Automating Pro/Engineer Using Trail Files and External Programs (open access)

Automating Pro/Engineer Using Trail Files and External Programs

Keyboard macros provide shortcuts to many repetitive command sequences in Pro/Engineer. They map any number of frequently used command sequences to user-selected keyboard keys. They may be nested within each other and may also include user keyboard entry within the macro. Another powerful feature of Pro/Engineer is adding menu options. Menu options may be added to any Pro/Engineer menu and is an effective way to graphically display keyboard macros to make them more accessible. Command sequences are mapped to a single user-defined menu option added to the bottom of any Pro/Engineer window. The '{at}setbutton' command added to the 'menu{_}def.pro' file specifies the commands to associate with added menu options. Menu options may also be used to execute non-Pro/Engineer commands. The associated command is linked to a menu option within Pro/Engineer's Utilities menu (in the Misc menu) and is issued whenever the menu option is selected. Such a feature is useful for adding menu options to start the Pro/Engineer User Guide utility, start a text editor from within Pro/Engineer, or perform system level actions. The '{at}setbutton{_}exec' command is used in the 'menu{_}def.pro' file for non-Pro/Engineer commands. A more detailed description of adding menu options can be found in the Pro/Engineer Fundamentals …
Date: May 21, 1996
Creator: Chow, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Residual waste volume measurement for Hanford underground storage tanks (open access)

Residual waste volume measurement for Hanford underground storage tanks

The Acquire Commercial Technology for Retrieval program seeks commercial solutions to measure any waste residual (i.e., heel)left after waste retrieval operations of underground radioactive storage tanks. The technology identified should operate in a range of waste depth thickness of 0 - 6 inches. This report provides a description of the need, requirements, and constraints for the residual waste volume measurement system; describes a logical approach to measuring waste volume; provides a brief review and assessment of available technologies; and outlines a set of integrated tests that will evaluate the performance of candidate technologies.
Date: August 21, 1996
Creator: Berglin, E.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of VJRR, Six O’clock Valve Boxes and Circulating Compressor (open access)

Performance of VJRR, Six O’clock Valve Boxes and Circulating Compressor

None
Date: November 21, 1996
Creator: Wu, K. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Systems and economic analysis of microalgae ponds for conversion of CO{sub 2} to biomass. Final report (open access)

Systems and economic analysis of microalgae ponds for conversion of CO{sub 2} to biomass. Final report

There is growing evidence that global warming could become a major global environmental threat during the 21st century. The precautionary principle commands preventive action, at both national and international levels, to minimize this potential threat. Many near-term, relatively inexpensive, mitigation options are available. In addition, long-term research is required to evaluate and develop advanced, possibly more expensive, countermeasures, in the eventuality that they may be required. The utilization of power plant CO{sub 2} and its recycling into fossil fuel substitutes by microalgae cultures could be one such long-term technology. Microalgae production is an expanding industry in the U.S., with three commercial systems (of approximately 10 hectare each) producing nutriceuticals, specifically beta-carotene, extracted from Dunaliella, and Spirulina biomass. Microalgae are also used in wastewater treatment. Currently production costs are high, about $10,000/ton of algal biomass, almost two orders of magnitude higher than acceptable for greenhouse gas mitigation. This report reviews the current state-of-the-art, including algal cultivation and harvesting-processing, and outlines a technique for achieving very high productivities. Costs of CO{sub 2} mitigation with microalgae production of oils ({open_quotes}biodiesel{close_quotes}) are estimated and future R&D needs outlined.
Date: March 21, 1996
Creator: Benemann, John R. & Oswald, William J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Special report on the audit of the management of Department of Energy construction projects (open access)

Special report on the audit of the management of Department of Energy construction projects

DOE`s FY 1996 budget of $18 billion included $1.1 billion for construction projects; ensuring that these projects meet bonafide existing or future DOE needs becomes increasingly important as DOE`s missions evolve and its organization changes. In 1994 and 1995, IG issued several reports expressing concerns about the construction planning process and questioned whether planned construction was necessary to meet mission needs. The reports also pointed out that DOE did not ensure that originally identified needs were still valid several years after a project`s conception. (The problems identified were at single locations.) While DOE management did not agree with all aspects of the audit reports, it canceled or downsized several projects and initiated a number of process improvements to enhance the construction planning process. Purpose of this report is to synthesize issues from these prior reports to assist management in focusing process improvement efforts to avoid construction of unneeded or oversized facilities.
Date: November 21, 1996
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Consequence analysis of an unmitigated NaOH solution spray release during addition to waste tank (open access)

Consequence analysis of an unmitigated NaOH solution spray release during addition to waste tank

Toxicological consequences were calculated for a postulated maximum caustic soda (NaOH) solution spray leak during addition to a waste tank to adjust tank pH. Although onsite risk guidelines were exceeded for the unmitigated release, site boundary consequences were below the level of concern. Means of mitigating the release so as to greatly reduce the onsite consequences were recommended.
Date: August 21, 1996
Creator: Himes, D.A., Westinghouse Hanford
System: The UNT Digital Library
The development of coal-based technologies for Department of Defense facilities. Semiannual technical progress report, March 28, 1995--September 27, 1995 (open access)

The development of coal-based technologies for Department of Defense facilities. Semiannual technical progress report, March 28, 1995--September 27, 1995

The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), through the Interagency Agreement with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), has initiated a three-phase program with the Consortium for Coal-Water Mixture Technology, with the aim of decreasing DOD`s reliance on imported oil by increasing its use of coal. The program is being conducted as a cooperative agreement between the Consortium and DOE. Activities this reporting period are summarized by phase. During this reporting period, preparation of the Phase I final report continued. Work on Phase II focused on emissions reductions, coal beneficiation/preparation studies, and economic analyses of coal use. Emissions reductions investigations included initiating a study to identify appropriate SO{sub 2} and NO{sub x} control technologies for coal-fired industrial boilers. In addition, work started on the design of a ceramic filtering device for installation on the demonstration boiler. The ceramic filter device will be used to demonstrate a more compact and efficient filtering device for retrofit applications. Coal preparation and utilization activities, and the economic analysis were completed and work focused on preparing the final report. Work on Phase III focused on coal preparation studies and economic analyses of coal use. Coal preparation studies were focused on continuing activities on particle size control, …
Date: October 21, 1996
Creator: Miller, B.G.; Hatcher, P. & Knicker, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catch tank inhibitor addition 200-East and 200-West Areas (open access)

Catch tank inhibitor addition 200-East and 200-West Areas

Reported is the study of 11 catch tanks in the 200-East Area and the 7 catch tanks in the 200-West Area listed as active. The location, capacity, material of construction, annual total accumulation, annual rain intrusion, waste transfer rate, and access for chemical injection in these tanks are documented. The present and future utilization and isolation plans for the catch tanks are established.
Date: June 21, 1996
Creator: Palit, A. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculational note in support of inventory assessment of three tank trailers using radiological attentuation calculations (open access)

Calculational note in support of inventory assessment of three tank trailers using radiological attentuation calculations

An estimate of tanker inventory using radiological attenuation calculations.
Date: December 21, 1996
Creator: Goldberg, H.J., Westinghouse Hanford
System: The UNT Digital Library
First positron annihilation lifetime measurement of Pu (open access)

First positron annihilation lifetime measurement of Pu

We have made the first measurement of defects in an aged sample of {delta} phase, Ga stabilized Pu, using positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy. This measurement validates the procedure necessary to perform measurements on this highly toxic material and obtain data representative of sample conditions. Comparison of the positron annihilation lifetime analysis of the data with calculated values suggests that He filled vacancies or vacancy clusters dominate the defect population. Such defects are the necessary precursor to void growth and swelling. The evolution of defects resulting from the radioactive decay of Pu during its life in the stockpile is one of the unknown quantities affecting our confidence in predictions of the limit on stockpile components. Radiation damage leads to changes in the size and strength of metals studied for reactor and accelerator use and similar effects may be expected in Pu. The evolution of radiation produced vacancies into larger void structures and accompanying macroscopic swelling may occur in Pu at some age. A detailed understanding of the defects in self irradiated Pu is required to predict the time scale of void swelling and related radiation effects. 1 fig.
Date: November 21, 1996
Creator: Colmenares, C.; Howell, R.H.; Ancheta, D.; Cowan, T.; Hanafee, J. & Sterne, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compact tokamak reactors part 2 (numerical results) (open access)

Compact tokamak reactors part 2 (numerical results)

The authors describe a numerical optimization scheme for fusion reactors. The particular application described is to find the smallest copper coil spherical tokamak, although the numerical scheme is sufficiently general to allow many other problems to be solved. The solution to the steady state energy balance is found by first selecting the fixed variables. The range of all remaining variables is then selected, except for the temperature. Within the specified ranges, the temperature which satisfies the power balance is then found. Tests are applied to determine that remaining constraints are satisfied, and the acceptable results then stored. Results are presented for a range of auxiliary current drive efficiencies and different scaling relationships; for the range of variables chosen the machine encompassing volume increases or remains approximately unchanged as the aspect ratio is reduced.
Date: October 21, 1996
Creator: Wiley, J.C.; Wootton, A.J. & Ross, D.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final report for tank 241-AN-102, grab samples 2AN-95-1 through 2AN-95-6 and 102-AN-1 through 102-AN-4 (open access)

Final report for tank 241-AN-102, grab samples 2AN-95-1 through 2AN-95-6 and 102-AN-1 through 102-AN-4

Ten grab samples (2AN-95-1, 2, 3, 4A, 5A; 102-AN-1, 2, 3(A), 3(B), and 4) and one field blank (2AN-95-6) were taken from tank 241-AN-102. In support of the safety screening program, total organic carbon and cyanide were performed as secondary analyses because the differential scanning calorimetry results exceeded the notification limit. These were compared to safety screening limits at a confidence level of 95%. Waste compatibility analyses were performed on the 3 supernate samples and the field blank from the latest sampling event. Results presented in the 45 day and in this report show that the waste in Tank 241-AN-1D2 has energetics greater than 480 J/g (dry) and total organic carbon > 3 wt%; however, with a moisture content > 17 wt%, the tank may be considered ``conditionally`` safe in accordance with the Data Quality Objective to Support Resolution of the Organic Complexant Safety Issue.
Date: March 21, 1996
Creator: Esch, R.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Documentation associated with the WESF preparation for receiving 25 cesium capsules from the Applied Radiant Energy Corporation (ARECO) (open access)

Documentation associated with the WESF preparation for receiving 25 cesium capsules from the Applied Radiant Energy Corporation (ARECO)

The purpose of this report is to compile all documentation associated with facility preparation of WESF to receive 25 cesium capsules from ARECO. The WESF validated it`s preparedness by completing a facility preparedness review using a performance indicator checklist.
Date: October 21, 1996
Creator: Pawlak, M.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improvement of storage, handling, and transportability of fine coal. Quarterly technical progress report No. 5, January 1, 1995--March 31, 1995 (open access)

Improvement of storage, handling, and transportability of fine coal. Quarterly technical progress report No. 5, January 1, 1995--March 31, 1995

The Mulled Coal process was developed as a means of overcoming the adverse handling characteristics of wet fine coal without thermal drying. The process involves the addition of a low cost, harmless reagent to wet fine coal using off-the-shelf mixing equipment. Based on laboratory- and bench-scale testing, Mulled Coal can be stored, shipped, and burned without causing any of the plugging, pasting, carryback and freezing problems normally associated with wet coal. The objectives of this project are to demonstrate that: the Mulled Coal process, which has been proven to work on a wide range of wet fine coals at bench scale, will work equally well on a continuous basis, producing consistent quality at a convincing rate of production in a commercial coal preparation plant; the wet product from a fine coal cleaning circuit can be converted to a solid fuel form for ease of handling and cost savings in storage and rail car transportation; and a wet fine coal product thus converted to a solid fuel form, can be stored, shipped, and burned with conventional fuel handling, transportation, and combustion systems. During this reporting period, virtually all of the technical activities and progress was made in the areas of circuit …
Date: August 21, 1996
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
N2 vs H20 as purge/hydrostatic head (open access)

N2 vs H20 as purge/hydrostatic head

This document provides the information to explain to the customer the ETP for the N2 vs H20 as Purge/Hydrostatic Head. This ETP follows the format described in Issurance of New Characterization Equipment Engineering Desk Instructions, 75200-95-013.
Date: March 21, 1996
Creator: Mast, J.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Synthesis and study of conjugated polymers containing Di- or Triphenylamine (open access)

Synthesis and study of conjugated polymers containing Di- or Triphenylamine

This thesis consists of two separate parts. The first part addresses the synthesis and study of conjugated polymers containing di- or triphenylamine. Two types of polymers: linear polymers and dendrimers, were synthesized. The polymers were characterized by NMR, IR, UV, GPC, TGA and DSC. Electronic and optical properties of the polymers were studied through the conductivity measurements and excitation- emission spectra. the second part of this thesis deals with a reaction of electron-rich acetylenes with TCNE. The discovery of the reaction from charge transfer complex studies and the investigation of this reaction on various electron-rich acetylenes are presented.
Date: June 21, 1996
Creator: Sukwattanasinitt, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Museum in a School (reaching the unreachable audience). Final report, February 2, 1993--December 14, 1995 (open access)

Museum in a School (reaching the unreachable audience). Final report, February 2, 1993--December 14, 1995

SciTech, an interactive science and technology center located 45 miles west of Chicago, is dedicated to providing hands-on and minds-on experiences that explore the spectrum of science and mathematics. SciTech opened at its present location during the summer of 1990 in Aurora, a changing community with a large minority population. Since then, SciTech has received over 331,000 visitors from the entire Chicago metropolitan area. There are now more than 250 exhibits housed in the museum. SciTech has grown quickly in part due to the strong volunteer support from the research and development corridor population it serves, as well as through international ties. SciTech has become known as an innovative force in the science museum community for its original exhibits and unique youth and school programs. SciTech`s traveling outreach program, ``Museum in a School,`` has served over 391 public and private schools in 111 districts in the Chicago metropolitan area, and has reached over 3,099 teachers and 98,837 students throughout its history. This program serves a wide variety of students, including bilingual, economically depressed, and learning impaired. SciTech is concerned with every American`s need for increasing basic science literacy.
Date: February 21, 1996
Creator: Diaz, O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental assessment for consolidation of certain materials and machines for nuclear criticality experiments and training (open access)

Environmental assessment for consolidation of certain materials and machines for nuclear criticality experiments and training

In support of its assigned missions and because of the importance of avoiding nuclear criticality accidents, DOE has adopted a policy to reduce identifiable nuclear criticality safety risks and to protect the public, workers, government property and essential operations from the effects of a criticality accident. In support of this policy, the Los Alamos Critical Experiments Facility (LACEF) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Technical Area (TA) 18, provides a program of general purpose critical experiments. This program, the only remaining one of its kind in the United States, seeks to maintain a sound basis of information for criticality control in those physical situations that DOE will encounter in handling and storing fissionable material in the future, and ensuring the presence of a community of individuals competent in practicing this control.
Date: May 21, 1996
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Desalination with carbon aerogel electrodes (open access)

Desalination with carbon aerogel electrodes

An electrically regenerated electrosorption process known as carbon aerogel CDI was developed for continuously removing ionic impurities from aqueous streams. A salt solution flows in a channel formed by pairs of parallel carbon aerogel electrodes. Each electrode has a very high BET surface area and very low resistivity. After polarization, anions and cations are removed from electrolyte by the electric field and electrosorbed onto the carbon aerogel. The solution is thus separated into two streams, brine and water. Based on this, carbon aerogel CDI appears to be an energy-efficient alternative to evaporation, electrodialysis, and reverse osmosis. The energy required by this process is about QV/2, plus losses. Estimated energy requirement for sea water desalination is 18-27 Wh gal{sup -1}, depending on cell voltage and flow rate. The requirement for brackish water desalination is less, 1.2-2.5 Wh gal{sup -1} at 1600 ppM. This is assuming that stored electrical energy is reclaimed during regeneration.
Date: October 21, 1996
Creator: Farmer, J.C.; Richardson, J.H. & Fix, D.V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Particulate hot gas stream cleanup technical issues. Quarterly report, January--March 1996 (open access)

Particulate hot gas stream cleanup technical issues. Quarterly report, January--March 1996

To identify which ash characteristics can lead to problems with filtration, the authors have assembled 235 ash samples from eleven facilities involved in METC`s HGCU program. They have analyzed many of these ashes with a variety of laboratory tests. Physical attributes of the particles that they have examined include size distribution, specific surface area, particle morphology, and bulk ash cohesivity and permeability. They have also performed a range of chemical analyses on these ashes, as well as characterizations of agglomerates of ash removed from filter vessels at Tidd and Karhula. They are in the process of assembling the data obtained in these studies into an interactive data base which will help the manufacturers and operators of high-temperature barrier filters tailor their designs and operations to the specific characteristics of the ashes they are collecting. In order to understand the thermal and mechanical behavior of the various types of ceramic materials used in hot gas filtration, they have been performing hoop and axial tensile tests, thermal expansion, compression, and creep evaluations of these materials at temperatures up to 1,800 F. Nondestructive testing methods they perform on filter specimens include density and ultrasonic velocity. To date they have evaluated various characteristics of …
Date: May 21, 1996
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Cost Saving Plan (open access)

Hanford Cost Saving Plan

Fiscal Year (FY) 1995 challenged us to dramatically reduce costs at Hanford. We began the year with an 8 percent reduction in our Environmental Management budget but at the same time were tasked with accomplishing additional workscope. This resulted in a Productivity Challenge whereby we took on more work at the beginning of the year than we had funding to complete. During the year, the Productivity Challenge actually grew to 23 percent because of recissions, Congressional budget reductions, and DOE Headquarters actions. We successfully met our FY 1995 Productivity Challenge through an aggressive cost reduction program that identified and eliminated unnecessary workscope and found ways to be more efficient. We reduced the size of the workforce, cut overhead expenses, eliminated paperwork, cancelled construction of new facilities, and reengineered our processes. We are proving we can get the job done better and for less money at Hanford. DOE`s drive to do it ``better, faster, cheaper`` has led us to look for more and larger partnerships with the private sector. The biggest will be privatization of Hanford`s Tank Waste Remediation System, which will turn liquid tank waste into glass logs for eventual disposal. We will also save millions of dollars and avoid …
Date: June 21, 1996
Creator: Andrews-Smith, K.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-cost hadron colliders at Fermilab: A discussion paper (open access)

Low-cost hadron colliders at Fermilab: A discussion paper

New more economic approaches are required to continue the dramatic exponential rise in collider energies as represented by the well known Livingston plot. The old idea of low cost, low field iron dominated magnets in a small diameter pipe may become feasible in the next decade with dramatic recent advances in technology: (1) advanced tunneling technologies for small diameter, non human accessible tunnels, (2) accurate remote guidance systems for tunnel survey and boring machine steering, (3) high T{sub c} superconductors operating at liquid N{sub 2} or liquid H{sub 2} temperatures, (4) industrial applications of remote manipulation and robotics, (5) digitally multiplexed electronics to minimize cables, (6) achievement of high luminosities in p-p and p-{anti P} colliders. The goal of this paper is to stimulate continuing discussions on approaches to this new collider and to identify critical areas needing calculations, construction of models, proof of principle experiments, and full scale prototypes in order to determine feasibility and arrive at cost estimates.
Date: June 21, 1996
Creator: Foster, G.W. & Malamud, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Releases from failure of a flexible receiver bag in high winds (open access)

Releases from failure of a flexible receiver bag in high winds

This document supports the development and presentation of the following accident scenario in the TWRS Final Safety Analysis Report: Natural Phenomena - High Wind. The calculations needed to quantify the risk associated with this accident scenario are included within.
Date: October 21, 1996
Creator: Slaughterbeck, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test report, 241-AW air inlet filter station pressure decay test (open access)

Acceptance test report, 241-AW air inlet filter station pressure decay test

This is the acceptance test report for pressure decay tests performed on newly-installed 241-AW Tank Farm primary ventilation system air inlet filter stations.
Date: February 21, 1996
Creator: Tuck, J.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library