Design and performance of liquid hydrogen target systems for the Fermilab Fixed Target Program (open access)

Design and performance of liquid hydrogen target systems for the Fermilab Fixed Target Program

The Fermilab 1990--1991 Fixed Target Program featured six experiments utilizing liquid hydrogen or liquid deuterium targets as part of their apparatus. Each design was optimized to the criteria of the experiment, resulting in variations of material selection, methods of refrigeration and secondary containment. Collectively, the targets were run for a total of 14,184 hours with an average operational efficiency of 97.6%. The safe and reliable operation of these targets was complemented by an increased degree of documentation and component testing. This operation was also aided by several key upgrades. All the systems were designed and fabricated under a set of written guidelines that blend analytical calculations and empirical guidance drawn from over twenty years of target fabrication experience. 3 refs., 4 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Allspah, D.; Danes, J.; Peifer, J. & Stanek, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Surface, interface and thin-film magnetism (open access)

Surface, interface and thin-film magnetism

In the last quarter of the 20th century, with the information revolution and the ever growing need to acquire, store, and retrieve information, the science and technologies attached to magnetic recording have experienced an explosive growth. Central to those pursuits has been the materials science of magnetism as it applies to surfaces, interfaces, and thin films. This report discusses topics on thin-film magnetism such as: theory, physical effects, prospects, opportunities and future developments. (JL)
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Falicov, L.M. (Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA (United States) California Univ., Berkeley, CA (United States). Dept. of Physics)
System: The UNT Digital Library
A search for the production of the final states. tau. sup +. tau. sup minus e sup + e sup minus ,. tau. sup +. tau. sup minus. mu. sup +. mu. sup minus , and. tau. sup +. tau. sup minus. pi. sup +. pi. sup minus in e sup + e sup minus collisions at radical s = 29 GeV (open access)

A search for the production of the final states. tau. sup +. tau. sup minus e sup + e sup minus ,. tau. sup +. tau. sup minus. mu. sup +. mu. sup minus , and. tau. sup +. tau. sup minus. pi. sup +. pi. sup minus in e sup + e sup minus collisions at radical s = 29 GeV

We have searched for the reaction e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} {yields} {tau}{sup +}{tau}{sup {minus}}{bar f}f, where f is either an electron, muon, or charged pion, at {radical}s = 29 GeV using the Mark 2 detector at the PEP storage ring. One candidate event is found while 2.3 events are expected from known processes. We would expect to see 11 events if the cross-section for e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} {yields} {tau}{sup +}{tau}{sup {minus}}{bar f}f at {radical}s = 29 GeV were enhanced by the factor of 4.7 which the ALEPH collaboration reports for {radical}s = 91 GeV. we also look for e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} {yields} e{sup +}e{sup {minus}}{bar f}f and e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} {yields} {mu}{sup +}{mu}{sup {minus}} {bar f}f, and for e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} {yields} {tau}{sup +}{tau}{sup {minus}} {gamma} using a similar analysis procedure and see the number of events predicted by the standard model. 10 refs., 5 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Influences of clouds and rain on the large-scale transport and deposition of sulfur (open access)

Influences of clouds and rain on the large-scale transport and deposition of sulfur

This paper describes the application of a three-dimensional, global-scale Eulerian model with an explicit description of cloud and chemical processes. Simulation results describing the transport of sulfur from North America and Europe across the north Atlantic Ocean during a climatological July are presented. Wet deposition was found to contribute slightly more to total sulfur deposition than dry deposition, a feature explained by the large amounts of precipitation during this month. The wet deposition patterns did not always correspond to the emissions patterns. The precipitation rate and spatial distribution had a large effect on the calculated concentrations of soluble sulfur species. 10 refs., 7 figs., 1 tab.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Luecken, D.J.; Berkowitz, C.M. & Easter, R.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Situational simulations in interactive video (open access)

Situational simulations in interactive video

The Westinghouse Hanford Company Advanced Training Technologies section is using situational simulations in several Interactive Video training courses. Two applications of situational simulations will be discussed. In the first, used in the Hanford General Employee Training course, the student evaluates employee's actions in simulations of possible workplace situations. In the second, used in the Criticality Safety course, students must follow well-defined procedures to complete tasks. Design and incorporation of situational simulations will be discussed. 3 refs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Smith, L.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scale effects in sliding friction: An experimental study (open access)

Scale effects in sliding friction: An experimental study

Solid friction is considered by some to be a fundamental property of two contacting materials, while others consider it to be a property of the larger tribosystem in which the materials are contained. A set of sliding friction experiments were designed to investigate the hypothesis that the unlubricated sliding friction between two materials is indeed a tribosystems-related property and that the relative influence of the materials properties or those of the machine on friction varies from one situation to another. Three tribometers were used: a friction microprobe (FMP), a typical laboratory-scale reciprocating pin-on-flat device, and a heavy-duty commercial wear tester. The slider material was stainless steel (AISI 440C) and the flat specimen material was an ordered alloy of Ni{sub 3}Al (IC-50). Sphere-on-flat geometry was used at ambient conditions and at normal forces ranging from 0.01 N to 100 N and average sliding velocities of 0.01 to 100.0 mm/s. The nominal, steady-state sliding friction coefficient tended to decrease with increases in normal force for each of the three tribometers, and the steady state value of sliding friction tended to increase as the mass of the machine increased. The variation of the friction force during sliding was also a characteristic of the …
Date: July 24, 1991
Creator: Blau, P.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Soft and hard pomerons: Is there a distinction (open access)

Soft and hard pomerons: Is there a distinction

One of the big unsolved problems of QCD remains the problem of the Pomeron: what is the relation of high energy elastic and diffractive phenomena to the underlying theory This is not a subject in which I have actively worked. But my interest in it has in this year increased greatly. The reason has to do with ideas for experimentation at SSC/LHC which either directly address the problem or which require the understanding of strong-interaction diffractive phenomena as backgrounds for discovery-physics processes involving electroweak boson exchanges. I will in this talk omit these motivations, which can be found elsewhere, and instead concentrate on some personal veiwpoints regarding the Pomeron which may or may not be conventional. The main question has to do with the distinction between the original, old-fashioned soft'' Pomeron of the 1960s, built out of multiperipheral hadron-exchanges, and the more modern perturbative-QCD hard'' Pomeron, built out of multiperipheral gluon exchanges. The perspective I offer comes mainly from two sources: one is heavy-flavor physics, and the other is the Manohar-Georgi view of constituent quark physics. 27 refs., 5 figs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Bjorken, J. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An IFE development strategy (open access)

An IFE development strategy

The development of inertial fusion as a power source will require achieving four principal milestones: ignition and propagating burn; high gain at low drive energy for the reactor driver; pulse repetition rates of a few Hz; and long-term reliability and economics of a reactor. To keep development time and costs to a minimum, these should be accomplished with as few major facilities as possible. A viable scenario for the Inertial Fusion Energy (IFE) Program would include establishing the first milestone in a Nova Upgrade for ignition and gain and the latter three in an upgradable, low-power Engineering Test Facility (ETF)/Demonstration Power Plant (DPP), i.e. two major facilities. To be successful in as short a time as possible operations at the major facilities would have to be supported by off-line reactor driver and other reactor technology development efforts. These efforts would evaluate and prioritize the myriad of options available at present for power plant and subsystem concepts. This paper describes the elements of such a program that could make the first commercial power available in the decade of the 2020s and estimates the resources needed. This program would be carried out in phases with major go/no-go decision points before each large …
Date: July 16, 1991
Creator: Hogan, W.J.; Storm, E. & Lindl, J.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
PATRAN and P/THERMAL Applications for Thermal Modeling. [SP-100 Ground Engineering Station] (open access)

PATRAN and P/THERMAL Applications for Thermal Modeling. [SP-100 Ground Engineering Station]

The standard that has been established over the last decade or so in performing numerical modeling for analysis purposes is to make creation of the computational grid and results presentation less time and effort consuming than the analysis function itself. Software packages known as pre- and post-processors have been developed and made available in various forms and sizes for the engineering analyst's use. These packages reduce the effort and time required of the analyst to perform pre- and post-operations on a given model. PATRAN is one such pre- and post-processing software package. PATRAN provides a large array of capabilities to enable geometric representation and creation of the analysis model. This software package also incorporates interfacing routines which enable a model created in PATRAN to be translated into the input format of many other analysis codes. This paper discusses the use of PATRAN as a pre- and post-processor and the software package P/THERMAL as the analysis code for the steady state and transient thermal analysis of a vacuum vessel. The design objective of the vessel is to duplicate the conditions of outer space and provide containment for a test nuclear reactor designed for space application. This objective creates a challenging thermal …
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Valdiviez, R. & Crea, B. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Algebraic calculation of stroboscopic maps of ordinary, nonlinear differential equations (open access)

Algebraic calculation of stroboscopic maps of ordinary, nonlinear differential equations

The relation between the parameters of a differential equation and corresponding discrete maps are becoming increasingly important in the study of nonlinear dynamical systems. Maps are well adopted for numerical computation and several universal properties of them are known. Therefore some perturbation methods have been proposed to deduce them for physical systems, which can be modeled by an ordinary differential equation (ODE) with a small nonlinearity. A new iterative, rigorous algebraic method for the calculation of the coefficients of a Taylor expansion of a stroboscopic map from ODE's with not necessarily small nonlinearities is presented. It is shown analytically that most of the coefficients are small for a small integration time and grow slowly in the course of time if the flow vector field of the ODE is polynomial and if the ODE has fixed point in the origin. Approximations of different orders respectively of the rest term are investigated for several nonlinear systems. 31 refs., 16 figs.
Date: July 25, 1991
Creator: Wackerbauer, R. (Max-Planck-Institut fuer Extraterrestrische Physik, Garching (Germany)); Huebler, A. (Illinois Univ., Urbana, IL (United States). Center for Complex Systems Research) & Mayer-Kress, G. (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (United States) California Univ., Santa Cruz, CA (United States). Dept. of Mathematics)
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect of limiter conditioning on the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor edge plasma (open access)

The effect of limiter conditioning on the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor edge plasma

Measurements by moveable Langmuir probes and edge spectroscopy diagnostics have documented the conditioning effect of low density helium-initiated discharge sequences on the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR) edge plasma. Langmuir probe measurements show in general that the edge electron density n{sub e} decreases by less than a factor of 2 while the edge electron temperature T{sub e} doubles. Radial profiles to the plasma boundary show that the density scrape-off length increases somewhat while the temperature scrape-off length decreases substantially. The particle flux density is unaffected. The spectral emission of C 2 decreases by a factor of 2, a much smaller change than that exhibited by the D{sub {alpha}} signal. These results complement previous accounts of the conditioning technique. Comparisons of these He conditioning measurements are made to edge measurements during a deuterium density scan experiment, showing many similarities, and to an existing edge model of the conditioning process, showing qualitative agreement. 20 refs., 5 figs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Kilpatrick, S. J.; Manos, D. M.; Nyberg, I.; Ramsey, A. T.; Stratton, B. C.; Timberlake, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear thermal rocket clustering: 1, A summary of previous work and relevant issues (open access)

Nuclear thermal rocket clustering: 1, A summary of previous work and relevant issues

A general review of the technical merits of nuclear thermal rocket clustering is presented. A summary of previous analyses performed during the Rover program is presented and used to assess clustering in the context of projected Space Exploration Initiative missions. A number of technical issues are discussed including cluster reliability, engine-out operation, neutronic coupling, shutdown core power generation, shutdown reactivity requirements, reactor kinetics, and radiation shielding. 7 refs., 3 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: July 14, 1991
Creator: Buksa, J.J. & Houts, M.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer modeling of Y-Ba-Cu-O thin film deposition and growth (open access)

Computer modeling of Y-Ba-Cu-O thin film deposition and growth

The deposition and growth of epitaxial thin films of YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub 7} are modeled by means of Monte Carlo simulations of the deposition and diffusion of Y, Ba, and Cu oxide particles. This complements existing experimental characterization techniques to allow the study of kinetic phenomena expected to play a dominant role in the inherently non-equilibrium thin film deposition process. Surface morphologies and defect structures obtained in the simulated films are found to closely resemble those observed experimentally. A systematic study of the effects of deposition rate and substrate temperature during in-situ film fabrication reveals that the kinetics of film growth can readily dominate the structural formation of the thin film. 16 refs., 4 figs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Burmester, C.; Gronsky, R. (Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA (United States)) & Wille, L. (Florida Atlantic Univ., Boca Raton, FL (United States). Dept. of Physics)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determining surface profile from sequential interference patterns from a long trace profiler (open access)

Determining surface profile from sequential interference patterns from a long trace profiler

The Long Trace Profiler (Takacs et al.) is a slope-measuring instrument which was introduced several years ago. Development of this instrument continues at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in improving both hardware design and software algorithms for turning the raw interference data (a sequence of intensity patterns) into properly interpreted representations of surface slope and height. This report presents a mathematical model of the interference pattern and methods of extracting the slope and height profile from such patterns. 9 refs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Irick, S.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparative sodium void effects for different advanced liquid metal reactor fuel and core designs (open access)

Comparative sodium void effects for different advanced liquid metal reactor fuel and core designs

An analysis of metal-, oxide, and nitride-fueled advanced liquid metal reactor cores was performed to investigate the calculated differences in sodium void reactivity, and to determine the relationship between sodium void reactivity and burnup reactivity swing using the three fuel types. The results of this analysis indicate that nitride fuel has the least positive sodium void reactivity for any given burnup reactivity swing. Thus, it appears that a good design compromise between transient overpower and loss of flow response is obtained using nitride fuel. Additional studies were made to understand these and other nitride advantages. 8 refs., 5 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Dobbin, K. D.; Kessler, S. F.; Nelson, J. V.; Gedeon, S. R. & Omberg, R. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron energies in metals (open access)

Electron energies in metals

The modern era of electron-electron interactions began a decade ago. Plummer's group initiated a program of using angular resolved photoemission to examine the band structure of the simple metals. Beginning with aluminum, and carrying on to sodium and potassium, they always found that the occupied energy bands were much narrower than expected. For example, the compressed energy bands for metallic potassium suggest a band effective mass of m* = 1.33m{sub e}. This should be compared to the band mass found from optical conductivity m*/m{sub e} = 1.01 {plus minus} 0.01. The discrepancy between these results is startling. It was this great difference which started my group doing calculations. Our program was two-fold. On one hand, we reanalyzed the experimental data, in order to see if Plummer's result was an experimental artifact. On the other hand, we completely redid the electron-electron self-energy calculations for simple metals, using the most modern choices of local-field corrections and vertex corrections. Our results will be reported in these lectures. They can be summarized as following: Our calculations give the same effective masses as the older calculations, so the theory is relatively unchanged; Our analysis of the experiments suggests that the recent measurements of band narrowing …
Date: July 10, 1991
Creator: Mahan, G.D. (Oak Ridge National Lab., TN (United States) Tennessee Univ., Knoxville, TN (United States). Dept. of Physics and Astronomy)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Overview of the first workshop on alpha particle physics in TFTR (open access)

Overview of the first workshop on alpha particle physics in TFTR

The First Workshop on Alpha Physics in TFTR'' was held at the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab March 28--29, 1991. The motivation for this meeting was to clarify and strengthen the TFTR alpha physics program, and to increase the involvement of the fusion community outside PPPL in the TFTR D-T experiments. Therefore the meeting was sharply focused on alpha physics relevant to the upcoming TFTR D-T simulation, and was asked to devote half of his talk to specific TFTR issues. The Workshop consisted of 27 talks on: (1) experimental possibilities; (2) theoretical possibilities; (3) diagnostic possibilities; (4) relevance for future machines; and (5) discussion/summary session. This summary contains a brief sampling of the new results and ideas brought out by these talks, followed by two more general overviews of the status of experiment and theory.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Zweben, S. J. & Biglari, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electromagnetic field effects on cells of the immune system: The role of calcium signalling (open access)

Electromagnetic field effects on cells of the immune system: The role of calcium signalling

During the past decade considerable evidence has accumulated demonstrating the exposures of cells of the immune system to relatively weak extremely-low-frequency (ELF) electromagnetic fields (< 300 Hz) can elicit cellular changes which might be relevant to in-vivo immune activity. However, knowledge about the underlying biological mechanisms by which weak fields induce cellular changes is still very limited. It is generally believed that the cell membrane and Ca{sup 2+} regulated activity is involved in bioactive ELF field-coupling to living systems. This article begins with a short review of the current state of knowledge concerning the effects of nonthermal levels of ELF electromagnetic fields on the biochemistry and activity of immune cells, and then closely examines new results which suggest a role for Ca{sup 2+} in the induction of these cellular field effects. Based on these findings it is proposed that membrane-mediated Ca{sup 2+} signalling processes are involved in the mediation of field effects on the immune system. 64 refs., 2 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Walleczek, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Capillary surfaces in exotic containers (open access)

Capillary surfaces in exotic containers

A survey is presented of results to date for capillary surfaces in exotic'' containers. These containers have the property that each one admits a continuum of distinct equilibrium free surfaces, all bounding with the container walls the same volume of fluid, making the same contact angle at the trip interface curve, and having identical mechanical energies. The containers can be so designed that they are themselves axially symmetric but that the fluid configurations of minimizing energy cannot be axially symmetric. 9 refs., 2 figs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Concus, P. (Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA (United States)) & Finn, R. (Stanford Univ., CA (United States). Dept. of Mathematics)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Economical clean carbon fuel and co-product gaseous and liquid from coal (open access)

Economical clean carbon fuel and co-product gaseous and liquid from coal

Unlike its predecessors, the HYDROCARB Process converts coal or other carbonaceous feedstock to a clean carbon fuel and co-product gaseous hydrogen- and/or methane (CH{sub 4})-rich gas and/or liquid methanol. Feedstock carbon content is essentially extracted as pure particulate carbon, free of sulfur, nitrogen, and ash. By eliminating the need to manufacture large quantities of hydrogen, lower capital cost and higher thermal efficiency result compared to previous coal-to-synthetic-fuel processes, allowing production of carbon fuel and at a price competitive with current energy prices. Combustion testing has shown that carbon fuel can be burned in conventional combustion and heat engine equipment with minimum modification. The HYDROCARB Process also can reduce CO{sub 2} emissions for mitigating the greenhouse problem. 5 refs., 1 fig., 2 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Steinberg, M. (Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, NY (United States)) & Grohse, E.W. (HYDROCARB Corporation, New York, NY (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reliability of fast reactor mixed-oxide fuel during operational transients (open access)

Reliability of fast reactor mixed-oxide fuel during operational transients

Results are presented from the cooperative DOE and PNC Phase 1 and 2 operational transient testing programs conducted in the EBR-2 reactor. The program includes second (D9 and PNC 316 cladding) and third (FSM, AST and ODS cladding) generation mixed-oxide fuel pins. The irradiation tests include duty cycle operation and extended overpower tests. the results demonstrate the capability of second generation fuel pins to survive a wide range of duty cycle and extended overpower events. 15 refs., 9 figs., 4 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Boltax, A.; Neimark, L.A.; Tsai, Hanchung (Argonne National Lab., IL (United States)); Katsuragawa, M. & Shikakura, S. (Power Reactor and Nuclear Fuel Development Corp., Oarai, Ibaraki (Japan). Oarai Engineering Center)
System: The UNT Digital Library
The U5. 0 Undulator for the ALS (open access)

The U5. 0 Undulator for the ALS

the U5.0 Undulator, and 89 period, 5 cm period length, 4.6 m long insertion device has been designed, is being fabricated and is scheduled for completion in early 1992. This undulator will be the first high brightness source, in the 50 to 1500 eV range, for the Advanced Light Source (ALS) at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. A hybrid magnetic configuration using Nd-Fe-B permanent magnet material and vanadium permendur poles has been selected to achieve the field quality needed to meet performance requirements. The magnetic structure is modular with each half consisting of 5 assembly sections, which provide the periodic structure, and end structures, for entrance and exit correction, mounted on a steel backing beam. Each assembly section consists of 35 half-period pole assemblies bolted to a mount. The required 0.837 Tesla effective peak field at a 1.4 cm gap has been verified with model measurements. Vertical field integral correction is accomplished with the end structures, each having an arrangement of permanent magnet rotors which will be adjusted to minimize electron beam missteering over the undulator operating field range. To reduce the effect of environmental fields, the steel backing beams are connected through parallel, low-reluctance, Ni-Fe hinges. The magnetic structure is …
Date: July 15, 1991
Creator: Hoyer, E.; Chin, J.; Halbach, K.; Hassenzahl, W.V.; Humphries, D.; Kincaid, B. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Algebraic modelling of components and computer simulation of refrigerator steady-state operation (open access)

Algebraic modelling of components and computer simulation of refrigerator steady-state operation

Because manufacturers of household refrigerators are facing two important problems, the replacement of refrigerant R12 and the need to improve efficiency, there is a need to develop a model of the refrigerator which greatly reduces the computer time required to evaluate the refrigeration cycle. This paper describes a refrigerator model where all equations are reduced to algebraic form. The model has the following features: (1) each component of the refrigerator is modelled separately, (2) all differential equations are reduced to algebraic equations, and (3) the transport properties of new refrigerants are not needed. The model can be used to: (1) evaluate new refrigerants as drop-in refrigerants, (2) study different refrigeration cycles and (3) optimize the refrigerator for each new refrigerant. This paper describes the development of the model and, where possible, the results of the model are compared to experimental data. 12 refs., 7 figs.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Rogers, S. & Tree, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pre-tinning and flux considerations on the reliability of solder surface (open access)

Pre-tinning and flux considerations on the reliability of solder surface

The kinetics of wetting were studied on several different prepared surfaces of copper (Cu) to simulate the microstructure observed in pre-tinned Cu-clad printed circuit boards. The results illustrate the effectiveness of pre-tinning in maintaining the solderability of Cu surfaces. Pre-tinning with Pb-rich solder (95Pb-5Sn) is particularly effective since solderability is preserved even after a relatively long aging treatment. On the other hand, pre-tinning with eutectic solder risks the loss of solderability during aging or baking due to surface exposure of an {var epsilon}-phase intermetallic with poor wetting properties. The results also confirm the presence of carbon in pre-tinned specimens due to the use of flux. The effect of carbon on solderability is not yet known. 13 refs., 8 figs., 1 tab.
Date: July 1, 1991
Creator: Sunwoo, A.J. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (United States)); Morris, J.W. Jr. (Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA (United States)) & Lucey, G.K. (Harry Diamond Labs., Adelphi, MD (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library