Long-Term Hydrologic Monitoring Program Sampling and Analysis Results for 2011 at Rulison, Colorado (open access)

Long-Term Hydrologic Monitoring Program Sampling and Analysis Results for 2011 at Rulison, Colorado

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Legacy Management conducted annual sampling at the Rulison, Colorado, Site for the Long-Term Hydrologic Monitoring Program (LTHMP) on May 18, 2011. The samples were shipped to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Radiation and Indoor Environments National Laboratory in Las Vegas, Nevada, for analysis. All requested analyses were successfully completed, with the exception of the determination of tritium concentration by the enrichment method. The laboratory no longer provides that service. Samples were analyzed for gamma-emitting radionuclides by high-resolution gamma spectrometry and for tritium using the conventional method. Starting in 2012, DOE will retain a different laboratory that provides the enriched tritium analysis service.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
BLENDING ANALYSIS FOR RADIOACTIVE SALT WASTE PROCESSING FACILITY (open access)

BLENDING ANALYSIS FOR RADIOACTIVE SALT WASTE PROCESSING FACILITY

Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) evaluated methods to mix and blend the contents of the blend tanks to ensure the contents are properly blended before they are transferred from the blend tank such as Tank 21 and Tank 24 to the Salt Waste Processing Facility (SWPF) feed tank. The tank contents consist of three forms: dissolved salt solution, other waste salt solutions, and sludge containing settled solids. This paper focuses on developing the computational model and estimating the operation time of submersible slurry pump when the tank contents are adequately blended prior to their transfer to the SWPF facility. A three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics approach was taken by using the full scale configuration of SRS Type-IV tank, Tank 21H. Major solid obstructions such as the tank wall boundary, the transfer pump column, and three slurry pump housings including one active and two inactive pumps were included in the mixing performance model. Basic flow pattern results predicted by the computational model were benchmarked against the SRNL test results and literature data. Tank 21 is a waste tank that is used to prepare batches of salt feed for SWPF. The salt feed must be a homogeneous solution satisfying the acceptance criterion of …
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Lee, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mode-Locked Multichromatic X-Rays in a Seeded Free-Electron Laser for Single-Shot X-Ray Spectroscopy (open access)

Mode-Locked Multichromatic X-Rays in a Seeded Free-Electron Laser for Single-Shot X-Ray Spectroscopy

We present the promise of generating gigawatt mode-locked multichromatic x rays in a seeded free-electron laser (FEL). We show that, by using a laser to imprint periodic modulation in electron beam phase space, a single-frequency coherent seed can be amplified and further translated to a mode-locked multichromatic output in an FEL. With this configuration the FEL output consists of a train of mode-locked ultrashort pulses which span a wide frequency gap with a series of equally spaced sharp lines. These gigawatt multichromatic x rays may potentially allow one to explore the structure and dynamics of a large number of atomic states simultaneously. The feasibility of generating mode-locked x rays ranging from carbon K edge ({approx}284 eV) to copper L{sub 3} edge ({approx}931 eV) is confirmed with numerical simulation using the realistic parameters of the linac coherent light source (LCLS) and LCLS-II. We anticipate that the mode-locked multichromatic x rays in FELs may open up new opportunities in x-ray spectroscopy (i.e. resonant inelastic x-ray scattering, time-resolved scattering and spectroscopy, etc.).
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Xiang, Dao; Ding, Yuantao; Raubenheimer, Tor & Wu, Juhao
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extension of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycle to Low Reactor Power Operation: Investigations Using the Coupled Anl Plant Dynamics Code-sas4a/Sassys-1 Liquid Metal Reactor Code System. (open access)

Extension of the Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Brayton Cycle to Low Reactor Power Operation: Investigations Using the Coupled Anl Plant Dynamics Code-sas4a/Sassys-1 Liquid Metal Reactor Code System.

Significant progress has been made on the development of a control strategy for the supercritical carbon dioxide (S-CO{sub 2}) Brayton cycle enabling removal of power from an autonomous load following Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor (SFR) down to decay heat levels such that the S-CO{sub 2} cycle can be used to cool the reactor until decay heat can be removed by the normal shutdown heat removal system or a passive decay heat removal system such as Direct Reactor Auxiliary Cooling System (DRACS) loops with DRACS in-vessel heat exchangers. This capability of the new control strategy eliminates the need for use of a separate shutdown heat removal system which might also use supercritical CO{sub 2}. It has been found that this capability can be achieved by introducing a new control mechanism involving shaft speed control for the common shaft joining the turbine and two compressors following reduction of the load demand from the electrical grid to zero. Following disconnection of the generator from the electrical grid, heat is removed from the intermediate sodium circuit through the sodium-to-CO{sub 2} heat exchanger, the turbine solely drives the two compressors, and heat is rejected from the cycle through the CO{sub 2}-to-water cooler. To investigate the effectiveness …
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Moisseytsev, A. & Sienicki, J. J. (Nuclear Engineering Division)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
LITERATURE REVIEW ON IMPACT OF GLYCOLATE ON THE 2H EVAPORATOR AND THE EFFLUENT TREATMENT FACILITY (open access)

LITERATURE REVIEW ON IMPACT OF GLYCOLATE ON THE 2H EVAPORATOR AND THE EFFLUENT TREATMENT FACILITY

Glycolic acid (GA) is being studied as an alternate reductant in the Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF) feed preparation process. It will either be a total or partial replacement for the formic acid that is currently used. A literature review has been conducted on the impact of glycolate on two post-DWPF downstream systems - the 2H Evaporator system and the Effluent Treatment Facility (ETF). The DWPF recycle stream serves as a portion of the feed to the 2H Evaporator. Glycolate enters the evaporator system from the glycolate in the recycle stream. The overhead (i.e., condensed phase) from the 2H Evaporator serves as a portion of the feed to the ETF. The literature search revealed that virtually no impact is anticipated for the 2H Evaporator. Glycolate may help reduce scale formation in the evaporator due to its high complexing ability. The drawback of the solubilizing ability is the potential impact on the criticality analysis of the 2H Evaporator system. It is recommended that at least a theoretical evaluation to confirm the finding that no self-propagating violent reactions with nitrate/nitrites will occur should be performed. Similarly, identification of sources of ignition relevant to glycolate and/or update of the composite flammability analysis to …
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Adu-Wusu, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
NEAMS update quarterly report for January - March 2012. (open access)

NEAMS update quarterly report for January - March 2012.

Quarterly highlights are: (1) The integration of Denovo and AMP was demonstrated in an AMP simulation of the thermo-mechanics of a complete fuel assembly; (2) Bison was enhanced with a mechanistic fuel cracking model; (3) Mechanistic algorithms were incorporated into various lower-length-scale models to represent fission gases and dislocations in UO2 fuels; (4) Marmot was improved to allow faster testing of mesoscale models using larger problem domains; (5) Component models of reactor piping were developed for use in Relap-7; (6) The mesh generator of Proteus was updated to accept a mesh specification from Moose and equations were formulated for the intermediate-fidelity Proteus-2D1D module; (7) A new pressure solver was implemented in Nek5000 and demonstrated to work 2.5 times faster than the previous solver; (8) Work continued on volume-holdup models for two fuel reprocessing operations: voloxidation and dissolution; (9) Progress was made on a pyroprocessing model and the characterization of pyroprocessing emission signatures; (10) A new 1D groundwater waste transport code was delivered to the used fuel disposition (UFD) campaign; (11) Efforts on waste form modeling included empirical simulation of sodium-borosilicate glass compositions; (12) The Waste team developed three prototypes for modeling hydride reorientation in fuel cladding during very long-term fuel …
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Bradley, K. S.; Hayes, S.; Pointer, D.; Summers, R.; Sadasivan, P.; Sun, X. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A New Biology for the 21st Century; Ensuring the United States Leads the Coming Biology Revolution (open access)

A New Biology for the 21st Century; Ensuring the United States Leads the Coming Biology Revolution

In July, 2008, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Science Foundation (NSF), and Department of Energy (DOE) asked the National Research Council’s Board on Life Sciences to convene a committee to examine the current state of biological research in the United States and recommend how best to capitalize on recent technological and scientific advances that have allowed biologists to integrate biological research findings, collect and interpret vastly increased amounts of data, and predict the behavior of complex biological systems. From September 2008 through July of 2009, a committee of 16 experts from the fields of biology, engineering and computational science undertook to delineate those scientific and technological advances and come to a consensus on how the U.S. might best capitalize on them. This report, authored by the Committee on a New Biology for the 21st Century, describes the committee’s work and conclusions.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Committee on a New Biology for the 21st Century
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal Emittance Growth Due to Nonlinear Space Charge Effect (open access)

Longitudinal Emittance Growth Due to Nonlinear Space Charge Effect

None
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Lau, Y. Y.; Yu, S. S.; Barnard, J. J. & Seidl, P. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fuel from Bacteria, CO2, Water, and Solar Energy (open access)

Fuel from Bacteria, CO2, Water, and Solar Energy

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about a new program to generate liquid fuels from bacteria, carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight (project title "Engineering a Bacterial Reverse Fuel Cell") including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet is the first open solicitation, announcing funding opportunities for involvement in the project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Harvard Medical School. Wyss Institute
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biofuels from E. coli (open access)

Biofuels from E. coli

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the Electrofuels program including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet discusses the modification of E. coli to consume carbon dioxide and produce liquid fuel as part of the "Engineering E. coli as an Electrofuels Chassis for Isooctane Production" project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Ginkgo Bioworks
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Genetically Modified Bacteria for Fuel Production (open access)

Genetically Modified Bacteria for Fuel Production

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the Electrofuels program including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet discusses a new program to develop a bacteria that uses electricity to convert carbon dioxide into liquid fuels as part of the "Development of Rhodobacter as a Versatile Platform for Fuels Production" project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Pennsylvania State University
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Versatile Transportation Energy Solutions (open access)

Versatile Transportation Energy Solutions

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the 13 projects that are a part of the Electrofuels program including project goals, innovation needs, and potential impacts.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: United States. Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energetics and approximate quasiparticle electronic structure of low-index surfaces of SnO2 (open access)

Energetics and approximate quasiparticle electronic structure of low-index surfaces of SnO2

None
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Kuefner, S; Schleife, A; Hoeffling, B & Bechstedt, F
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test Plan - Solids Accumulation Scouting Studies (open access)

Test Plan - Solids Accumulation Scouting Studies

This plan documents the highlights of the Solids Accumulations Scouting Studies test; a project, from Washington River Protection Solutions (WRPS), that began on February 1, 2012. During the last 12 weeks considerable progress has been made to design and plan methods that will be used to estimate the concentration and distribution of heavy fissile solids in accumulated solids in the Hanford double-shell tank (DST) 241-AW-105 (AW-105), which is the primary goal of this task. This DST will be one of the several waste feed delivery staging tanks designated to feed the Pretreatment Facility (PTF) of the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant (WTP). Note that over the length of the waste feed delivery mission AW-105 is currently identified as having the most fill empty cycles of any DST feed tanks, which is the reason for modeling this particular tank. At SRNL an existing test facility, the Mixing Demonstration Tank, which will be modified for the present work, will use stainless steel particles in a simulant that represents Hanford waste to perform mock staging tanks transfers that will allow solids to accumulate in the tank heel. The concentration and location of the mock fissile particles will be measured in these scoping studies …
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Duignan, M. R.; Steeper, T. J.; Steimke, J. L. & Fowley, M. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report on thermal aging effects on tensile properties of ferritic-martensitic steels. (open access)

Report on thermal aging effects on tensile properties of ferritic-martensitic steels.

This report provides an update on the evaluation of thermal-aging induced degradation of tensile properties of advanced ferritic-martensitic steels. The report is the first deliverable (level 3) in FY11 (M3A11AN04030103), under the Work Package A-11AN040301, 'Advanced Alloy Testing' performed by Argonne National Laboratory, as part of Advanced Structural Materials Program for the Advanced Reactor Concepts. This work package supports the advanced structural materials development by providing tensile data on aged alloys and a mechanistic model, validated by experiments, with a predictive capability on long-term performance. The scope of work is to evaluate the effect of thermal aging on the tensile properties of advanced alloys such as ferritic-martensitic steels, mod.9Cr-1Mo, NF616, and advanced austenitic stainless steel, HT-UPS. The aging experiments have been conducted over a temperature of 550-750 C for various time periods to simulate the microstructural changes in the alloys as a function of time at temperature. In addition, a mechanistic model based on thermodynamics and kinetics has been used to address the changes in microstructure of the alloys as a function of time and temperature, which is developed in the companion work package at ANL. The focus of this project is advanced alloy testing and understanding the effects of …
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Li, M.; Soppet, W. K.; Rink, D. L.; Listwan, J. T. & Natesan, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering Bacteria for Efficient Fuel Production (open access)

Engineering Bacteria for Efficient Fuel Production

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the Electrofuels program including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet discusses engineering a microorganism to create a liquid fuel from hydrogen and carbon dioxide as part of the "Novel Biological Conversion of Hydrogen and Carbon Dioxide Directly into Free Fatty Acids" project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: OPX Biotechnologies
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biofuels from Solar Energy and Bacteria (open access)

Biofuels from Solar Energy and Bacteria

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the Electrofuels program including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet discusses the conversion of carbon dioxide into liquid fuels as part of the "Electrofuels Via Direct Electron Transfer from Electrodes to Microbes" project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: University of Massachusetts Amherst
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fuel from Bacteria (open access)

Fuel from Bacteria

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about a new program to genetically modify bacteria to generate Butanol from carbon dioxide (project title "Bioconversion of Carbon Dioxide to Biofuels by Facultatively Autotrophic Hydrogen Bacteria") including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet is the first open solicitation, announcing funding opportunities for involvement in the project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Ohio State University
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanical Design of a High Energy Beam Absorber for the Advanced Superconducting Test Accelerator (ASTA) at Fermilab (open access)

Mechanical Design of a High Energy Beam Absorber for the Advanced Superconducting Test Accelerator (ASTA) at Fermilab

A high energy beam absorber has been built for the Advanced Superconducting Test Accelerator (ASTA) at Fermilab. In the facility's initial configuration, an electron beam will be accelerated through 3 TTF-type or ILC-type SRF cryomodules to an energy of 750MeV. The electron beam will be directed to one of multiple downstream experimental and diagnostic beam lines and then deposited in one of two beam absorbers. The facility is designed to accommodate up to 6 cryomodules, which would produce a 75kW beam at 1.5GeV; this is the driving design condition for the beam absorbers. The beam absorbers consist of water-cooled graphite, aluminum and copper layers contained in a helium-filled enclosure. This paper describes the mechanical implementation of the beam absorbers, with a focus on thermal design and analysis. The potential for radiation-induced degradation of the graphite is discussed.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Baffes, C.; Church, M.; Leibfritz, J.; Oplt, S. & Rakhno, I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electric Vehicle Batteries (open access)

Electric Vehicle Batteries

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the 10 projects that are a part of the Batteries for Electrical Energy Storage in Transportation (BEEST) program including project goals, innovation needs, and potential impacts.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: United States. Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biofuels from Bacteria, Electricity, and CO2 (open access)

Biofuels from Bacteria, Electricity, and CO2

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the Electrofuels program including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet discusses combining ammonia and bacteria to produce liquid fuel as part of the "Biofuels from CO2 Using Ammonia or Iron-Oxidizing Bacteria in Reverse Microbial Fuel Cells" project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Columbia University
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Energy Density Capacitors (open access)

High Energy Density Capacitors

Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy project sheet summarizing general information about the Batteries for Electrical Energy Storage in Transportation (BEEST) program including critical needs, innovation and advantages, impacts, and contact information. This sheet discusses a new capacitor design for electric vehicles as part of the "High Energy Density Capacitors" project.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Recapping, Inc.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Graphical User Interface Software for Gross Defect Detection at the Atucha-I Plant (open access)

Graphical User Interface Software for Gross Defect Detection at the Atucha-I Plant

At the Atucha-I pressurized heavy water reactor in Argentina, fuel assemblies in the spent fuel pools are stored by suspending them in two vertically stacked layers. This introduces the unique problem of verifying the presence of fuel in either layer without physically moving the fuel assemblies. Movement of fuel, especially from the lower layer, would involve a major effort on the part of the operator. Given that the facility uses both natural uranium and slightly enriched uranium at 0.85 w% {sup 235}U, and has been in operation since 1974, a wide range of burnups and cooling times can exist in any given pool. Additionally, while fuel assemblies are grouped together in a uniform fashion, the packing density from group to group can vary within a single pool. A tool called the Spent Fuel Neutron Counter (SFNC) was developed and successfully tested at the site to verify, in an in-situ condition, the presence of fuel up to burnups of 8,000 MWd/t. Since the neutron source term becomes a nonlinear function of burnup beyond this burnup, a new algorithm was developed to predict expected response from the SFNC at measurement locations covering the entire range of burnups, cooling times, and initial enrichments. …
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Wong, Alden C.; Sitaraman, Shivakumar; Ham, Young S. & Peixoto, Orpet J. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Federal Laws Relating to Cybersecurity: Discussion of Proposed Revisions (open access)

Federal Laws Relating to Cybersecurity: Discussion of Proposed Revisions

This report discusses that framework and proposals to amend more than 30 acts of Congress that are part of or relevant to it.
Date: May 10, 2012
Creator: Fischer, Eric A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library