Effects of crack geometry and material behavior on scattering by cracks for QNDE applications (open access)

Effects of crack geometry and material behavior on scattering by cracks for QNDE applications

In work carried out on this project, the usual mathematical modeling of ultrasonic wave scattering by flaws is being extended to account for several typical characteristics of fatigue and stress-corrosion cracks, and the environment of such cracks. Work has been completed on scattering by macrocrack-microcrack configurations. We have also investigated reflection and transmission by a flaw plane consisting of an infinite array of randomly oriented cracks. In another investigation the propagation of mechanical disturbances in solids with periodically distributed cracks has been studied.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Achenbach, J. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of crack geometry and material behavior on scattering by cracks for QNDE applications. Technical progress report, March 1, 1988--August 30, 1989 (open access)

Effects of crack geometry and material behavior on scattering by cracks for QNDE applications. Technical progress report, March 1, 1988--August 30, 1989

In work carried out on this project, the usual mathematical modeling of ultrasonic wave scattering by flaws is being extended to account for several typical characteristics of fatigue and stress-corrosion cracks, and the environment of such cracks. Work has been completed on scattering by macrocrack-microcrack configurations. We have also investigated reflection and transmission by a flaw plane consisting of an infinite array of randomly oriented cracks. In another investigation the propagation of mechanical disturbances in solids with periodically distributed cracks has been studied.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Achenbach, J. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An investigation of bridge width measurement and processing capabilities (1985) (open access)

An investigation of bridge width measurement and processing capabilities (1985)

An investigation of Mound`s ability to measure and process bridges was conducted in 1985. Prior to improvements in the measuring system and technique, bridge width was found to have a sigma of 0.00019 in. After improvements were made, a sigma of 0.000047 was realized. Bridge length was found to be more erratic than width, although most of the inaccuracy was caused by measurement uncertainty. Length and width were found to have little or no correlation.
Date: May 15, 1989
Creator: Armstrong, K.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Configuring the SLC linac for injection into PEP (open access)

Configuring the SLC linac for injection into PEP

From time to time the normal SLC physics program is to be interrupted so that beam can be delivered to PEP. In order that the switch to PEP injection (and the switch back again) can be accomplished quickly and easily, the gun, the damping rings, the linac phase ramp, the energy profile of the linac klystrons for the scavenger bunch, and the entire positron production system are to be kept the same as in the SLC configuration. What mainly remains to be changed is the linac klystron profile for the leading two bunches - those going to PEP. The new klystron profile must be such that it leaves these two beams (1) with final energies that match that of the storage ring and (2) with final energy spectra that fit within the energy aperture of the PEP transfer line. The conditions that need to be met in order to achieve these two goals are discussed in this note. 1 ref., 2 figs.
Date: December 15, 1989
Creator: Bane, K.L.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Induction accelerators and free-electron lasers at LLNL: Beam Research Program (open access)

Induction accelerators and free-electron lasers at LLNL: Beam Research Program

Linear induction accelerators have been developed to produce pulses of charged particles at voltages exceeding the capabilities of single-stage, diode-type accelerators and at currents too high rf accelerators. In principle, one can accelerate charged particles to arbitrarily high voltages using a multistage induction machine. The advent of magnetic pulse power systems makes sustained operation at high repetition rates practical, and high-average-power capability is very likely to open up many new applications of induction machines. In Part A of this paper, we survey the US induction linac technology, emphasizing electron machines. We also give a simplified description of how induction machines couple energy to the electron beam to illustrate many general issues that designers of high-brightness and high-average-power induction linacs must consider. We give an example of the application of induction accelerator technology to the relativistic klystron, a power source for high-gradient accelerators. In Part B we address the application of LIAs to free-electron lasers. The multikiloampere peak currents available from linear induction accelerators make high-gain, free-electron laser amplifier configurations feasible. High extraction efficiencies in a single mass of the electron beam are possible if the wiggler parameters are appropriately ''tapered'', as recently demonstrated at millimeter wavelengths on the 4-MeV ELF …
Date: February 15, 1989
Creator: Briggs, R. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of irradiation on intergranular stress corrosion cracking of Type 304 stainless steel (open access)

Effects of irradiation on intergranular stress corrosion cracking of Type 304 stainless steel

Constant extension rate tests (CERT) were run on ten irradiated specimens in continuation of a study of environmental effects on intergranular stress corrosion cracking of type 304 stainless steel. Specimens of both furnace sensitized and annealed material were irradiated to fluences of 1 to 2 {times} 10{sup 21} neutrons (E {ge} 0.1 Mev) per square centimeter at a temperature of {approximately}150{degree}C in a reflector position of the High Flux Isoptope Reactor at ORNL. CERT test conditions duplicated conditions for testing of non-irradiated specimens. The time-to-failure for the sensitized and irradiated specimens showed the same pattern of dependence on test variables as the non-irradiated specimens in an associated study. The annealed and irradiated specimens showed no evidence of irradiation assisted stress corrosion cracking.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Caskey, G. R.; Ondrejcin, R. S. (Westinghouse Savannah River Co., Aiken, SC (United States)); Aldred, P.; Davis, R. B. & Wilson, S. A. (General Electric Co., San Jose, CA (United States))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of irradiation on intergranular stress corrosion cracking of Type 304 stainless steel (open access)

Effects of irradiation on intergranular stress corrosion cracking of Type 304 stainless steel

Constant extension rate tests (CERT) were run on ten irradiated specimens in continuation of a study of environmental effects on intergranular stress corrosion cracking of type 304 stainless steel. Specimens of both furnace sensitized and annealed material were irradiated to fluences of 1 to 2 {times} 10{sup 21} neutrons (E {ge} 0.1 Mev) per square centimeter at a temperature of {approximately}150{degree}C in a reflector position of the High Flux Isoptope Reactor at ORNL. CERT test conditions duplicated conditions for testing of non-irradiated specimens. The time-to-failure for the sensitized and irradiated specimens showed the same pattern of dependence on test variables as the non-irradiated specimens in an associated study. The annealed and irradiated specimens showed no evidence of irradiation assisted stress corrosion cracking.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Caskey, G. R.; Ondrejcin, R. S.; Aldred, P.; Davis, R. B. & Wilson, S. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A note on thermal analysis for an inclined plate crotch absorber (open access)

A note on thermal analysis for an inclined plate crotch absorber

Crotch absorbers are used to absorb unwanted synchrotron radiation to prevent most of the photons from striking the wall of a vacuum chamber. Since synchrotron radiation generated by bending the positron beam is very powerful, concentrated and penetrating, the absorber produces high internal heat generation. Depending on the materials used, this energy generation may be restricted near the surface of the absorber or distributed throughout the absorber with exponential decay in the direction of the penetration. The cooling of an absorber is important to prevent melting the material and to retain ultra high vacuum, since photon energy deposition on the metal surface causes the desorption of gases. This note describes an analytical solution of the heat transfer with application to designing a crotch absorber. The effects of angles and thicknesses of the plate and different materials on temperature distributions of the absorber are examined.
Date: June 15, 1989
Creator: Choi, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Linear plasma-based tritium production facility (open access)

Linear plasma-based tritium production facility

The concept presented here is an adaptation of a recently completed conceptual design of a compact high-fluence D-T neutron source for accelerated end-of-life testing of fusion reactor materials. Although this preliminary assessment serves to illustrate the main features of a linear plasma-based tritium breeder, it is not necessarily an optimized design. We believe that proper design choices for the breeder application will certainly reduce costs, perhaps as much as a factor of two. We also point out that Q (the ratio of fusion power produced to power input to the plasma) increases with system length and that the cost per kg of tritium decreases for longer systems with higher output. In earlier studies of linear two-component plasma systems, Q values as high as three were predicted. At this level of performance and with energy recovery, operating power requirements of the breeder could approach zero. 5 refs., 1 fig., 1 tab.
Date: February 15, 1989
Creator: Coensgen, F. H.; Futch, A. H. & Molvik, A. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Primate polonium metabolic models and their use in estimation of systemic radiation doses from bioassay data. Final report (open access)

Primate polonium metabolic models and their use in estimation of systemic radiation doses from bioassay data. Final report

A Polonium metabolic model was derived and incorporated into a Fortran algorithm which estimates the systemic radiation dose from {sup 210}Po when applied to occupational urine bioassay data. The significance of the doses estimated are examined by defining the degree of uncertainty attached to them through comprehensive statistical testing procedures. Many parameters necessary for dosimetry calculations (such as organ partition coefficients and excretion fractions), were evaluated from metabolic studies of {sup 210}Po in non-human primates. Two tamarins and six baboons were injected intravenously with {sup 210}Po citrate. Excreta and blood samples were collected. Five of the baboons were sacrificed at times ranging from 1 day to 3 months post exposure. Complete necropsies were performed and all excreta and the majority of all skeletal and tissue samples were analyzed radiochemically for their {sup 210}Po content. The {sup 210}Po excretion rate in the baboon was more rapid than in the tamarin. The biological half-time of {sup 210}Po excretion in the baboon was approximately 15 days while in the tamarin, the {sup 210}Po excretion rate was in close agreement with the 50 day biological half-time predicted by ICRP 30. Excretion fractions of {sup 210}Po in the non-human primates were found to be markedly …
Date: March 15, 1989
Creator: Cohen, N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solar opacities constrained by solar neutrinos and solar oscillations (open access)

Solar opacities constrained by solar neutrinos and solar oscillations

This review discusses the current situation for opacities at the solar center, the solar surface, and for the few million kelvin temperatures that occur below the convection zone. The solar center conditions are important because they are crucial for the neutrino production, which continues to be predicted about 4 times that observed. The main extinction effects there are free-free photon absorption in the electric fields of the hydrogen, helium and the CNO atoms, free electron scattering of photons, and the bound-free and bound-bound absorption of photons by iron atoms with two electrons in the 1s bound level. An assumption that the iron is condensed-out below the convection zone, and the opacity in the central regions is thereby reduced, results in about a 25 percent reduction in the central opacity but only a 5 percent reduction at the base of the convection zone. Furthermore, the p-mode solar oscillations are changed with this assumption, and do not fit the observed ones as well as for standard models. A discussion of the large effective opacity reduction by weakly interacting massive particles also results in poor agreement with observed p-mode oscillation frequencies. The much larger opacities for the solar surface layers from the Los …
Date: August 15, 1989
Creator: Cox, A. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of robotic systems for radiochemical sample changing and for analytical sample preparation (open access)

Use of robotic systems for radiochemical sample changing and for analytical sample preparation

Two uses of the Perkin-Elmer (PE) robotic system will be presented. In the first, a PE robot functions as an automatic sample changer for up to five low energy photon spectrometry (LEPS) detectors operated with a Nuclear Data ND 6700 system. The entire system, including the robot, is controlled by an IBM PC-AT using software written in compiled BASIC. Problems associated with the development of the system and modifications to the robot will be presented. In the second, an evaluation study was performed to assess the abilities of the PE robotic system for performing complex analytical sample preparation procedures. For this study, a robotic system based upon the PE robot and auxiliary devices was constructed and programmed to perform the preparation of final product samples (UO{sub 3}) for accountability and impurity specification analyses. These procedures require sample dissolution, dilution, and liquid-liquid extraction steps. The results of an in-depth evaluation of all system components will be presented.
Date: May 15, 1989
Creator: Delmastro, J. R.; Hartenstein, S. D. & Wade, M. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual design report for a superconducting coil suitable for use in the large solenoid detector at the SSC (Superconducting Super Collider) (open access)

Conceptual design report for a superconducting coil suitable for use in the large solenoid detector at the SSC (Superconducting Super Collider)

The conceptual design of a large superconducting solenoid suitable for a magnetic detector at the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) was done at Fermilab. The magnet will provide a magnetic field of 1.7 T over a volume 8 m in diameter by 16 m long. The particle-physics calorimetry will be inside the field volume and so the coil will be bath cooled and cryostable; the vessels will be stainless steel. Predictability of performance and the ability to safely negotiate all probable failure modes, including a quench, are important items of the design philosophy. Our conceptual design of the magnet and calorimeter has convinced us that this magnet is a reasonable extrapolation of present technology and is therefore feasible. The principal difficulties anticipated are those associated with the very large physical dimensions and stored energy of the magnet. 5 figs.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Fast, R.W.; Grimson, J.H.; Krebs, H.J.; Kephart, R.D.; Theriot, D. & Wands, R.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detailed photonuclear cross-section calculations and astrophysical applications (open access)

Detailed photonuclear cross-section calculations and astrophysical applications

We have investigated the role of an isomeric state and its coupling to the ground state (g.s.) via photons and neutron inelastic scattering in a stellar environment by making detailed photonuclear and neutron cross-section calculations for /sup 176/Lu and /sup 210/Bi. In the case of /sup 176/Lu, the g.s. would function as an excellent galactic slow- (s-) process chronometer were it not for the 3.7-h isomer at 123 keV. Our calculations predicted much larger photon cross sections for production of the isomer, as well as a lower threshold, than had been assumed based on earlier measurements. These two factors combine to indicate that an enormous correction, a factor of 10/sup 7/, must be applied to shorten the current estimate of the half-life against photoexcitation of /sup 176/Lu as a function of temperature. This severely limits the use of /sup 176/Lu as a stellar chronometer and indicates a significantly lower temperature at which the two states reach thermal equilibrium. For /sup 210/Bi, our preliminary calculations of the production and destruction of the 3 /times/ 10/sup 6/ y isomeric state by neutrons and photons suggest that the /sup 210/Bi isomer may not be destroyed by photons as rapidly as assumed in certain …
Date: June 15, 1989
Creator: Gardner, D. G.; Gardner, M. A. & Hoff, R. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High energy density fusing using the Compact Torus (open access)

High energy density fusing using the Compact Torus

My remarks are concerned with employing the Compact Torus magnetic field configuration to produce fusion energy. In particular, I would like to consider high energy density regimes where the pressures generated extend well beyond the strength of materials. Under such conditions, where nearby walls are vaporized and pushed aside each shot, the technological constraints are very different from usual magnetic fusion and may admit opportunities for an improved fusion reactor design. 5 refs., 3 figs.
Date: February 15, 1989
Creator: Hartman, C. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy changes in transforming solids. Continuation proposal for the period January 1--December 31, 1990 (open access)

Energy changes in transforming solids. Continuation proposal for the period January 1--December 31, 1990

This report describes work completed, work in progress, and work planned during the continuation of funding. Research is being carried out on the following: bonded inclusions are being treated as problems of a homogeneous body; the problem of two cavities or inclusions is being studied; the examination of non-classical transformations is leading to conservation laws in statics and dynamics with applications in fracture and defect mechanics; mathematical and physical modeling of damage in brittle solids is being performed; a theoretical and numerical study of subsonic interfacial waves in bonded piezoelectric dissimilar half-spaces has been completed; the study of which crystal classes are capable of admitting the so-called Type 3 transonic state in anisotropic elasticity is also complete; and wave studies will be extended into the supersonic regime. The authors also intend to complete a study of the general self-force on a 3-dimensional dislocation loop element in an elastic medium of arbitrary anisotropy, as this is currently a needed ingredient in modern fracture and damage mechanics and in the study of defects in integrated circuit materials.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Herrmann, G. & Barnett, D.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Action Plan for updated Chapter 15 Accident Analysis in the SRS Production Reactor SAR (open access)

Action Plan for updated Chapter 15 Accident Analysis in the SRS Production Reactor SAR

This report describes the Action Plan for the upgrade of the Chapter 15 Accident Analysis in the SRS Production Reactor SAR required for K-Restart. This Action Plan will be updated periodically to reflect task accomplishments and issue resolutions.
Date: November 15, 1989
Creator: Hightower, N. T., III & Burnett, T. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Action Plan for updated Chapter 15 Accident Analysis in the SRS Production Reactor SAR (open access)

Action Plan for updated Chapter 15 Accident Analysis in the SRS Production Reactor SAR

This report describes the Action Plan for the upgrade of the Chapter 15 Accident Analysis in the SRS Production Reactor SAR required for K-Restart. This Action Plan will be updated periodically to reflect task accomplishments and issue resolutions.
Date: November 15, 1989
Creator: Hightower, N. T., III & Burnett, T. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Colloid migration in fractured media (open access)

Colloid migration in fractured media

Field studies at the Nevada Test Site by researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have demonstrated that radionuclides are being transported by colloidal material suspended in groundwater. This observation is counter to most predictions from contaminant transport models because the models assume adsorbed species are immobile. The purpose of this research is to quantify the transport processes for colloidal materials and develop the mechanistic understanding necessary to predict radionuclide transport in fractured media. There were three areas of investigation during this year that have addressed these issues: chemical control of colloid deposition on clean mineral surfaces, colloid accumulation on fracture surfaces, and the influence of deposited colloids on colloid and tracer migration. 7 refs.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Hunt, J.R. (California Univ., Berkeley, CA (USA). Dept. of Civil Engineering)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhancing nuclear power plant performance through the use of artifical intelligence (open access)

Enhancing nuclear power plant performance through the use of artifical intelligence

In the summer of 1988, the Department of Nuclear Engineering (NE) at the University of Tennessee (UT) in Knoxville was selected to carry out a research program in Enhancing the Operation of Nuclear Power plants through the use of Artificial Intelligence, This program is sponsored by the Department of Energy's Office of Energy Research under 10CFR605 for Nuclear Engineering Research. The objective of the research is to advance the state-of-the-art of nuclear power plant control, safety, management, and instrumentation systems through the use of artificial intelligence (AI) techniques, including both expert systems and neural networks. The emphasis will be placed on methods that can be implemented on a rapid or real-time basis. A second, but equally important, objective is to build a broadly based critical mass of expertise in the artificial intelligence, field that can be brought to bear on the technology of nuclear power plants. Both of these goals are being met. This overview and the attached technical reports describe the work that is being carried out. Although in some cases, the scope of the work differs somewhat from the specific tasks described in the original proposal, all activities are clearly within the overall scope of the contract.
Date: June 15, 1989
Creator: Johnson, M.; Maren, A.; Miller, L.; Uhrig, R. & Upadhyaya, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhancing nuclear power plant performance through the use of artifical intelligence. First annual report (open access)

Enhancing nuclear power plant performance through the use of artifical intelligence. First annual report

In the summer of 1988, the Department of Nuclear Engineering (NE) at the University of Tennessee (UT) in Knoxville was selected to carry out a research program in ``Enhancing the Operation of Nuclear Power plants through the use of Artificial Intelligence, This program is sponsored by the Department of Energy`s Office of Energy Research under 10CFR605 for Nuclear Engineering Research. The objective of the research is to advance the state-of-the-art of nuclear power plant control, safety, management, and instrumentation systems through the use of artificial intelligence (AI) techniques, including both expert systems and neural networks. The emphasis will be placed on methods that can be implemented on a rapid or real-time basis. A second, but equally important, objective is to build a broadly based critical mass of expertise in the artificial intelligence, field that can be brought to bear on the technology of nuclear power plants. Both of these goals are being met. This overview and the attached technical reports describe the work that is being carried out. Although in some cases, the scope of the work differs somewhat from the specific tasks described in the original proposal, all activities are clearly within the overall scope of the contract.
Date: June 15, 1989
Creator: Johnson, M.; Maren, A.; Miller, L.; Uhrig, R. & Upadhyaya, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Underestimation of oxygen deficiency hazard through use of linearized temperature profiles (open access)

Underestimation of oxygen deficiency hazard through use of linearized temperature profiles

The failure mode analysis for any cryogenic system includes the effects of a large liquid spill due to vessel rupture or overfilling. The Oxygen Deficiency Hazard (ODH) analysis for this event is a strong function of the estimated heat flux entering the spilled liquid. A common method for estimating the heat flux is to treat the surface on which the liquid spills as a semi-infinite solid. This note addresses the effect of linearizing the temperature profile in this form of analysis, and shows it to cause the calculated flux to be underestimated by more than a factor of two. 3 refs., 2 figs.
Date: June 15, 1989
Creator: Kerby, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Materials for ultra-high vacuum (open access)

Materials for ultra-high vacuum

This report discusses materials for use in ultrahigh vacuum systems of 1 {times} 10{sup {minus}9} Torr or lower. The author briefly discusses alloys, solders, insulators and joining methods for vacuum systems. (JDL)
Date: August 15, 1989
Creator: Lee, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molecular biological enhancement of coal biodesulfurization. First quarterly technical progress report (open access)

Molecular biological enhancement of coal biodesulfurization. First quarterly technical progress report

The objective of this project is to produce one or more microorganisms capable of removing the organic and inorganic sulfur in coal. The original specific technical objectives of the project were to: Clone and characterize the genes encoding the enzymes of the ``4S`` pathway (sulfoxide/sulfone/sulfonate/sulfate) for release of organic sulfur from coal; return multiple copies of genes to the original host to enhance the biodesulfurization activity of that organism; transfer this pathway into a fast-growing chemolithotropic bacterium; conduct a batch-mode optimization/analysis of scale-up variables.
Date: September 15, 1989
Creator: Litchfield, J. H.; Palmer, D. T.; Zupancic, T. J. & Conkle, H. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library