1 to 2 GeV/c beam line for hypernuclear and kaon research (open access)

1 to 2 GeV/c beam line for hypernuclear and kaon research

A kaon beam line operating in the range from 1.0 to 2.0 GeV/c is proposed. The line is meant for kaon and pion research in a region hitherto inaccessible to experimenters. Topics in hypernuclear and kaon physics of high current interest include the investigation of doubly strange nuclear systems with the K/sup -/,K/sup +/ reaction, searching for dibaryon resonances, hyperon-nucleon interactions, hypernuclear ..gamma.. rays, and associated production of excited hypernuclei. The beam line would provide separated beams of momentum analyzed kaons at intensities greater than 10/sup 6/ particles per spill with a momentum determined to one part in a thousand. This intensity is an order of magnitude greater than that currently available. 63 references.
Date: February 15, 1985
Creator: Chrien, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Gas Cooled Nuclear Reactor Materials Evaluation and Development Program. Progress Report for Period October 1, 1980-December 31, 1980. (open access)

Advanced Gas Cooled Nuclear Reactor Materials Evaluation and Development Program. Progress Report for Period October 1, 1980-December 31, 1980.

This report presents the results of work performed from October 1, 1980 through December 31, 1980 on the Advanced Gas- Cooled Nuclear Reactor Materials Evaluation and Development Program.
Date: February 15, 1981
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Argon and argon-oxygen glow discharge cleaning of the Main Ring beam pipe (open access)

Argon and argon-oxygen glow discharge cleaning of the Main Ring beam pipe

This report presents the experimental results from the argon and argon-oxygen gas mixture glow discharge in the Main Ring beam pipe and is a follow-up to the proposal for vacuum improvements of the Main Ring magnets and straight sections and the warm Tevatron straight sections. Glow discharge was used in the experiment in order to clean the vacuum system instead of bakeout which could only be performed with great difficulty or not at all. It is a relatively simple and very effective method. The glow discharge occurs under specific gas pressures (10--120 mTorr) and current flows (10/sup /minus/5/ /minus/ 10/sup /minus/1/ A) through gas excitation and formation of plasma conditions. Deexcitation of the gas molecules produces visible light. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain the glow discharge cleaning process. Ions can sputter adsorbed molecules or atoms at the cathode surface and even produce lattice damage extending several monolayers below the surface. The glow discharge has already been extensively used for vacuum improvements in accelerators. 9 refs.
Date: February 15, 1989
Creator: Trbojevic, D. & Pastore, N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compliant Converter Design and Analysis Study, Final Report on Phase 1 (open access)

Compliant Converter Design and Analysis Study, Final Report on Phase 1

No Abstract. There is a duplicate copy.
Date: February 15, 1988
Creator: Schock, Alfred
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CONC/11: a computer program for calculating the performance of dish-type solar thermal collectors and power systems (open access)

CONC/11: a computer program for calculating the performance of dish-type solar thermal collectors and power systems

CONC/11 is a computer program designed for calculating the performance of dish-type solar thermal collectors and power systems. It is intended to aid the system or collector designer in evaluating the performance to be expected with possible design alternatives. From design or test data on the characteristics of the various subsystems, CONC/11 calculates the efficiencies of the collector and the overall power system as functions of the receiver temperature for a specified insolation. If desired, CONC/11 will also determine the receiver aperture and the receiver temperature that will provide the highest efficiencies at a given insolation. The program handles both simple and compound concentrators. CONC/11 is written in Athena Extended Fortran (similar to Fortran 77) to operate primarily in an interactive mode on a Sperry 1100/81 computer. It could also be used on many small computers.
Date: February 15, 1984
Creator: Jaffe, L. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cost of Czochralski wafers as a function of diameter (open access)

Cost of Czochralski wafers as a function of diameter

The impact of diameter in the range of 10 to 15 cm on the cost of wafers sliced from Czochralski ingots is analyzed. Increasing silicon waste and decreasing ingot cost with increasing ingot size are estimated along with projected costs. Results indicate a small but continuous decrease in sheet cost with increasing ingot size in this size range. Sheet costs including silicon are projected to be $50 to $60/m/sup 2/ (1980 $) depending upon technique used.
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: Leipold, M.H.; Radics, C. & Kachare, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Critical parameters for coarse coal underground slurry haulage systems (open access)

Critical parameters for coarse coal underground slurry haulage systems

This report describes the basic parameters which directly influence the behavior of a coal slurry pipeline transportation system and determine the limitations of the system performance. The purpose of this technology assessment is to provide an identification and understanding of the critical factors which must be given consideration in the design and evaluation of such a slurry haulage system intended for use in an underground coal mine. The slurry haulage system will be utilized to satisfy the transportation requirements of conveying, in a pipeline, the coal mined by a continuous mining machine to a storage location near the mine entrance or to a coal preparation plant located on the surface. Coal-water slurries, particularly those consisting of homogeneous suspensions of small particles, frequently behave as non-Newtonian, Bingham-plastic fluids. For successful operation, slurry transport systems should be designed to operate in the turbulent flow regime and at a flow rate at least 30% greater than the deposition velocity. The deposition velocity is defined as the slurry flow rate at which the solid particles tend to settle in the pipe. Due to the importance of accurately determining the deposition velocity and the uncertainties of current methods for predicting the deposition velocity of coarse …
Date: February 15, 1981
Creator: Maynard, D.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defect states in plasma-deposited a-Si:H. Final report, February 1979-January 1980 (open access)

Defect states in plasma-deposited a-Si:H. Final report, February 1979-January 1980

Studies of defects in plasma-deposited, hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H), covering the period February 1979-January 1980 are described. Substantial progress has been made in understanding defect structures, their electronic properties and the influence of doping. The two most significant results are surprising, in one case for simplicity where complexity was expected, and in the other for complexity where simplicity had been presumed. In the first study we have clarified the nature of the defects by showing the connection between luminescence and light induced ESR experiments. The results indicate that dangling bonds having a positive electronic correlation energy are sufficient to explain most of the experimental information. The second study demonstrates the existence of microstructural inhomogeneities, arising from the nucleation and growth of the films. Thus the usual assumption of a uniform alloy with a random distribution of defects must be modified in considering processes such as electrical conduction, trapping, recombination, hydrogen effusion, etc. Of considerable technological and fundamental interest is the influence of doping on the defect behavior. Previous indications that doping introduces defect states have been confirmed. It remains to determine why this behavior occurs, and if there are any means of circumventing the problem.
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: Knights, J C
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of tailored ceramics for geologic storage of nuclear wastes. Quarterly progress report, October 1, 1979-December 31, 1979 (open access)

Development of tailored ceramics for geologic storage of nuclear wastes. Quarterly progress report, October 1, 1979-December 31, 1979

Tailored ceramics are crystalline assemblages made by high-temperature and pressure consolidation of a nuclear waste with selected additives. The multitask program includes waste form development and characterizations, and process and equipment development. (DLC)
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electromagnetic fields in axial symmetric waveguides with variable cross section (open access)

Electromagnetic fields in axial symmetric waveguides with variable cross section

A new class of separable variables is found which allows one to find an approximate analytical solution of the Maxwell equations for axial symmetric waveguides with slow (but not necessarily small) varying boundary surfaces. An example of the solution is given. Possible applications and limitations of this approach are discussed. 6 refs., 10 figs.
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: Kheifets, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental formation of chalk from calcareous ooze. Technical progress report (open access)

Experimental formation of chalk from calcareous ooze. Technical progress report

Samples of calcareous ooze collected from the tropical and equatorial Atlantic Ocean were subjected to hydrothermal alteration in order to simulate the diagenesis of chalk. Changes in mineralogy and morphology of enclosed microfossils were measured. (ACR)
Date: February 15, 1981
Creator: Seyfried, W. E. & Johnson, T. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
General Chemistry Division. Quarterly report, October-December 1979 (open access)

General Chemistry Division. Quarterly report, October-December 1979

Progress is reported on analytical R and D for the nuclear explosives programs (coupling of gas chromatograph, mass spectrometer, and infrared spectrometer; analysis of fluorocarbon FC-86; far-infrared laser development; transient behavior of n-type TiO/sub 2/ semiconductor photoelectrodes; and impurities on Kevlar 49 fibers) and for the energy programs (on-line mass spectroscopy of oil shale and testing of additives for controlling the scaling of hypersaline geothermal brine). (DLC)
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geologic Interpretation of the Geothermal Potential of the North Bonneville Area (open access)

Geologic Interpretation of the Geothermal Potential of the North Bonneville Area

Possible geothermal development for the township of North Bonneville, Washington is being investigated because of the proximity of the town to hot springs in a geologic province of good geothermal potential. Surface expression of geothermal resources is provided by conduits through an impermeable reservoir cap and is therefore generally structurally controlled. Near North Bonneville the geologic formations that underlie potential drilling sites are the Eagle Creek formation and the Ohanpecosh Formation. The Lower Miocene Eagle Creek Formation is composed of poorly consolidated volcanic conglomerates, sandstones, tuffs, and includes a few minor interbedded lava flows. The Eocene-Oligiocene Ohanapecosh (Weigle) Formation in its nearest exposures to North Bonneville is composed of volcaniclastics and lava flows. The Ohanapecosh has been altered to zeolites and clays and is therefore well consolidated and impermeable. The lack of permeability provides the necessary reservoir cap for any geothermal system that may be present at depth. This formation, to the northeast, in the Wind River drainage is greater than 19,000 ft. thick. Circulation of geothermal heated water from this thick sequence of impermeable strata must be associated with penetrating fracture zones.
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: Nielson, D. L. & Moran, M. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal hydrogen sulfide and health in Rotorua, New Zealand (open access)

Geothermal hydrogen sulfide and health in Rotorua, New Zealand

Rotorua, New Zealand, lies inside a volcanic caldera. Natural steam is extensively used for space and water heating, and electric power generation. This report presents results of a preliminary reconnaissance survey of atmospheric H/sub 2/S levels in the area and attempts to relate these levels to health statistics in the region. 5 refs., 8 tabs. (ACR)
Date: February 15, 1984
Creator: Siegel, S. M. & Siegel, B. Z.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health and safety evaluation of a modified tunnel-borer design for application to single-entry coal-mine development (open access)

Health and safety evaluation of a modified tunnel-borer design for application to single-entry coal-mine development

The health and safety analysis is part of an overall effort to identify and develop innovative underground coal extraction systems. The single-entry tunnel borer system was initially considered an innovative approach to underground mining because it exhibited a means of increasing the speed and efficiency of entry development by reducing the number of entries. However, to be considered a truly advanced system, the tunnel borer had to meet distinct safety criteria as well. The objective was to examine the tunnel borer design and determine whether it offset major health hazards, and satisfied the prescribed safety levels. As a baseline for comparison, the tunnel borer was compared against the continuous mining entry driving system. The results of the health analysis indicated that while the tunnel borer design offered improvements in dust control through the use of water sprays, a higher face ventilation rate, and the application of spalling rather than the conventional grinding process, it interjected an additional mutagenic is and toxic compound into the environment through the use of shotcrete. The tunnel borer system easily conformed with the prescribed fatality limit, but exceeded the required limits for disabling and overall injuries. It also exhibited projected disabling and overall injury rates …
Date: February 15, 1982
Creator: Zimmerman, W. F.
Object Type: Report
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
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
Integrating quality assurance and research and development (open access)

Integrating quality assurance and research and development

Quality assurance programs cannot be transferred from one organization to another without attention to existing cultures and traditions. Introduction of quality assurance programs constitutes a significant change and represents a significant impact on the organizational structure and operational mode. Quality assurance professionals are change agents, but do not know how to be effective ones. Quality assurance as a body of knowledge and experience can only become accepted when its practitioners become familiar with their role as change agents. 8 references.
Date: February 15, 1985
Creator: Dronkers, J.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of deep level defects in epitaxial semiconducting zinc sulpho-selenide. Progress report, June 15, 1980-June 14, 1981 (open access)

Investigation of deep level defects in epitaxial semiconducting zinc sulpho-selenide. Progress report, June 15, 1980-June 14, 1981

High conductivity ZnSe single crystalline films have been heteroepitaxially deposited on GaAs substrates using open tube chemical vapor transport. Unintentionally doped films had net donor densities of 10/sup 14/ - 10/sup 16/ cm/sup -3/ and resistivities of 1 to 10/sup 3/ ohm cm. Resistivity was found to be strongly dependent upon zinc partial pressure during deposition. Electron mobilities of the order of 50 to 200 cm/sup 2//V sec were observed which suggested that the films are highly compensated. Properties of the deep level defects in heteroepitaxially grown ZnSe have been investigated using transient capacitance spectroscopy. A series of electron traps were observed with activation energies of 0.33, 0.35, 0.42, 0.71 and 0.86 eV in Au/ZnSe Schottky diodes. Trap concentration ranged from 10/sup 12/ to 10/sup 14/ cm/sup -3/ and depended on the zinc partial pressure. A model for the defect structure of ZnSe was proposed. Growth studies of ZnS/sub x/Se/sub 1-x/ on GaAs were begun.
Date: February 15, 1981
Creator: Wessels, B. W.
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
Phase relations in crystalline ceramic nuclear waste forms the system UO/sub 2 + x/-CeO/sub 2/-ZrO/sub 2/-ThO/sub 2/ at 1200/sup 0/C in air (open access)

Phase relations in crystalline ceramic nuclear waste forms the system UO/sub 2 + x/-CeO/sub 2/-ZrO/sub 2/-ThO/sub 2/ at 1200/sup 0/C in air

Steady-state phase relations in the system UO/sub 2 + x/-CeO/sub 2/-ZrO/sub 2/-ThO/sub 2/ were determined for application to phase relations in the high-level crystalline ceramic nuclear waste form Supercalcine-Ceramics. Samples were treated at 1200/sup 0/C at an oxygen partial pressure of 0.21 atm and a total pressure of 1 atm. Phase assemblages were found to be composed of cubic solid solutions of the flourite structure type, solid solutions based on ZrO/sub 2/, and orthorhombic solid solutions based on U/sub 3/O/sub 8/.
Date: February 15, 1981
Creator: Pepin, J.G. & McCarthy, G.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prediction and Measurement of Optimum Operating Conditions for Entrained Coal Gasification Processes. Quarterly Technical Progress Report, No. 1, 1 November 1979-31 January 1980 (open access)

Prediction and Measurement of Optimum Operating Conditions for Entrained Coal Gasification Processes. Quarterly Technical Progress Report, No. 1, 1 November 1979-31 January 1980

This report summarizes work completed to predict and measure optimum operating conditions for entrained coal gasifications processes. This study is the third in a series designed to investigate mixing and reaction in entrained coal gasifiers. A new team of graduate and undergraduate students was formed to conduct the experiments on optimum gasification operating conditions. Additional coal types, which will be tested in the gasifier were identified, ordered, and delivered. Characterization of these coals will be initiated. Hardware design modifications to introduce swirl into the secondary were initiated. Minor modifications were made to the gasifier to allow laser diagnostics to be made on an independently funded study with the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory. The tasks completed on the two-dimensional model included the substantiation of a Gaussian PDF for the top-hat PDF in BURN and the completion of a Lagrangian particle turbulent dispersion module. The reacting submodel is progressing into the final stages of debug. The formulation of the radiation submodel is nearly complete and coding has been initiated. A device was designed, fabricated, and used to calibrate the actual Swirl Number of the cold-flow swirl generator used in the Phase 2 study. Swirl calibrations were obtained at the normal tests flow …
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: Smoot, L. D.; Hedman, P. O. & Smith, P. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary draft: comprehensive air-monitoring plan report (open access)

Preliminary draft: comprehensive air-monitoring plan report

The topography of the CAMP Study Area, climate, and air pollution meteorology are described. The population analysis indicated limited growth during the next 10 years in the CAMP Study Area. Analysis of emission sources (current and projected) included a presentation of the types of emissions and their impact on the Study Area population (receptors). The general conclusion was drawn that of the non-condensible gases emitted, and considered pollutants, hydrogen sulfide was the only one for which monitoring would be recommended. Recommendations for type, placement, performance criteria, and the timing of establishment and terminating monitoring equipment were determined.
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Silicon-on ceramic process. Silicon sheet growth and device developmentt for the Large-Area Silicon Sheet Task of the Low-Cost Solar Array Project. Quarterly report No. 13, October 1-December 31, 1979 (open access)

Silicon-on ceramic process. Silicon sheet growth and device developmentt for the Large-Area Silicon Sheet Task of the Low-Cost Solar Array Project. Quarterly report No. 13, October 1-December 31, 1979

Research on the technical and economic feasibility of producing solar-cell-quality sheet silicon by coating inexpensive ceramic substrates with a thin layer of polycrystalline silicon is reported. The coating methods to be developed are directed toward a minimum-cost process for producing solar cells with a terrestrial conversion efficiency of 11 percent or greater. By applying a graphite coating to one face of a ceramic substrate, molten silicon can be caused to wet only that graphite-coated face and produce uniform thin layers of large-grain polycrystalline silicon; thus, only a minimal quantity of silicon is consumed. A variety of ceramic materials have been dip coated with silicon. The investigation has shown that mullite substrates containing an excess of SiO/sub 2/ best match the thermal expansion coefficient of silicon and hence produce the best SOC layers. With such substrates, smooth and uniform silicon layers 25 cm/sup 2/ in area have been achieved with single-crystal grains as large as 4 mm in width and several cm in length. Crystal length is limited by the length of the substrate. The thickness of the coating and the size of the crystalline grains are controlled by the temperature of the melt and the rate at which the substrate …
Date: February 15, 1980
Creator: Chapman, P W; Zook, J D; Grung, B L; McHenry, K & Schuldt, S B
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library