A Four Cell Lattice for the UCLA Compact Light Source Synchrotron (open access)

A Four Cell Lattice for the UCLA Compact Light Source Synchrotron

The 1.5 GeV compact light source UCS proposed for UCLA must fit into a shielded vault that is 9.144 meters (30 feet) wide. In order for the machine to fit into the allowable space, the ring circumference must be reduced 36 meters, the circumference of the six cell lattice, to something like 26 or 27 meters. The four cell lattice described in this report has a ring circumference of 27.0 meters.
Date: March 12, 1999
Creator: Garren, A.A. & Green, M.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ENRICO FERMI FAST REACTOR SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL CRITICALLY CALCULATIONS: INTACT MODE (open access)

ENRICO FERMI FAST REACTOR SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL CRITICALLY CALCULATIONS: INTACT MODE

The purpose of this calculation is to perform intact mode and partially degraded mode criticality evaluations of the Department of Energy's (DOE) Enrico Fermi (EF) Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) co-disposed in a 5 Defense High-Level Waste (5-DHLW) Waste Package (WP) and emplaced in a Monitored Geologic Repository (MGR). The criticality evaluations estimate the values of the effective neutron multiplication factor, k{sub eff}, a measure of nuclear criticality potential, for the 5-DHLW/DOE SNF WP with intact or partially degraded internal configurations. These evaluations contribute to the WP design.
Date: April 12, 1999
Creator: Mobasheran, A.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prospects for Advanced RF Theory and Modeling (open access)

Prospects for Advanced RF Theory and Modeling

This paper represents an attempt to express in print the contents of a rather philosophical review talk. The charge for the talk was not to summarize the present status of the field and what we can do, but to assess what we will need to do in the future and where the gaps are in fulfilling these needs. The objective was to be complete, covering all aspects of theory and modeling in all frequency regimes, although in the end the talk mainly focussed on the ion cyclotron range of frequencies (ICRF). In choosing which areas to develop, it is important to keep in mind who the customers for RF modeling are likely to be and what sorts of tasks they will need for RF to do. This occupies the first part of the paper. Then we examine each of the elements of a complete RF theory and try to identify the kinds of advances needed.
Date: April 12, 1999
Creator: Batchelor, D.B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performing three-dimensional neutral particle transport calculations on tera scale computers (open access)

Performing three-dimensional neutral particle transport calculations on tera scale computers

A scalable, parallel code system to perform neutral particle transport calculations in three dimensions is presented. To utilize the hyper-cluster architecture of emerging tera scale computers, the parallel code successfully combines the MPI message passing and paradigms. The code's capabilities are demonstrated by a shielding calculation containing over 14 billion unknowns. This calculation was accomplished on the IBM SP ''ASCI-Blue-Pacific computer located at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL).
Date: January 12, 1999
Creator: Woodward, C. S.; Brown, P. N.; Chang, B.; Dorr, M. R. & Hanebutte, U. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The blending strategy for the plutonium immobilization program (open access)

The blending strategy for the plutonium immobilization program

The Department of Energy (DOE) has declared approximately 38.2 tonnes of weapons-grade plutonium to be excess to the needs of national security, 14.3 tonnes of fuel- and reactor-grade plutonium excess to DOE needs, and anticipates an additional 7 tonnes to be declared excess to national security needs. Of this 59.5 tonnes, DOE anticipates that {approximately} 7.5 tonnes will be dispositioned as spent fuel at the Geologic Repository and {approximately} 2 tonnes will be declared below the safeguards termination limit and be discard3ed as TRU waste at WIPP. The remaining 50 tonnes of excess plutonium exists in many forms and locations around the country, and is under the control of several DOE offices. In addition to the plutonium, the feed stock also contains about 17 tonnes of depleted uranium, about 600 kg of highly enriched uranium, and many kilograms of neptunium and thorium and about 8 to 10 tonnes of tramp impurities. The Materials Disposition Program (MD) will be received materials packaged by these other Programs to disposition in a manor that meets the spent fuel standard. To minimize the cost of characterization of the feedstock and to minimize purification processes, a blending strategy will be followed. The levelization of the …
Date: February 12, 1999
Creator: Ebbinghaus, B. B.; Edmunds, T. A.; Gentry, S.; Gray, L. W.; Riley, D. C.; Spingarn, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of an automated guided vehicle system for large scale materials handling of optics in the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Development of an automated guided vehicle system for large scale materials handling of optics in the National Ignition Facility

None
Date: February 12, 1999
Creator: McMahon, D H; Tiszauer, D & Yakuma, S
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status Report on Studies of Recovery Boiler Composite Floor Tube Cracking (open access)

Status Report on Studies of Recovery Boiler Composite Floor Tube Cracking

Cracking of the stainless steel layer of co-extruded 304L stainless steel/SA210 Gd A 1 carbon steel black liquor recovery boiler floor tubes has been identified as one of the most serious material problems in the pulp and paper industry. A DOE-funded study was initiated in 1995 with the goal of determining the cause of and possible solutions to this cracking problem. These studies have characterized tube cracking as well as the chemical and thermal environment and stress state of floor tubes. Investigations of possible cracking mechanisms indicate that stress corrosion cracking rather than thermal fatigue is a more likely cause of crack initiation. The cracking mechanism appears to require the presence of hydrated sodium sulfide and is most likely active during shut-downs and/or start-ups. Based on these results and operating experience, certain alloys appear to be more resistant than others to cracking in the floor environment, and certain operating practices appear to significantly lessen the likelihood of cracking. This report is the latest in a series of progress reports presented on this project.
Date: September 12, 1999
Creator: Eng, P.; Frederick, L. A.; Hoffmann, C. M.; Keiser, J. R.; Mahmood, J.; Maziasz, P. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test Report for ENRAF Annulus Leak Detector Development (open access)

Test Report for ENRAF Annulus Leak Detector Development

Development testing determined feasibility of using ENRAF 854 gauges as annulus leak detectors.
Date: August 12, 1999
Creator: HUBER, J.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical Basis for the Determination that Current Characterization Data and Processes are Sufficient to Ensure Safe Storage and to Design Waste Disposal (open access)

Technical Basis for the Determination that Current Characterization Data and Processes are Sufficient to Ensure Safe Storage and to Design Waste Disposal

This document presents the technical basis for closure of Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB) Recommendation 93-5 Implementation Plan milestone 5.6.3.13, ''Core sample all tanks by 2002'' (DOE-RL 1996). The milestone was based on the need for characterization data to ensure safe storage of the waste, to operate the tanks safely, and to plan and implement retrieval and processing of the waste. Sufficient tank characterization data have been obtained to ensure that existing controls are adequate for safe storage of the waste in the 177 waste tanks at the Hanford Site. In addition, a process has been developed, executed, and institutionalized to systemically identify information needs, to integrate and prioritize the needs, and to reliably obtain and analyze the associated samples. This document provides a technical case that the remaining 45 incompletely sampled tanks no longer require sampling to support the intent of the Implementation Plan milestone. Sufficient data have been obtained to close the Unreviewed Safety Questions (USQs), and to ensure that existing hazard controls are adequate and appropriately applied. However, in the future, additional characterization of tanks at the site will be required to support identified information needs. Closure of this milestone allows sampling and analytical data to …
Date: August 12, 1999
Creator: SIMPSON, B.C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual Design Report Cask Loadout Sys and Cask Drop Redesign for the Immersion Pail Support Structure and Operator Interface Platform at 105 K West (open access)

Conceptual Design Report Cask Loadout Sys and Cask Drop Redesign for the Immersion Pail Support Structure and Operator Interface Platform at 105 K West

This conceptual design report documents the redesign of the IPSS and the OIP in the 105 KW Basin south loadout pit due to a postulated cask drop accident, as part of Project A.5/A.6, Canister Transfer Facility Modifications. Project A.5/A.6 involves facility modifications needed to transfer fuel from the basin into the cask-MCO. The function of the IPSS is to suspend, guide, and position the immersion pail. The immersion pail protects the cask-MCO from contamination by basin water and acts as a lifting device for the cask-MCO. The OIP provides operator access to the south loadout pit. Previous analyses studied the effects of a cask-MCO drop on the south loadout pit concrete structure and on the IPSS. The most recent analysis considered the resulting loads at the pit slab/wall joint (Kanjilal, 1999). This area had not been modeled previously, and the analysis results indicate that the demand capacity exceeds the allowable at the slab/wall joint. The energy induced on the south loadout pit must be limited such that the safety class function of the basin is maintained. The solution presented in this CDR redesigns the IPSS and the OIP to include impact-absorbing features that will reduce the induced energy. The impact …
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: Langevin, A. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
K Basin sandfilter backwash line characterization project, analytical results for Campaign 20 (open access)

K Basin sandfilter backwash line characterization project, analytical results for Campaign 20

Sample 112KWBMF was taken from the K West Sandfilter Backwash Pit on June 1, 1999, and received by 222-S Laboratory on June 2,1999. Analyses were performed on sample 112KWBMF in accordance with Letter of Instruction for K Basins Sandfilter Backwash Line Samples (LOI) in support of the K Basin Sandfilter Backwash Line Characterization Project.
Date: August 12, 1999
Creator: Steen, F. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank 241-AP-107, grab samples, 7AP-99-1, 7AP-99-3 and 7AP-99-4 analytical results for the final report (open access)

Tank 241-AP-107, grab samples, 7AP-99-1, 7AP-99-3 and 7AP-99-4 analytical results for the final report

This document is the format IV, final report for the tank 241-AP-107 (AP-107) grab samples taken in May 1999 to address waste compatibility concerns. Chemical, radiochemical, and physical analyses on the tank AP-107 samples were performed as directed in Compatibility Grab Sampling and Analysis Plan for Fiscal year 1999. Any deviations from the instructions provided in the tank sampling and analysis plan (TSAP) were discussed in this narrative. Interim data were provided earlier to River Protection Project (RPP) personnel, however, the data presented here represent the official results. No notification limits were exceeded.
Date: August 12, 1999
Creator: BELL, K.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Walkdown and Evaluation Report (ETN-98-0005) S-Farm Pit 241-S-B to Valve Pit 241-S-D (open access)

Walkdown and Evaluation Report (ETN-98-0005) S-Farm Pit 241-S-B to Valve Pit 241-S-D

This document addresses the initial investigation of the as-found condition of the partially constructed 2414 Overground Transfer (OGT) system. It also addresses the evaluation of design deficiencies and their resolution, and includes before and after photographs, lists of drawings and Engineering Change Notices, and all design calculations.
Date: August 12, 1999
Creator: HICKS, D.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste retrieval sluicing system campaign number 1 solids volume transferred calculation (open access)

Waste retrieval sluicing system campaign number 1 solids volume transferred calculation

This calculation has been prepared to document the volume of sludge removed from tank 241-C-106 during Waste Retrieval Sluicing System (WRSS) Sluicing Campaign No.1. This calculation will be updated, if necessary, to incorporate new data. This calculation supports the declaration of completion of WRSS Campaign No.1 and, as such, is also the documentation for completion of Performance Agreement TWR 1.2.1 C-106 Sluicing Performance Expectations. It documents the performance of all the appropriate tank 241-C-106 mass transfer verifications, evaluations, and appropriate adjustments discussed in HNF-SD-WM-PROC-021, Chapter 23, ''Process Engineering Calculations for Tank 241-C-106 Sluicing and Retrieval''.
Date: August 12, 1999
Creator: BAILEY, J.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Construction integrity assessment report (ETN-98-0005) S-Farm overground transfer (OGT) system valve pit 241-S-B to valve pit 241-S-D (open access)

Construction integrity assessment report (ETN-98-0005) S-Farm overground transfer (OGT) system valve pit 241-S-B to valve pit 241-S-D

The S-Farm overground transfer (OGT) line will bypass the existing line(s), between valve pits 241-S-B and 241-S-D that no longer meet system requirements. The new OGT line will provide a waste transfer pipeline between these valve pits in support of saltwell pumping activities. The length of the OGT line is approximately 180 ft from pit to pit. The primary pipe is nominal 1-in. diameter stainless steel (SST) braided Ethylene-propylene Diene Monomer (EPDM) hose. The encasement pipe is a nominal 3-in., flanged, SST pipe made up of several different length pipe spool pieces (drawing H-2-829564, sh. 1 and sh. 2). The OGT line slopes from valve pit 241-S-B toward valve pit 241-S-D. At each end, the primary and encasement pipe connect to a pit entry spool piece. The pit entry spool pieces are constructed of prefabricated SST materials. These spool pieces allow for the separation of the primary and encasement pipelines after the pipes have entered the valve pits (drawing H-2-818280, sh. 2). The pit entry spool pieces also allow for leak detection of the encasement pipe at each end (drawing H-2-829564, sh. 2). The OGT encasement pipeline is supported above ground by adjustable height unistrut brackets and precast concrete bases …
Date: August 12, 1999
Creator: HICKS, D.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrective Action Investigation Plan for Corrective Action Unit 143: Area 25 Contaminated Waste Dumps, Nevada Test Site, Nevada (open access)

Corrective Action Investigation Plan for Corrective Action Unit 143: Area 25 Contaminated Waste Dumps, Nevada Test Site, Nevada

None
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: /NV, USDOE
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Toward more precise beam position measurements (open access)

Toward more precise beam position measurements

For the past year or so we have been examining the properties and limitations of the beam bugs in use in the ETA program at LLNL with a view toward improving the accuracy of beam position and current measurements. When considering measurements of beam position, it is very important to distinguish between relative and absolute position measurements. A relative position measurement determines only the amplitude and direction of the motion of the beam within the transport tube. If one knew where the beam was, one could determine its new position. A relative measurement is essentially independent of errors in mechanical fabrication or electrical components. The minimum measurable displacement is only limited by the strength of the electrical signals or the signal to noise ratio of the position signal. An absolute position measurement is much more challenging. All inaccuracies in mechanical components and fabrication, electrical components, installation and assembly errors must be considered and controlled along with the issues common to relative position measurements. However, if the object is to strike a small specific point on a target or pass the beam through a small hole, absolute beam position measurements are required. The following is a summary of our progress including …
Date: May 12, 1999
Creator: Clark, J C; Fessenden, T J & Holmes, C
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Sandia/Arzamas-16 Magazine-to-Magazine Remote Monitoring Field Trial Evaluation (open access)

The Sandia/Arzamas-16 Magazine-to-Magazine Remote Monitoring Field Trial Evaluation

Sandia National Laboratories and the Russian Federal Nuclear Center-All Russian Research Institute for Experimental Physics (VNIIEF) (also known as Arzamas-16) are collaborating on ways to assure the highest standards of safety, security, and international accountability of fissile material. For these collaborations, sensors and information technologies have been identified as important in reaching these standards in a cost-effective manner. Specifically, Sandia and VNIIEF have established a series of remote monitoring field trials to provide a mechanism for joint research and development on storage monitoring systems. These efforts consist of the ''Container-to-Container'', ''Magazine-to-Magazine'', and ''Facility-to-Facility'' field trials. This paper will describe the evaluation exercise Sandia and VNIIEF conducted on the Magazine-to-Magazine systems. Topics covered will include a description of the evaluation philosophy, how the various sensors and system features were tested, evaluation results, and lessons learned.
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: Barkanov, Boris; Blagin, Sergei; Croessmann, Dennis; Damico, Joe; Ehle, Steve & Nilsen, Curt
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Grouting Lost-Circulation Zones with Polyurethane Foam (open access)

Chemical Grouting Lost-Circulation Zones with Polyurethane Foam

Sandia National Laboratories is developing polyurethane foam as a chemical grout for lost circulation zones. In past work polyurethane foam was tried with limited success in laboratory tests and GDO sponsored field tests. Goals were that the foam expanded significantly and harden to a chillable firmness quickly. Since that earlier work there have been improvements in polyurethane chemistry and the causes of the failures of previous tests have been identified. Recent success in applying pure solution grouts (proper classification of polyurethane--Naudts) in boreholes encourages reevaluating its use to control lost circulation. These successes include conformance control in the oil patch (e.g. Ng) and darn remediation projects (Bruce et al.). In civil engineering, polyurethane is becoming the material of choice for sealing boreholes with large voids and high inflows, conditions associated with the worst lost circulation problems. Demonstration of a delivery mechanism is yet to be done in a geothermal borehole.
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: Mansure, A. J. & Westmoreland, J. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Investigation of Molecular Templating in Amorphous Silicas by Cross-Polarization NMR Spectroscopy (open access)

An Investigation of Molecular Templating in Amorphous Silicas by Cross-Polarization NMR Spectroscopy

The precise pore sizes defined by crystalline zeolite lattices have led to intensive research on zeolite membranes. Unfortunately zeolites have proven to be extremely difficult to prepare in a defect-free thin film form needed for membrane flux and selectivity. We introduce tetrapropylammonium (TPA), a structure-directing agent for zeolite ZSM-5, into a silica sol and exploit the development of high solvation stresses to create templated amorphous silicas with pore apertures comparable in size to those of ZSM-5. Silicon and carbon NMR experiments were performed to evaluate the efficacy of our templating approach. The {sup 29}Si NMR spectrum of the silica matrix was observed by an intermolecular cross-polarization experiment involving the {sup 1}H nuclei of TPA and the {sup 29}Si nuclei in the silica matrix. The efficiency of the cross-polarization interaction was used to investigate the degree to which the matrix formed a tight cage surrounding the template molecule. Bulk xerogels, prepared by gelation and slow drying of the corresponding sols, exhibited only weak interactions between the two sets of nuclei. Thin film xerogels, where drying stresses are greater, exhibited significantly increased interactions. Intramolecular cross-polarization experiments between the {sup 1}H and {sup 13}C nuclei of the template molecule demonstrated that much of …
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: Assink, R. A.; Brinker, C. J.; Click, C. A. & Naik, S. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Absorbance and Photoluminescence of Si, Ge, and MoS2 Nanoparticles Studied by Liquid Chromatography (open access)

Absorbance and Photoluminescence of Si, Ge, and MoS2 Nanoparticles Studied by Liquid Chromatography

The authors have successfully synthesized highly crystalline, size-selected indirect band-gap nanocrystals (NC) of Si, Ge and MoS{sub 2} in the size range 2-10 nm in inverse micelles and studied their optical absorption and photoluminescence (PL) properties using liquid chromatography. Room temperature, visible PL from these nanocrystals was demonstrated in the range 700-350 nm (1.8-3.5 eV). their experimental results are interpreted in terms of the corresponding electronic structure of the bulk materials and it is demonstrated that these nanocrystals retain bulk-like electronic character to sizes as small as 2 nm, but the absorbance energies are strongly blue-shifted by quantum confinement. The experimental results on Si-NCs are also compared to earlier work on Si clusters grown by other techniques and to the predictions of various model calculations. Currently, the wide variations in the theoretical predictions of the various models along with considerable uncertainties in experimental size determination for clusters less than 3-4 nm, make it difficult to select the best model.
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: Provencio, P. P.; Samara, G. A. & Wilcoxon, J. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography detection method (open access)

Polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography detection method

This study demonstrates the potential of polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography (PS-OCT) for non-invasive in vivo detection and characterization of early, incipient caries lesions. PS-OCT generates cross-sectional images of biological tissue while measuring the effect of the tissue on the polarization state of incident light. Clear discrimination between regions of normal and demineralized enamel is first shown in PS-OCT images of bovine enamel blocks containing well-characterized artificial lesions. High-resolution, cross-sectional images of extracted human teeth are then generated that clearly discriminate between the normal and carious regions on both the smooth and occlusal surfaces. Regions of the teeth that appeared to be demineralized in the PS-OCT images were verified using histological thin sections examined under polarized light microscopy. The PS-OCT system discriminates between normal and carious regions by measuring the polarization state of the back-scattered 1310 nm light, which is affected by the state of demineralization of the enamel. Demineralization of enamel increases the scattereing coefficient, thus depolarizing the incident light. This study shows that PS-OCT has great potential for the detection, characterization, and monitoring of incipient caries lesions.
Date: May 12, 1999
Creator: Everett, M J; Sathyam, U S; Colston, B W; DaSilva, L B; Fried, D; Ragadio, J N et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fourier Transform Luminescence Spectroscopy of Semiconductor Thin Films and Devices (open access)

Fourier Transform Luminescence Spectroscopy of Semiconductor Thin Films and Devices

We have been successful in adapting Fourier transform (FT) Raman accessories and spectrophotometers for sensitive measurements of the photoluminescence (PL) spectra of photovoltaic materials and devices. In many cases, the sensitivity of the FT technique allows rapid room-temperature measurements of weak luminescence spectra that cannot be observed using dispersive PL spectrophotometers. We present here the results of a number of studies of material and device quality obtained using FT-luminescence spectroscopy, including insights into bandgap variations, defect and impurity effects, and relative recombination rates. We also describe our approach to extending the range of the FT-Raman spectrophotometer to cover the region from 11,500 to 3700 cm-1, enabling FT-luminescence measurements to be made from 1.42 to 0.46 eV, and our investigation of FT-PL microspectroscopy.
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: Webb, J. D.; Keyes, B. M.; Ahrenkiel, R. K.; Wanlass, M. W.; Ramanathan, K.; Gedvilas, L. M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Proposal for an Advanced Drilling System with Real-Time Diagnostics (Diagnostics-While-Drilling) (open access)

A Proposal for an Advanced Drilling System with Real-Time Diagnostics (Diagnostics-While-Drilling)

In this paper, we summarize the rationale for an advanced system called Diagnostics-While-Drilling (DWD) and describe its benefits, preliminary configuration, and essential characteristics. The central concept is a closed data circuit in which downhole sensors collect information and send it to the surface via a high-speed data link, where it is combined with surface measurements and processed through drilling advisory software. The driller then uses this information to adjust the drilling process, sending control signals back downhole with real-time knowledge of their effects on performance. We outline a Program Plan for DOE, university, and industry to cooperate in the development of DWD technology.
Date: July 12, 1999
Creator: Finger, J. T.; Mansure, A. J. & Prairie, M. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library