120-keV beam direct conversion system for TFTR injectors (open access)

120-keV beam direct conversion system for TFTR injectors

Several practical motivations exist for the development of beam direct conversion systems that are compatible with the injection systems of large experiments such as the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR). We present a preliminary design in which we analyze the most acute problems involved in scaling up existing designs and apparatus to fulfill TFTR requirements. Some of the questions addressed are the requirements for electron suppression, gas pumping, compactness, and power densities. A new idea is presented that allows for the handling of higher beam power. The gross savings in the capital cost of injector power supplies for the TFTR will be about $7.2 million, but the net savings will be somewhat less than this. This preliminary design has not yet revealed fundamental limitations with respect to the development of beam energy-recovery systems operating at high levels of current, voltage, and power densities.
Date: September 21, 1976
Creator: Hamilton, G. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AN Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report (open access)

241-AN Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report

This report presents the results of the integrity assessment of the 241-AN double-shell tank farm facility located in the 200 East Area of the Hanford Site. The assessment included the design evaluation and integrity examinations of the tanks and concluded that the facility is adequately designed, is compatible with the waste, and is fit for use. Recommendations including subsequent examinations, are made to ensure the continued safe operation of the tanks.
Date: September 21, 1999
Creator: Jensen, C. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AW Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report (open access)

241-AW Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report

This report presents the results of the integrity assessment of the 241-AW double-shell tank farm facility located in the 200 East Area of the Hanford Site. The assessment included the design evaluation and integrity examinations of the tanks and concluded that the facility is adequately designed, is compatible with the waste, and is fit for use. Recommendations including subsequent examinations, are made to ensure the continued safe operation of the tanks.
Date: September 21, 1999
Creator: Jensen, C. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AY Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report (open access)

241-AY Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report

This report presents the results of the integrity assessment of the 241-AY double-shell tank farm facility located in the 200 East Area of the Hanford Site. The assessment included the design evaluation and integrity examinations of the tanks and concluded that the facility is adequately designed, is compatible with the waste, and is fit for use. Recommendations including subsequent examinations. are made to ensure the continued safe operation of the tanks.
Date: September 21, 1999
Creator: JENSEN, C.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-AZ Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report (open access)

241-AZ Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report

This report presents the results of the integrity assessment of the 241-A2 double-shell tank farm facility located in the 200 East Area of the Hanford Site. The assessment included the design evaluation and integrity examinations of the tanks and concluded that the facility is adequately designed, is compatible with the waste, and is fit for use. Recommendations including subsequent examinations, are made to ensure the continued safe operation of the tanks.
Date: September 21, 1999
Creator: JENSEN, C.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-SY Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report (open access)

241-SY Double Shell Tanks (DST) Integrity Assessment Report

This report presents the results of the integrity assessment of the 241-SY double-shell tank farm facility located in the 200 West Area of the Hanford Site. The assessment included the design evaluation and integrity examinations of the tanks and concluded that the facility is adequately designed, is compatible with the waste, and is fit for use. Recommendations including subsequent examinations, are made to ensure the continued safe operation of the tanks.
Date: September 21, 1999
Creator: JENSEN, C.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2003 Archaea: Ecology, Metabolism and Molecular Biology (open access)

2003 Archaea: Ecology, Metabolism and Molecular Biology

The Gordon Research Conference (GRC) on 2003 Archaea: Ecology, Metabolism and Molecular Biology was held at Proctor Academy, Andover, NH from August 3-8, 2003. The Conference was well-attended with 150 participants (attendees list attached). The attendees represented the spectrum of endeavor in this field coming from academia, industry, and government laboratories, both U.S. and foreign scientists, senior researchers, young investigators, and students. In designing the formal speakers program, emphasis was placed on current unpublished research and discussion of the future target areas in this field. There was a conscious effort to stimulate lively discussion about the key issues in the field today. Time for formal presentations was limited in the interest of group discussions. In order that more scientists could communicate their most recent results, poster presentation time was scheduled. Attached is a copy of the formal schedule and speaker program and the poster program. In addition to these formal interactions, ''free time'' was scheduled to allow informal discussions. Such discussions are fostering new collaborations and joint efforts in the field. I want to personally thank you for your support of this Conference. As you know, in the interest of promoting the presentation of unpublished and frontier-breaking research, Gordon Research …
Date: September 21, 2004
Creator: Shand, Richard F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2003 Plant Cell Walls Gordon Conference (open access)

2003 Plant Cell Walls Gordon Conference

This conference will address recent progress in many aspects of cell wall biology. Molecular, genetic, and genomic approaches are yielding major advances in our understanding of the composition, synthesis, and architecture of plant cell walls and their dynamics during growth, and are identifying the genes that encode the machinery needed to make their biogenesis possible. This meeting will bring together international scientists from academia, industry and government labs to share the latest breakthroughs and perspectives on polysaccharide biosynthesis, wood formation, wall modification, expansion and interaction with other organisms, and genomic & evolutionary analyses of wall-related genes, as well as to discuss recent ''nanotechnological'' advances that take wall analysis to the level of a single cell.
Date: September 21, 2004
Creator: Cosgrove, Daniel J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2008 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report (open access)

2008 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Annual Illness and Injury Surveillance Report

The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) commitment to assuring the health and safety of its workers includes the conduct of epidemiologic surveillance activities that provide an early warning system for health problems among workers. The Illness and Injury Surveillance Program monitors illnesses and health conditions that result in an absence of workdays, occupational injuries and illnesses, and disabilities and deaths among current workers.
Date: September 21, 2009
Creator: United States. Department of Energy. Office of Health, Safety, and Security.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2D Spatial Gain Profiles in Multiple-Pulse Driven Ne-like Ge Lasers (open access)

2D Spatial Gain Profiles in Multiple-Pulse Driven Ne-like Ge Lasers

In this paper, we present the direct spatial measurement of the two-dimensional gain profiles for the Ne-like Ge 196 Å laser line using a slab target illuminated by the multiple pulse technique. To understand the spatial dependence for Ge plasmas driven by a series of 100 ps pulses 400 ps apart we did a series of Nova experiments backlighting short Ge amplifiers. Two-dimensional, high-resolution, spatial images of the 196 Å laser emission from the output aperture of the amplifiers were measured to determine the spatial position of the gain. The amplifier lengths were chosen to be short enough to avoid the significant refraction effects which have dominated the analysis of previous near field imaging experiments. To assure good temporal overlap, the traveling wave geometry was used to illuminate both the amplifier and backlighter. The amplifier design included a wire fiducial that provided an absolute spatial reference and avoided the usual difficulty of determining the location of the target surface. We compare the measured spatial gain profiles with simulations done using LASNEX, which calculates the hydrodynamic evolution of the plasma, and XRASER, which uses the temperatures and densities from LASNEX to do the gain and kinetics calculations.
Date: September 21, 1998
Creator: Dunn, J.; Li, Y.; Nilsen, J. & Osterheld, A. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator system for neutron radiography (open access)

Accelerator system for neutron radiography

The field of x-ray radiography is well established for doing non-destructive evaluation of a vast array of components, assemblies, and objects. While x-rays excel in many radiography applications, their effectiveness diminishes rapidly if the objects of interest are surrounded by thick, high-density materials that strongly attenuate photons. Due to the differences in interaction mechanisms, neutron radiography is highly effective in imaging details inside such objects. To obtain a high intensity neutron source suitable for neutron imaging a 9-MeV linear accelerator is being evaluated for putting a deuteron beam into a high-pressure deuterium gas cell. As a windowless aperture is needed to transport the beam into the gas cell, a low-emittance is needed to minimize losses along the high-energy beam transport (HEBT) and the end station. A description of the HEBT, the transport optics into the gas cell, and the requirements for the linac will be presented.
Date: September 21, 2000
Creator: Rusnak, B & Hall, J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ACTIVE CATHODES FOR SUPER-HIGH POWER DENSITY SOLID OXIDE FUEL CELLS THROUGH SPACE CHARGE EFFECTS (open access)

ACTIVE CATHODES FOR SUPER-HIGH POWER DENSITY SOLID OXIDE FUEL CELLS THROUGH SPACE CHARGE EFFECTS

This report summarizes the work done during the eleventh quarter of the project. Conductivity relaxation experiments were conducted on porous La{sub 0.5}Sr{sub 0.5}CoO{sub (3-{delta})} (LSC50) samples over a temperature range from 350 to 750 C, and over an oxygen partial pressure, p{sub O{sub 2}}, switch between 0.04 and 0.06 atm in order to determine the surface exchange coefficient, k{sub chem}. The normalized conductivity data could be fitted to a first order kinetic equation. The time constant decreased with decreasing temperature between {approx}750 and {approx}450 C, but sharply increased with decreasing temperature between 450 and 350 C. The corresponding k{sub chem} was estimated using three models: (a) A porous body model wherein it is assumed that the kinetics of surface exchange is the slowest. (b) Solution to the diffusion equation assuming the particles can be approximated as spheres. (c) Solution to the diffusion equation assuming the particles can be approximated as cylinders. The values of k{sub chem} obtained from the three models were in good agreement. In all cases, it was observed that k{sub chem} increases with decreasing temperature between 750 and 450 C, but below 450 C, it sharply decreases with further decrease in temperature.
Date: September 21, 2005
Creator: Virkar, Anil V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addendum 1 to CSER 94-013 Criticality Evaluation of Loose Powder in the 232-Z Burning Hood [CANCELLED] (open access)

Addendum 1 to CSER 94-013 Criticality Evaluation of Loose Powder in the 232-Z Burning Hood [CANCELLED]

This CSER is no longer needed so it is being canceled
Date: September 21, 1999
Creator: Ramble, A. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adjustable cutting tool holder (open access)

Adjustable cutting tool holder

This patent application describes a device for varying the geometry of a cutting tool for use in machining operations.
Date: September 21, 2000
Creator: Steinhour, William Lee III; West, Drew; Honeycutt, Steve; Frank, Steven & Krishnamurthy, Kallutla
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
AdS/CFT and Exclusive Processes in QCD (open access)

AdS/CFT and Exclusive Processes in QCD

The AdS/CFT correspondence between string theory in AdS space and conformal field theories in physical space-time leads to an analytic, semi-classical model for strongly-coupled QCD which has scale invariance and dimensional counting at short distances and color confinement at large distances. One can use holography to map the amplitude describing the hadronic state in the fifth dimension of Anti-de Sitter space AdS5 to the light-front wavefunctions of hadrons in physical space-time, thus providing a relativistic description of hadrons in QCD at the amplitude level. In particular, we show that there is an exact correspondence between the fifth-dimensional coordinate of AdS space z and a specific impact variable {var_sigma} which measures the separation of the quark and gluonic constituents within the hadron in ordinary space-time. New relativistic light-front equations in ordinary space-time can then be derived which reproduce the results obtained using the 5-dimensional theory. The effective light-front equations possess elegant algebraic structures and integrability properties. This connection between the AdS and the light-front representations allows one to compute the analytic form of the frame-independent light-front wavefunctions, the fundamental entities which encode hadron properties and allow the computation of decay constants, form factors, deeply virtual Compton scattering, exclusive heavy hadron decays …
Date: September 21, 2007
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J. & de Teramond, Guy F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced reactors transition fiscal year 1996 multi-year program plan WBS 7.3 (open access)

Advanced reactors transition fiscal year 1996 multi-year program plan WBS 7.3

This document describes in detail the work to be accomplished in FY 1996 and the out years for the Advanced Reactors Transition (WBS 7.3. ). This document describes specific milestones and funding profiles. Based upon the Fiscal Year 1996 Multi-Year Program Plan (MYPP), DOE will provide authorization to perform the work outlined in the FY 1996 MYPP
Date: September 21, 1995
Creator: Hulvey, R.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Thermal Barrier Coating System Development. Technical progress report (open access)

Advanced Thermal Barrier Coating System Development. Technical progress report

The objectives of the program are to provide an improved TBC system with increased temperature capability and improved reliability relative to current state of the art TBC systems. The development of such a coating system is essential to the ATS engine meeting its objectives. The base program consists of three phases: Phase I: Program Planning - Complete; Phase II: Development; and Phase III: Selected Specimen - Bench Test. Work is being performed in Phase II and III of the program.
Date: September 21, 1998
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerogel Fingerprint Media (open access)

Aerogel Fingerprint Media

A fingerprint medium which is made of an aerogel having a predetermined density. The fingerprint medium may have a midrange density for forming plates or may be crushed forming a powder. The fingerprint medium may further include at least one of a metal and metal oxide to enhance characteristics desirable in a fingerprint medium.
Date: September 21, 1999
Creator: Miller, Fred S. & Andresen, Brian D.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ames test results on shot-tank residues (open access)

Ames test results on shot-tank residues

In August 1987, a routine Ames test on soot from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) 4-in. gun showed that the soot was mutagenic to Salmonella bacteria. Subsequent liquid chromatography on the soot showed that, out of hundreds of ultravoilet-absorbing compounds found in the residue, only three or four were mutagenic. When a sample large enough to weigh was collected, it was found that No environmentally identified complex mixture has ever been reported with as much Ames/Salmonella activity per gram as the gun residues.'' Since then, Ames tests of hundreds of samples have verified that the residues from our gun tanks may be hazardous to health. The actual degree of the hazard and the identity of the offending chemicals are still unknown. 2 refs.
Date: September 21, 1990
Creator: Bloom, G.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of a Ferric Uptake Regulator (Fur) Mutant ofDesulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough (open access)

Analysis of a Ferric Uptake Regulator (Fur) Mutant ofDesulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough

Previous experiments examining the transcriptional profileof the anaerobe Desulfovibrio vulgaris demonstrated up-regulation of theFur regulon in response to various environmental stressors. To test theinvolvement of Fur in the growth response and transcriptional regulationof D. vulgaris, a targeted mutagenesis procedure was used for deletingthe fur gene. Growth of the resulting ?fur mutant (JW707) was notaffected by iron availability, but the mutant did exhibit increasedsensitivity to nitrite and osmotic stresses compared to the wild type.Transcriptional profiling of JW707 indicated that iron-bound Fur acts asa traditional repressor for ferrous iron uptake genes (feoAB) and othergenes containing a predicted Fur binding site within their promoter.Despite the apparent lack of siderophore biosynthesis genes within the D.vulgaris genome, a large 12-gene operon encoding orthologs to TonB andTolQR also appeared to be repressed by iron-bound Fur. While other genespredicted to be involved in iron homeostasis were unaffected by thepresence or absence of Fur, alternative expression patterns that could beinterpreted as repression or activation by iron-free Fur were observed.Both the physiological and transcriptional data implicate a globalregulatory role for Fur in the sulfate-reducing bacterium D.vulgaris.
Date: September 21, 2007
Creator: Bender, Kelly S.; Yen, Huei-Che Bill; Hemme, Christopher L.; Yang, Zamin K.; He, Zhili; He, Qiang et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An analysis of commerical zeolite catalysts by multinuclear NMR (open access)

An analysis of commerical zeolite catalysts by multinuclear NMR

This work involves studying two commercial hydrocracking catalysts by solid state multinuclear NMR silicon 29 and aluminum 27 with the goal of developing a method of determining the fraction zeolite in the catalysts. The zeolite fraction is known to be one of the faujasite zeolites type X or Y. The clay matrix of the catalyst is assumed to be kaolinite. Fresh, air-exposed commercial hydrocracking catalysts were provided by Phillips Petroleum. Sample 33351-86 was known to be a physical mixture of a Y zeolite and a clay matrix. The other catalyst, 33351-20, was composed of a faujasite zeolite grown within a clay matrix. Both were suspected of being about 20 wt % zeolite. Nothing is known about the state of pretreatment or cation exchange. A portion of each catalyst was calcined in a porcelain crucible in air at 500{degree}C for two hours with a hour heating ramp preceding and a two hour cooling ramp following calcination. 64 refs., 21 figs., 8 tabs.
Date: September 21, 1990
Creator: Flanagan, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Analysis of Microbial Pollution in the Sinclair-Dyes Inlet Watershed (open access)

An Analysis of Microbial Pollution in the Sinclair-Dyes Inlet Watershed

This assessment of fecal coliform sources and pathways in Sinclair and Dyes Inlets is part of the Project ENVironmental InVESTment (ENVVEST) being conducted by the Navy's Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility in cooperation with the US Environmental Protection Agency, Washington State Department of Ecology, the Suquamish Tribe, Kitsap County, the City of Bremerton, the City of Port Orchard, and other local stakeholders. The goal of this study was to identify microbial pollution problems within the Sinclair-Dyes Inlet watershed and to provide a comprehensive assessment of fecal coliform (FC) contamination from all identifiable sources in the watershed. This study quantifies levels of contamination and estimated loadings from known sources within the watersheds and describes pollutant transport mechanisms found in the study area. In addition, the effectiveness of pollution prevention and mitigation measures currently in place within the Sinclair-Dyes Inlet watershed are discussed. This comprehensive study relies on historical data collected by several cooperating agencies, in addition to data collected during the study period from spring 2001 through summer 2005. This report is intended to provide the technical information needed to continue current water quality cleanup efforts and to help implement future efforts.
Date: September 21, 2005
Creator: May, Christopher W. & Cullinan, Valerie I.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Radionuclide Migration through a 200-m Vadose Zone Following a 16-year Infiltration Event (open access)

Analysis of Radionuclide Migration through a 200-m Vadose Zone Following a 16-year Infiltration Event

The CAMBRIC nuclear test was conducted beneath Frenchman Flat at the Nevada Test Site on May 14, 1965. The nuclear device was emplaced in heterogeneous alluvium, approximately 70 m beneath the ambient water table, which is itself 220 m beneath the ground surface. Approximately 10 years later, groundwater adjacent to the test was pumped steadily for 16 years to elicit information on the migration of residual radionuclide migration through the saturated zone. The pumping well effluent--containing mostly soluble radionuclides such as tritium, {sup 14}C, {sup 36}Cl, {sup 85}Kr, {sup 129}I, and {sup 106}Ru--was monitored, discharged to an unlined ditch, and allowed to flow towards Frenchman Lake over one kilometer away. Discharged water and radionuclides infiltrated into the ground and created an unexpected second experiment in which the migration of the effluent through the unsaturated zone back to the water table could be studied. In this paper, the pumping and effluent data are being utilized in conjunction with a series of geologic data, new radionuclide measurements, isotopic age-dating estimates, and vadose zone flow and transport models to better understand the movement of radionuclides between the ditch and the water table. Measurements of radionuclide concentrations in water samples produced from a water …
Date: September 21, 2004
Creator: Tompson, A. B.; Hudson, G. B.; Smith, D. K. & Hunt, J. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Chemistry at the Interface Between Materials Science and Biology (open access)

Analytical Chemistry at the Interface Between Materials Science and Biology

None
Date: September 21, 2000
Creator: O'Brien, J. C.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library