of the K Basins and for the materials within them. A subproject to the SNF Project is the Debris Removal Subproject, which is responsible for removal of empty canisters and lids from the basins. The Canister Cleaning System (CCS) is part of the Debris Removal Project. The CCS will be installed in the KW Basin and operated during the fuel removal activity. The KW Basin has approximately 3600 canisters that require removal from the basin. The CCS is being designed to ''clean'' empty fuel canisters and lids and package them for disposal to the Environmental Restoration Disposal Facility complex. The system will interface with the KW Basin and be located in the Dummy Elevator Pit.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Farwick, C. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defense Acquisitions: Use of Cost Reduction Plans in Estimating F-22 Total Production Costs (open access)

Defense Acquisitions: Use of Cost Reduction Plans in Estimating F-22 Total Production Costs

Testimony issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed the Air Force's F-22 Raptor Program and its impact on production cost reduction plans, focusing on the: (1) status of cost reduction plans, including some plans not yet implemented, and identifying Air Force procedures for reporting on the plans; and (2) comparison of 1999 cost estimates developed by the Air Force and the Office of the Secretary of Defense with the congressional cost limitation."
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defense Software: Review of Defense Report on Software Development Best Practices (open access)

Defense Software: Review of Defense Report on Software Development Best Practices

Correspondence issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a legislative requirement, GAO reviewed the Department of Defense's (DOD) report on its efforts to adopt management best practices for software development and acquisition, focusing on whether: (1) it satisfied the Senate Committee on Armed Service's directive; and (2) the information included was accurate and complete."
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dislocation Dynamics using Anisotropic Elasticity: Methodology and Analysis (open access)

Dislocation Dynamics using Anisotropic Elasticity: Methodology and Analysis

A numerical methodology to incorporate anisotropic elasticity into three-dimensional dislocation dynamics codes has been developed, employing theorems derived by Lothe (1967), Brown (1967), Indenbom and Orlov (1968) and Asaro and Barnett (1976). The formalism is based on the stress field solution for a straight dislocation segment of arbitrqq orientation in 3-dimensional space. The general solution is given in a complicated closed integral form. To reduce the computation complexity, look-up tables are used to avoid heavy computations for the evaluation of the angular stress factor ({Sigma}{sub ij}) and its first derivative term ({Sigma}{sub ij}). The computation methodology and error analysis are discussed in comparison with known closed form solutions for isotropic elasticity. For the case of Mo single crystals, it is shown that the difference between anisotropic and isotropic elastic stress fields can be as high as 15% close to the dislocation line, and decreases significantly far away from it. This suggests that short-range interactions should be evaluated based on anisotropic elasticity, while long-range interaction can be approximated using isotropic elasticity.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Rhee, M; Stolken, J S; Bulatov, V V; Diaz de la Rubia, T; Zbib, H M & Hirth, J P
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The dynamics of combustion fronts in porous media (open access)

The dynamics of combustion fronts in porous media

In this report, a method for solving this problem by treating the reaction region as a place of discontinuities in the appropriate variables, which include, for example, fluxes of heat and mass was proposed. Using a rigorous perturbation approach, similar to that used in the propagation of flames and smoldering combustion, appropriate jump conditions that relate the change in these variables across the front was derived. These conditions account for the kinetics of the reaction between the oxidant and the fuel, the changes in the morphology of the pore space and the heat and mass transfer in the reaction zone. The modeling of the problem reduces to the modeling of the dynamics of a combustion front, on the regions of either side of which transport of momentum (fluids), heat and mass, but not chemical reactions, must be considered. Properties of the two regions are coupled using the derived jump conditions. This methodology allows one to explicitly incorporate permeability heterogeneity effects in the process description, without the undue complexity of the coupled chemical reactions.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Akkutlu, I. Yucel & Yortsos, Yannis C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An economic growth model of investment, energy savings, and CO2 reductions : an integrated analysis of policies that increase investments in advanced efficient/low-carbon technologies. (open access)
The effect of laser welding process parameters on the mechanical and microstructural properties of V-4Cr-4Ti structural materials. (open access)

The effect of laser welding process parameters on the mechanical and microstructural properties of V-4Cr-4Ti structural materials.

This paper reports on a systematic study which was conducted to examine the use of a pulsed Nd:YAG laser to weld sheet materials of V-Cr-Ti alloys and to characterize the microstructural and mechanical properties of the resulting joints. Deep penetration and defect-free welds were achieved under an optimal combination of laser parameters including focal length of lens, pulse energy, pulse repetition rate, beam travel speed, and shielding gas arrangement. The key for defect-free welds was found to be the stabilization of the keyhole and providing an escape path for the gas trapped in the weld. An innovative method was developed to obtain deep penetration and oxygen contamination free welds. Oxygen and nitrogen uptake were reduced to levels only a few ppm higher than the base metal by design and development of an environmental control box. Effort directed at developing an acceptable postwelding heat treatment showed that five passes of a diffuse laser beam over the welded region softened the weld material, especially in the root region of the weld.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Reed, C.; Natesan, K.; Xu, Z. & Smith, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects on axial momentum spread on the electron-ion two-stream instability in high-intensity ion beams (open access)

Effects on axial momentum spread on the electron-ion two-stream instability in high-intensity ion beams

Use is made of the Vlasov-Maxwell equations to describe the electron-ion two-stream instability driven by the directed axial motion of a high-intensity ion beam propagating through a stationary population of (unwanted) background electrons. The ion beam is treated as continuous in the z-direction, and the electrons are electrostatically confined in the transverse direction by the space-charge potential produced by the excession charge. The analysis is carried out for arbitrary beam intensity, consistent with transverse confinement of the beam particles, and arbitrary fractional charge neutralization by the background electrons. For the case of overlapping step-function ion and electron density profiles, corresponding to monoenergetic electrons and ions in the transverse direction, detailed stability properties are calculated, including the important effects of an axial momentum spread, over a wide range of system parameters for dipole perturbations with azimuthal mode number l=1. The two-stream instability growth rate is found to increase with increasing beam intensity, increasing fractional charge neutralization, and decreasing proximity of the conducting wall. It is shown that Landau damping associated with a modest axial momentum spread of the beam ions and background electrons has a strong stabilizing influence on the instability.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Davidso, R. & Qin, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extraction of the width of the W boson from a measurement of the ratio of the W and Z cross sections (open access)

Extraction of the width of the W boson from a measurement of the ratio of the W and Z cross sections

This dissertation reports on measurements of inclusive cross sections times branching fractions into electrons for W and Z bosons produced in p{anti p} collisions at {radical}s = 1.8 TeV. From an integrated luminosity of 84.5 pb{sup {minus}1} recorded in 1994--1995 by the D0 detector at the Fermilab Tevatron {Lambda} the cross sections are measured to be {sigma}p{anti p} {r_arrow} W + X {center_dot} B(W {r_arrow} e{nu}) = 2,310 {+-} 10 (stat) {+-} 50 (Syst) {+-} 100 (lum) pb and {sigma}(p{anti p} {r_arrow} Z + X) {center_dot} B(Z {r_arrow} ee) = 221 {+-} 3 (stat) {+-} 4 (Syst) {+-} 10 (lum) pb. The cross section ratio R is determined to be {sigma}(p{anti p} {r_arrow} W + X) {center_dot} B(W {r_arrow} e{nu})/{sigma}(p{bar p} {r_arrow} Z + X) {center_dot} B(Z {r_arrow} ee) = 10.43 {+-} 0.15 (stat) {+-} 0.20 (syst) {+-} 0.10 (NLO){Lambda} and R is used to determine B(W {r_arrow} e{nu}) = 0.1044 {+-} 0.0015 (stat) {+-} 0.0020 (syst) {+-} 0.0017 (theory) {+-} 0.0010 (NLO){Lambda} and {Lambda}{sub W} = 2.169 {+-} 0.031 (stat) {+-} 0.042 (syst) {+-} 0.041 (theory) {+-} 0.022 (NLO) GeV. The latter is used to set a 95% confidence level upper limit on the partial decay width of the …
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Gomez, Gervasio
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
A flexible object-based software framework for modeling complex systems with interacting natural and societal processes. (open access)

A flexible object-based software framework for modeling complex systems with interacting natural and societal processes.

The Dynamic Information Architecture System (DIAS) is a flexible, extensible, object-based framework for developing and maintaining complex multidisciplinary simulations. The DIAS infrastructure makes it feasible to build and manipulate complex simulation scenarios in which many thousands of objects can interact via dozens to hundreds of concurrent dynamic processes. The flexibility and extensibility of the DIAS software infrastructure stem mainly from (1) the abstraction of object behaviors, (2) the encapsulation and formalization of model functionality, and (3) the mutability of domain object contents. DIAS simulation objects are inherently capable of highly flexible and heterogeneous spatial realizations. Geospatial graphical representation of DIAS simulation objects is addressed via the GeoViewer, an object-based GIS toolkit application developed at ANL. DIAS simulation capabilities have been extended by inclusion of societal process models generated by the Framework for Addressing Cooperative Extended Transactions (FACET), another object-based framework developed at Argonne National Laboratory. By using FACET models to implement societal behaviors of individuals and organizations within larger DIAS-based natural systems simulations, it has become possible to conveniently address a broad range of issues involving interaction and feedback among natural and societal processes. Example DIAS application areas discussed in this paper include a dynamic virtual oceanic environment, detailed simulation …
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Christiansen, J. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Food and Commodities: Federal Purchases and Major Regulations That Potentially Affect Prices Paid (open access)

Food and Commodities: Federal Purchases and Major Regulations That Potentially Affect Prices Paid

Correspondence issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO provided information on the federal government's food and commodity purchases, focusing on: (1) details about federal agencies' purchases of food and agricultural commodities from fiscal year (FY) 1997 through FY 1999; and (2) information on major regulations that may affect the prices paid by these agencies for these products."
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Foreign Assistance: U.S. Bilateral Food Assistance to North Korea Had Mixed Results (open access)

Foreign Assistance: U.S. Bilateral Food Assistance to North Korea Had Mixed Results

A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the U.S. bilateral food assistance project in North Korea, focusing on the: (1) objectives, accomplishments, key factors affecting performance, and monitoring effectiveness of the potato component of the bilateral aid project; (2) objectives, accomplishments, key factors affecting performance, and monitoring effectiveness of the food-for-work component; and (3) administration's views on the project and plans for additional bilateral assistance to North Korea. The United States, North Korea, and a consortium of U.S. private voluntary organizations (known as the Consortium) signed an agreement for the project in April 1999."
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Former Soviet Union and U.S. Foreign Assistance (open access)

The Former Soviet Union and U.S. Foreign Assistance

This is a report on the former soviet union and the U.S foreign assistance seeking to encourage a trasition to democracy and free market economics.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Tarnoff, Curt
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A General Design for Energy Test Procedures (open access)

A General Design for Energy Test Procedures

Appliances are increasingly controlled by microprocessors. Unfortunately, energy test procedures have not been modified to capture the positive and negative contributions of the microprocessor to the appliance's energy use. A new test procedure is described which captures both the mechanical and logical features present in many new appliances. We developed an energy test procedure for refrigerators that incorporates most aspects of the proposed new approach. Some of the strengths and weaknesses of the new test are described.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Meier, Alan
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Grid-based asynchronous migration of execution context in Java virtual machines (open access)

Grid-based asynchronous migration of execution context in Java virtual machines

Previous research efforts for building thread migration systems have concentrated on the development of frameworks dealing with a small local environment controlled by a single user. Computational Grids provide the opportunity to utilize a large-scale environment controlled over different organizational boundaries. Using this class of large-scale computational resources as part of a thread migration system provides a significant challenge previously not addressed by this community. In this paper the authors present a framework that integrates Grid services to enhance the functionality of a thread migration system. To accommodate future Grid services, the design of the framework is both flexible and extensible. Currently, the thread migration system contains Grid services for authentication, registration, lookup, and automatic software installation. In the context of distributed applications executed on a Grid-based infrastructure, the asynchronous migration of an execution context can help solve problems such as remote execution, load balancing, and the development of mobile agents. The prototype is based on the migration of Java threads, allowing asynchronous and heterogeneous migration of the execution context of the running code.
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: von Laszewski, G.; Shudo, K. & Muraoka, Y.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
H-2A Agricultural Guestworkers: Status of Efforts to Improve Program Services (open access)

H-2A Agricultural Guestworkers: Status of Efforts to Improve Program Services

Testimony issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO discussed the status of the Department of Labor's (DOL) efforts to improve the H-2A agricultural guestworker program services."
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Influence of Thermal Aging on the Mechanical and Corrosion Properties of C-22 Alloy Welds (open access)

Influence of Thermal Aging on the Mechanical and Corrosion Properties of C-22 Alloy Welds

The phase stability of C-22 alloy (UNS No. N06022) gas tungsten arc welds was studied by aging samples at 427, 482, 538, 593, 649, 704, and 760 C for times up to 40,000 hours. The tensile properties and the Charpy impact toughness of these samples were measured in the as-welded condition as well as after aging. The corrosion resistance was measured using standard immersion tests in acidic ferric sulfate (ASTM G 28 A) and 2.5% hydrochloric acid solutions at the boiling point. The microstructures of weld samples were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). One weld sample (aged 40,000 hours at 427 C) was examined using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The structure of the unaged welds was dendritic with tetrahedrally close-packed (TCP) phase particles in the interdendritic regions. Long-range order was seen in the weld aged at 427 C for 40,000 hours and was assumed to also occur in other welds aged below approximately 600 C. At temperatures above about 600 C, TCP phase nucleation and growth of existing particles occurred. This precipitation occurred near the original particles presumably in regions of the highest molybdenum (Mo) segregation. Lower temperatures had little or no effect on the morphology of TCP phases. …
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Edgecumbe Summers, T. S.; Rebak, R. B. & Seeley, R. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intermetallic anode materials for Li batteries. (open access)

Intermetallic anode materials for Li batteries.

None
Date: June 15, 2000
Creator: Benedek, R.; Vaughey, J. T.; Thackeray, M. M.; Yang, L. H. & Prasad, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library