ALARA Analysis of Radiological Control Criteria Associated with Alternatives for Disposal of Hazardous Wastes (open access)

ALARA Analysis of Radiological Control Criteria Associated with Alternatives for Disposal of Hazardous Wastes

This ALARA analysis of Radiological Control Criteria (RCC) considers alternatives to continued storage of certain DOE mixed wastes. It also considers the option of treating hazardous wastes generated by DOE facilities, which have a very low concentration of radionuclide contaminants, as purely hazardous waste. Alternative allowable contaminant levels examined correspond to doses to an individual ranging from 0.01 mrem/yr to 10 to 20 mrem/yr. Generic waste inventory data and radionuclide source terms are used in the assessment. Economic issues, potential health and safety issues, and qualitative factors relating to the use of RCCs are considered.
Date: May 15, 2002
Creator: Aaberg, Rosanne L.; Bilyard, Gordon R.; Branch, Kristi M.; Lavender, Jay C. & Miller, Peter L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulated Passage Through A Modified Kaplan Turbine Pressure Regime: A Supplement to "Laboratory Studies of the Effects of Pressure and Dissolved Gas Supersaturation on Turbine-Passed Fish" (open access)

Simulated Passage Through A Modified Kaplan Turbine Pressure Regime: A Supplement to "Laboratory Studies of the Effects of Pressure and Dissolved Gas Supersaturation on Turbine-Passed Fish"

Migratory and resident fish in the Columbia River basin are exposed to stresses associated with hydroelectric power production, including pressure changes during turbine passage and dissolved gas supersaturation (resulting from the release of water from the spillway). The responses of fall Chinook salmon and bluegill sunfish to these two stresses, both singly and in combination, were investigated in the laboratory. A previous test series (Abernethy et al. 2001) evaluated the effects of passage through a Kaplan turbine under the ?worst case? pressure conditions. For this series of tests, pressure changes were modified to simulate passage through a Kaplan turbine under a more ?fish-friendly? mode of operation. The results were compared to results from Abernethy et al. (2001). Fish were exposed to total dissolved gas (TDG) levels of 100%, 120%, or 135% of saturation for 16-22 hours at either surface (101 kPa) or 30 ft (191 kPa) of pressure, then held at surface pressure at 100% saturation for a 48-hour observation period. Sensitivity of fall Chinook salmon to gas supersaturation was slightly higher than in the previous test series, with 15% mortality for surface-acclimated fish at 120% TDG, compared to 0% in the previous tests.
Date: March 15, 2002
Creator: Abernethy, Cary S.; Amidan, Brett G. & Cada, G. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developing Intelligent Transportation Systems in an Integrated Systems Analysis Environment (open access)

Developing Intelligent Transportation Systems in an Integrated Systems Analysis Environment

We are working on developing an Integrated Systems Analysis Environment (ISAE) for application to analysis and optimization of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS). ISAE is based on the concept of Co-simulation, which allows the modeling of complex systems with extreme flexibility. Co-simulation allows the development of virtual ITS systems that can be analyzed and optimized as an overall integrated system. The virtual ITS system is defined by selecting different components from a component library. System component models can be written in multiple programming languages running on different computer platforms. At the same time, ISAE provides full protection for proprietary models. Co-simulation is a cost-effective alternative to competing methodologies, such as developing a translator or selecting a single programming language for all system components. Co-simulation has been recently demonstrated using an example of an automotive system. The demonstration was successfully performed. The paper describes plans on how to implement ISAE and Co-simulation to ITS, and the great advantages that this implementation would represent.
Date: January 15, 2002
Creator: Aceves, S. M. & Paddack, E. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Collaboration tools for the global accelerator network: Workshop Report (open access)

Collaboration tools for the global accelerator network: Workshop Report

The concept of a ''Global Accelerator Network'' (GAN) has been put forward as a means for inter-regional collaboration in the operation of internationally constructed and operated frontier accelerator facilities. A workshop was held to allow representatives of the accelerator community and of the collaboratory development community to meet and discuss collaboration tools for the GAN environment. This workshop, called the Collaboration Tools for the Global Accelerator Network (GAN) Workshop, was held on August 26, 2002 at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The goal was to provide input about collaboration tools in general and to provide a strawman for the GAN collaborative tools environment. The participants at the workshop represented accelerator physicists, high-energy physicists, operations, technology tool developers, and social scientists that study scientific collaboration.
Date: September 15, 2002
Creator: Agarwal, Deborah; Olson, Gary & Olson, Judy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Snowmass points and slopes : benchmarks for SUSY searches. (open access)

The Snowmass points and slopes : benchmarks for SUSY searches.

The ''Snowmass Points and Slopes'' (SPS) are a set of benchmark points and parameter lines in the MSSM parameter space corresponding to different scenarios in the search for Supersymmetry at present and future experiments. This set of benchmarks was agreed upon at the 2001 ''Snowmass Workshop on the Future of Particle Physics'' as a consensus based on different existing proposals.
Date: April 15, 2002
Creator: Allanach, B. C.; Battaglia, M.; Blair, G. A.; Carena, M.; De Roeck, A. & Wagner, C. E. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biomolecular Materials. Report of the January 13-15, 2002 Workshop (open access)

Biomolecular Materials. Report of the January 13-15, 2002 Workshop

Twenty-two scientists from around the nation and the world met to discuss the way that the molecules, structures, processes and concepts of the biological world could be used or mimicked in designing novel materials, processes or devices of potential practical significance. The emphasis was on basic research, although the long-term goal is, in addition to increased knowledge, the development of applications to further the mission of the Department of Energy.
Date: January 15, 2002
Creator: Alper, M. D. & Stupp, S. I.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Software Demonstration of 'rap': Preparing CAD Geometries for Overlapping Grid Generation (open access)

A Software Demonstration of 'rap': Preparing CAD Geometries for Overlapping Grid Generation

We demonstrate the application code ''rap'' which is part of the ''Overture'' library. A CAD geometry imported from an IGES file is first cleaned up and simplified to suit the needs of mesh generation. Thereafter, the topology of the model is computed and a water-tight surface triangulation is created on the CAD surface. This triangulation is used to speed up the projection of points onto the CAD surface during the generation of overlapping surface grids. From each surface grid, volume grids are grown into the domain using a hyperbolic marching procedure. The final step is to fill any remaining parts of the interior with background meshes.
Date: February 15, 2002
Creator: Anders Petersson, N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solid state device for two-wire downhole temperature measurement as a function of current. Final performance technical report (open access)

Solid state device for two-wire downhole temperature measurement as a function of current. Final performance technical report

Several metals systems were reviewed for their potential to act as resistive temperature devices. Platinum metal was selected as the metal of choice. Platinum was plated onto 5 mil copper wire, and then subsequently coated with Accusol's proprietary ceramic coating. The copper was etched out in an attempt to make a pure platinum, high resistive, resistive-temperature device. The platinum plating on the wire cracked during processing, resulting in a discontinuous layer of platinum, and the element could not be formed in this way.
Date: January 15, 2002
Creator: Anderson, Roger & Anderson, David
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CO-FIRING COAL, FEEDLOT, AND LITTER BIOMASS (CFB AND LFB) FUELS IN PULVERIZED FUEL AND FIXED BED BURNERS (open access)

CO-FIRING COAL, FEEDLOT, AND LITTER BIOMASS (CFB AND LFB) FUELS IN PULVERIZED FUEL AND FIXED BED BURNERS

Intensive animal feeding operations create large amounts of animal waste that must be safely disposed of in order to avoid environmental degradation. Cattle feedlots and chicken houses are two examples. In feedlots, cattle are confined to small pens and fed a high calorie grain diet in preparation for slaughter. In chicken houses, thousands of chickens are kept in close proximity. In both of these operations, millions of tons of manure are produced every year. In this project a co-firing technology is proposed which would use manure that cannot be used for fertilizer, for power generation. Since the animal manure has economic uses as both a fertilizer and as a fuel, it is properly referred to as feedlot biomass (FB) for cow manure, or litter biomass (LB) for chicken manure. The biomass will be used a as a fuel by mixing it with coal in a 90:10 blend and firing it in existing coal fired combustion devices. This technique is known as co-firing, and the high temperatures produced by the coal will allow the biomass to be completely combusted. Therefore, it is the goal of the current research to develop an animal biomass cofiring technology. A cofiring technology is being developed …
Date: January 15, 2002
Creator: Annamalai, Kalyan; Sweeten, John; Mukhtar, Saqib; Thien, Ben; Wei, Gengsheng & Priyadarsan, Soyuz
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrical and optical properties of carbon-doped GaN grown by MBE on MOCVD GaN templates using a CCl4 dopant source (open access)

Electrical and optical properties of carbon-doped GaN grown by MBE on MOCVD GaN templates using a CCl4 dopant source

Carbon-doped GaN was grown by plasma-assisted molecular-beam epitaxy using carbon tetrachloride vapor as the dopant source. For moderate doping mainly acceptors were formed, yielding semi-insulating GaN. However at higher concentrations p-type conductivity was not observed, and heavily doped films (>5 x 10{sup 20} cm{sup -3}) were actually n-type rather than semi-insulating. Photoluminescence measurements showed two broad luminescence bands centered at 2.2 and 2.9 eV. The intensity of both bands increased with carbon content, but the 2.2 eV band dominated in n-type samples. Intense, narrow ({approx}6 meV) donor-bound exciton peaks were observed in the semi-insulating samples.
Date: April 15, 2002
Creator: Armitage, Rob; Yang, Qing; Feick, Henning; Park, Yeonjoon & Weber, Eicke R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nucleon momentum distributions from a modified scaling analysis of inclusive electron-nucleus scattering. (open access)

Nucleon momentum distributions from a modified scaling analysis of inclusive electron-nucleus scattering.

Inclusive electron scattering from nuclei at low momentum transfer (corresponding to x {ge} 1) and moderate Q{sup 2} is dominated by quasifree scattering from nucleons. In the impulse approximation, the cross section can be directly connected to the nucleon momentum distribution via the scaling function F(y). The breakdown of the y-scaling assumptions in certain kinematic regions have prevented extraction of nucleon momentum distributions from such a scaling analysis. With a slight modification to the y-scaling assumptions, it is found that scaling functions can be extracted which are consistent with the expectations for the nucleon momentum distributions.
Date: May 15, 2002
Creator: Arrington, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of the Final Report: Waste Package Materials Performance Peer Review Panel (open access)

Evaluation of the Final Report: Waste Package Materials Performance Peer Review Panel

None
Date: August 15, 2002
Creator: Bailey, J. N.; Cloud, J. D.; Rodgers, T. E. & Summers, S. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metal-Insulator Transition in Li and LiH - Final Report (open access)

Metal-Insulator Transition in Li and LiH - Final Report

The main goals of this project were the search for a predicted nonmetallic high-pressure phase of Li and finding the metallization conditions for LiH. It has been predicted by Neaton & Ashcroft at Cornell [1] that the lithium atoms would pair at pressures around 100 GPa and their valence electrons would become localized in the interstitial regions and therefore non-conducting. LiH, an ionic compound, provides the unique opportunity to understand the effects of coupling two elements with opposite tendencies at extreme conditions and to study fundamental principles such as metallization and pairing. We measured the electrical conductivity of liquid lithium at pressures up to 1.8 Mbar and 4-fold compression, achieved through shock reverberation experiments [2]. We found that the results were consistent with a departure of the electronic properties of lithium from the nearly free electron approximation at high pressures and with ionic pairing correlations in the Mbar regime. Given the expected small effect of the temperature on the conductivity at high densities, the apparent conductivity drop and the behavior of the ionic core at the highest pressures could be interpreted as a decrease of the overall volume available for the electrons. It may be interesting to see if the …
Date: January 15, 2002
Creator: Bastea, M. & Cauble, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a Pattern Recognition Methodology for Determining Operationally Optimal Heat Balance Instrumentation Calibration Schedules (open access)

Development of a Pattern Recognition Methodology for Determining Operationally Optimal Heat Balance Instrumentation Calibration Schedules

The goal of the project is to enable plant operators to detect with high sensitivity and reliability the onset of decalibration drifts in all of the instrumentation used as input to the reactor heat balance calculations. To achieve this objective, the collaborators developed and implemented at DBNPS an extension of the Multivariate State Estimation Technique (MSET) pattern recognition methodology pioneered by ANAL. The extension was implemented during the second phase of the project and fully achieved the project goal.
Date: December 15, 2002
Creator: Beran, Kurt; Christenson, John; Nica, Dragos & Gross, Kenny
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct to Digital Holography (open access)

Direct to Digital Holography

In this CRADA, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) assisted nLine Corporation of Austin, TX in the development of prototype semiconductor wafer inspection tools based on the direct-to-digital holographic (DDH) techniques invented at ORNL. Key components of this work included, testing of DDH for detection of defects in High Aspect Ratio (HAR) structures, development of image processing techniques to enhance detection capabilities through the use of both phase and intensity, and development of methods for autofocus on the DDH tools.
Date: June 15, 2002
Creator: Bingham, P.R. & Tobin, K.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SUSY dark matter and non-universal gaugino masses (open access)

SUSY dark matter and non-universal gaugino masses

In this talk the authors investigate the dark matter prospects for supersymmetric models with non-universal gaugino masses. They motivate the use of non-universal gaugino masses from several directions, including problems, with the current favorite scenario, the cMSSM. They then display new corridors of parameter space that allow an acceptable dark matter relic density once gaugino mass universality is relaxed. They finish with a specific string-derived model that allows this universality relaxation and then use the dark matter constraint to make specific statements about the hidden sector of the model.
Date: April 15, 2002
Creator: Birkedal-Hansen, Andreas
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quantifying the value that energy efficiency and renewable energy provide as a hedge against volatile natural gas prices (open access)

Quantifying the value that energy efficiency and renewable energy provide as a hedge against volatile natural gas prices

Advocates of energy efficiency and renewable energy have long argued that such technologies can mitigate fuel price risk within a resource portfolio. Such arguments--made with renewed vigor in the wake of unprecedented natural gas price volatility during the winter of 2000/2001--have mostly been qualitative in nature, however, with few attempts to actually quantify the price stability benefit that these sources provide. In evaluating this benefit, it is important to recognize that alternative price hedging instruments are available--in particular, gas-based financial derivatives (futures and swaps) and physical, fixed-price gas contracts. Whether energy efficiency and renewable energy can provide price stability at lower cost than these alternative means is therefore a key question for resource acquisition planners. In this paper we evaluate the cost of hedging gas price risk through financial hedging instruments. To do this, we compare the price of a 10-year natural gas swap (i.e., what it costs to lock in prices over the next 10 years) to a 10-year natural gas price forecast (i.e., what the market is expecting spot natural gas prices to be over the next 10 years). We find that over the past two years natural gas users have had to pay a premium as high …
Date: May 15, 2002
Creator: Bolinger, Mark; Wiser, Ryan; Bachrach, Devra & Golove, William
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Imaging of Plasmas using Proton Beams Generated by Ultra-Intense Laser Pulses (open access)

Imaging of Plasmas using Proton Beams Generated by Ultra-Intense Laser Pulses

Proton imaging is a diagnostic with enormous potential for the investigation of fundamental plasma physics problems which were impossible to explore up to now. By using this diagnostic, for the first time the measurement of transient electric fields in dense plasmas has been obtained, determining their evolution on a picosecond scale with micrometric spatial resolution. The data is of great relevance to Inertial Confinement Fusion both in the conventional and Fast Ignitor approach. Detailed analysis and modeling is presently undergoing.
Date: January 15, 2002
Creator: Borghesi, M.; Campbell, D. H.; Clarke, R. J.; Galimberti, M.; Gizzi, L. A.; Haines, M. G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Capillary rise in nesting cylinders (open access)

Capillary rise in nesting cylinders

None
Date: October 15, 2002
Creator: Brady, Victor; Concus, Paul & Finn, Robert
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
HBTprogs Version 1.0 (open access)

HBTprogs Version 1.0

This is the manual for a collection of programs that can be used to invert angled-averaged (i.e. one dimensional) two-particle correlation functions. This package consists of several programs that generate kernel matrices (basically the relative wavefunction of the pair, squared), programs that generate test correlation functions from test sources of various types and the program that actually inverts the data using the kernel matrix.
Date: March 15, 2002
Creator: Brown, D. A. & Danielewicz, P.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cancer Risk Assessment: Should New Science be Applied? Workgroup summary (open access)

Cancer Risk Assessment: Should New Science be Applied? Workgroup summary

OAK-B135 A symposium discussing the implications of certain phenomena observed in radiation biology for cancer risk assessment in general. In July of 2002 a workshop was convened that explored some of the intercellular phenomena that appear to condition responses to carcinogen exposure. Effects that result from communication between cells that appear to either increase the sphere of damage or to modify the sensitivity of cells to further damage were of particular interest. Much of the discussion focused on the effects of ionizing radiation that were transmitted from cells directly hit to cells not receiving direct exposure to radiation (bystander cells). In cell culture, increased rates of mutation, chromosomal aberration, apoptosis, genomic instability, and decreased clonogenic survival have all been observed in cells that have experienced no direct radiation. In addition, there is evidence that low doses of radiation or certain chemicals give rise to adaptive responses in which the treated cells develop resistance to the effects of high doses given in subsequent exposures. Data were presented at the workshop indicating that low dose exposure of animals to radiation and some chemicals frequently reduces the spontaneous rate of mutation in vitro and tumor responses in vivo. Finally, it was concluded that …
Date: December 15, 2002
Creator: Bull, Richard J. & Brooks, Antone L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Demonstration of ElectroChemical Remediation Technologies-Induced Complexation (open access)

Demonstration of ElectroChemical Remediation Technologies-Induced Complexation

None
Date: February 15, 2002
Creator: Burks, Barry L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Suggestions for benchmark scenarios for MSSM Higgs Boson searches at hadron colliders. (open access)

Suggestions for benchmark scenarios for MSSM Higgs Boson searches at hadron colliders.

The Higgs boson search has shifted from LEP2 to the Tevatron and will subsequently move to the LHC. Due to the different initial states, the Higgs production and decay channels relevant for Higgs boson searches were different at LEP2 to what they are at hadron colliders. They suggest new benchmark scenarios for the MSSM Higgs boson search at hadron colliders that exemplify the phenomenology of different parts of the MSSM parameter space. Besides the m{sub h}{sup max} scenario and the no-mixing scenario used in the LEP2 Higgs boson searches, they propose two new scenarios. In one the main production channel at the LHC, gg {yields} h, is suppressed. In the other, important Higgs decay channels at the Tevatron and at the LCH, h {yields} b{bar b} and h {yields} {tau}{sup +}{tau}{sup -}, are suppressed. All scenarios evade the LEP2 constraints for nearly the whole M{sub A}-tan {beta}-plane.
Date: April 15, 2002
Creator: Carena, M.; Heinemeyer, S.; Wagner, C.E.M. & Weiglein, G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Downstream System for the Second Axis of the DARHT Facility (open access)

Downstream System for the Second Axis of the DARHT Facility

This paper presents the physics design of the DARHT-II downstream system, which consists of a diagnostic beam stop, a fast, high-precision kicker system and the x-ray converter target assembly. The beamline configuration, the transverse resistive wall instability and the ion hose instability modeling are presented. They also discuss elimination of spot size dilution during kicker switching and implementation of the foil-barrier scheme to minimize the backstreaming ion focusing effects. Finally, they present the target converter's configuration, and the simulated DARHT-II x-ray spot sizes and doses. Some experimental results, which support the physics design, are also presented.
Date: July 15, 2002
Creator: Chen, Y. J.; Bertolini, L.; Caporaso, G. J.; Chambers, F. W.; Cook, E. G.; Falabella, S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library