Preoperational test report, cross-site transfer water flush system (POTP-001) (open access)

Preoperational test report, cross-site transfer water flush system (POTP-001)

This report documents the results of the testing performed per POTP-001, for the Cross-Site Transfer Water Flush System. (HNF-1552, Rev. 0) The Flush System consists of a 47,000 gallon tank (302C), a 20 hp pump, two 498kW heaters, a caustic addition pump, various valves, instruments, and piping. The purpose of this system is to provide flush water at 140 F, 140gpm, and pH 11-12 for the Cross-Site Transfer System operation.
Date: February 20, 1998
Creator: Parsons, G.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
NIF ICCS network design and loading analysis (open access)

NIF ICCS network design and loading analysis

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) is housed within a large facility about the size of two football fields. The Integrated Computer Control System (ICCS) is distributed throughout this facility and requires the integration of about 40,000 control points and over 500 video sources. This integration is provided by approximately 700 control computers distributed throughout the NIF facility and a network that provides the communication infrastructure. A main control room houses a set of seven computer consoles providing operator access and control of the various distributed front-end processors (FEPs). There are also remote workstations distributed within the facility that allow provide operator console functions while personnel are testing and troubleshooting throughout the facility. The operator workstations communicate with the FEPs which implement the localized control and monitoring functions. There are different types of FEPs for the various subsystems being controlled. This report describes the design of the NIF ICCS network and how it meets the traffic loads that will are expected and the requirements of the Sub-System Design Requirements (SSDR's). This document supersedes the earlier reports entitled Analysis of the National Ignition Facility Network, dated November 6, 1996 and The National Ignition Facility Digital Video and Control Network, dated July 9, …
Date: February 20, 1998
Creator: Tietbohl, G & Bryant, R
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Specification of the power supply for a 6-pole combined horizontal and vertical corrector magnet (open access)

Specification of the power supply for a 6-pole combined horizontal and vertical corrector magnet

Light Source Note LS-176 lists four types of corrector magnets and their power supply specifications. In order to simplify the AC operation of corrector magnets for closed orbit correction feedback, adopting a single type of corrector magnet for the whole ring is currently considered. This corrector magnet has six poles (an adaption from the ring sextupole magnet) and has coil windings producing independent horizontal and vertical bending fields. As in the other correctors, the vacuum chamber eddy current dominates the AC operation of the magnet which affects the voltage specification of the power supplies. In this note, the physical requirements of the magnets will be reviewed, and the relevant magnet and power supply parameters will be reported. A few assumptions on the local bump geometries have changed since the publication of LS-176. The inner correctors of the straight section bump have been moved about 0.15 m inwards to conform with current vacuum chamber design. This decreases the required magnet strengths by 15% relative to those in LS-176. As of the publication date of this report, the locations of the two outboard correctors of the straight section bump are set midway between the quadrupoles Ql and Q2. Moving these correctors closer …
Date: February 20, 1992
Creator: Emergy, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flue gas dry scrubbing using pulsed electron beams (open access)

Flue gas dry scrubbing using pulsed electron beams

Electron beam dry scrubbing is a technique for removing in a single step both nitrogen oxides (NO{sub x}) and sulfur dioxide (SO{sub 2}) from the off-gas generated by utilities burning high sulfur coal. The use of pulsed electron beams may provide the most cost-effective solution to the implementation of this technique. This paper presents the results of plasma chemistry calculations to study the effect of dose rate, pulse length and pulse repetition rate on pulsed electron beam processing of NO{sub x} and SO{sub 2} in flue gases. The main objective is to determine if the proposed combinations of dose rate, pulse length and pulse repetition rate would have any deleterious effect on the utilization of radicals for pollutant removal. For a dose rate of 2x10{sup 5} megarads per second and a pulse length of 30 nanoseconds, the average dose per pulse is sufficiently low to prevent any deleterious effect on process efficiency because of radical-radical recombination reactions. During each post-pulse period, the radicals are utilized in the oxidation of NO{sub x} and SO{sub 2} in a timescale of around 200 microseconds; thus, with pulse frequencies of around 5 kilohertz or less, the radical concentrations remain sufficiently low to prevent any …
Date: February 20, 1996
Creator: Penetrante, B.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial studies to assess microbial impacts on nuclear waste disposal (open access)

Initial studies to assess microbial impacts on nuclear waste disposal

The impacts of the native and introduced bacteria on the performance of geologic nuclear waste disposal facilities should be evaluated because these bacteria could promote corrosion of repository components and alteration of chemical and hydrological properties of the surrounding engineered and rock barriers. As a first step towards investigating these potentialities, native and introduced bacteria obtained from post-construction Yucca Mountain (YM) rock were isolated under varying conditions, including elevated temperature, low nutrient availability, and the absence of available oxygen. Individual isolates are being screened for activities associated with microbially induced corrosion of metals (MIC). Preliminary determination of growth rates of whole YM microbial communities under varying conditions was also undertaken.
Date: February 20, 1996
Creator: Horn, J.M.; Meike, A.; McCright, R.D. & Economides, B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Power consumption and byproducts in electron beam and electrical discharge processing of volatile organic compounds (open access)

Power consumption and byproducts in electron beam and electrical discharge processing of volatile organic compounds

Among the new methods being investigated for the post-process reduction of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in atmospheric-pressure air streams are based on non-thermal plasmas. Electron beam, pulsed corona and dielectric-barrier discharge methods are among the more extensively investigated techniques for producing non-thermal plasmas. In order to apply non-thermal plasmas in an industrial scale, it is important to establish the electrical power requirements and byproducts of the process. In this paper the authors present experimental results using a compact electron beam reactor, a pulsed corona and a dielectric-barrier discharge reactor. They have used these reactors to study the removal of a wide variety of VOCs. The effects of background gas composition and gas temperature on the decomposition chemistry have been studied. They present a description of the reactions that control the efficiency of the plasma process. They have found that pulsed corona and other types of electrical discharge reactors are most suitable only for processes requiring O radicals. For VOCs requiring copious amounts of electrons, ions, N atoms or OH radicals, the use of electron beam reactors is generally the best way of minimizing the electrical power consumption. Electron beam processing is remarkably more effective for all of the VOCs tested. …
Date: February 20, 1996
Creator: Penetrante, B.M.; Hsiao, M.C. & Bardsley, J.N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A program to assess microbial impacts on nuclear waste containment (open access)

A program to assess microbial impacts on nuclear waste containment

In this paper we discuss aspects of a comprehensive program to identify and bound potential effects of microorganisms on long-term nuclear waste containment, using as examples, studies conducted within the Yucca Mountain Project. A comprehensive program has been formulated which cuts across standard disciplinary lines to address the specific concerns of microbial activity in a radioactive waste repository. Collectively, this program provides bounding parameters of microbial activities that modify the ambient geochemistry and hydrology, modify corrosion rates, and transport and transform radionuclides under conditions expected to be encountered after geological waste emplacement. This program is intended to provide microbial reaction rates and bounding conditions in a form that can be integrated into existing chemical and hydrological models. The inclusion of microbial effects will allow those models to more accurately assess long term repository integrity.
Date: February 20, 1996
Creator: Horn, J. & Meike, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal-hydrological analysis of large-scale thermal tests in the exploratory studies facility at Yucca Mountain (open access)

Thermal-hydrological analysis of large-scale thermal tests in the exploratory studies facility at Yucca Mountain

In situ thermal tests, which are to be conducted in the Exploratory Studies Facility (ESF) at Yucca Mountain, will provide a major portion of the experimental basis supporting the validation of coupled thermal-hydrological-geomechanical-geochemicaI (T-H-M-C) process models required to assess the total system performance at the site. With respect to advective rock dryout, we have identified three major T-H flow regimes: (1) throttled, nonbuoyant, advective rock dryout; (2) unthrottled, nonbuoyant, advective rock dryout; and (3) unthrottled, buoyant, advective rock dryout. With the V-TOUGH code, we modeled a range of heater test sizes, heating rates, and heating durations under a range of plausible hydrological conditions to help optimize an in situ thermal test design that provides sufficient information for determining (a) the dominant mode(s) of heat flow, (b) the major T-H regime(s) and processes (such as vapor diffusion) that govern the magnitude and direction of vapor and condensate flow, and (c) the influence of heterogeneous properties and conditions on the flow of heat, vapor, and condensate. For the plate thermal test, which uniformly heats a disk-shaped area, we evaluated a wide range of test areas, ranging from 50 to 5077 m{sup 2}. We evaluated the single-drift thermal test, which consists of a …
Date: February 20, 1996
Creator: Buscheck, T. A. & Nitao, J. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The corrosion of aluminum-clad spent nuclear fuel in wet basin storage (open access)

The corrosion of aluminum-clad spent nuclear fuel in wet basin storage

Large quantities of Defense related spent nuclear fuels are being stored in water basins around the United States. Under the non-proliferation policy, there has been no processing since the late 1980`s and these fuels are caught in the pipeline awaiting stabilization or other disposition. At the Savannah River Site, over 200 metric tons of aluminum clad fuel are being stored in four water filled basins. Some of this fuel has experienced visible pitting corrosion. An intensive effort is underway at SRS to understand the corrosion problems and to improve the basin storage conditions for extended storage requirements. Significant improvements have been accomplished during 1993-1996. This paper presents a discussion of the fundamentals of aluminum alloy corrosion as it pertains to the wet storage of spent nuclear fuel. It examines the effects of variables on corrosion in the storage environment and presents the results of corrosion surveillance testing activities at SRS, as well as discussions of fuel storage basins at other production sites of the Department of Energy.
Date: February 20, 1996
Creator: Howell, J. P. & Burke, S. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Incident analysis report (open access)

Incident analysis report

This document presents information about a fire that occurred in January 1996 at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. This fire was caused by the spontaneous combustion of 100% fuming nitric acid. Topics discussed include: Summary of the incident; technical background; procedural background; supervision; previous incidents with 100% fuming nitric acid; and judgment of potential hazards.
Date: February 20, 1996
Creator: Gregg, D.W.; Buerer, A. & Leeds, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Standard-E hydrogen monitoring system software acceptance testreport (open access)

Standard-E hydrogen monitoring system software acceptance testreport

This document details the results of Software Acceptance Testing of Standard-E Hydrogen Monitoring Systems (SHMS-E). The test result demonstrates that the software is developed as intended by the design.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Vo, C.V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank 214-AW-105, grab samples, analytical results for the finalreport (open access)

Tank 214-AW-105, grab samples, analytical results for the finalreport

This document is the final report for tank 241-AW-105 grab samples. Twenty grabs samples were collected from risers 10A and 15A on August 20 and 21, 1996, of which eight were designated for the K Basin sludge compatibility and mixing studies. This document presents the analytical results for the remaining twelve samples. Analyses were performed in accordance with the Compatibility Grab Sampling and Analysis Plan (TSAP) and the Data Quality Objectives for Tank Farms Waste Compatibility Program (DO). The results for the previous sampling of this tank were reported in WHC-SD-WM-DP-149, Rev. 0, 60-Day Waste Compatibility Safety Issue and Final Results for Tank 241-A W-105, Grab Samples 5A W-95-1, 5A W-95-2 and 5A W-95-3. Three supernate samples exceeded the TOC notification limit (30,000 microg C/g dry weight). Appropriate notifications were made. No immediate notifications were required for any other analyte. The TSAP requested analyses for polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) for all liquids and centrifuged solid subsamples. The PCB analysis of the liquid samples has been delayed and will be presented in a revision to this document.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Esch, R.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test report for exhauster environmental enclosure and heater (open access)

Test report for exhauster environmental enclosure and heater

The attached Test Report documents the results of testing for the function of an environmental enclosure and heater to support the rotary mode core sampling exhauster`s flammable gas detection system.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Kostelnik, A.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Front-End Data Reduction in Computer-Aided Diagnosis of Mammograms: A Pilot Study (open access)

Front-End Data Reduction in Computer-Aided Diagnosis of Mammograms: A Pilot Study

This paper presents the results of a pilot study whose primary objective was to further substantiate the efficacy of front-end data reduction in computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) of mammograms. This concept is realized by a preprocessing module that can be utilized at the front-end of most mammographic CAD systems. Based on fractal encoding, this module takes a mammo-graphic image as its input and generates, as its output, a collection of subregions called focus-of-attention regions (FARs). These FARs contain all structures in the input image that appear to be different from the normal background tissue. Subsequently, the CAD systems need only to process the presented FARs, rather than the entire input image. This accomplishes two objectives simultaneously: (1) an increase in throughput via a reduction in the input data, and (2) a reduction in false detections by limiting the scope of the detection algorithms to FARs only. The pilot study consisted of using the preprocessing module to analyze 80 mammographic images. The results were an average data reduction of 83% over all 80 images and an average false detection reduction of 86%. Furthermore, out of a total of 507 marked microcalcifications, 467 fell within FW, representing a coverage rate of 92%.
Date: February 20, 1999
Creator: Gleason, S.S.; Nishikawa, R.M. & Sari-Sarraf, H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design, operation, and evaluation of the transportable vitrification system (open access)

Design, operation, and evaluation of the transportable vitrification system

The Transportable Vitrification System (TVS) is a transportable melter system designed to demonstrate the treatment of low-level and mixed hazardous and radioactive wastes such as wastewater treatment sludges, contaminated soils and incinerator ash. The TVS is a large-scale, fully integrated vitrification system consisting of melter feed preparation, melter, offgas, service, and control modules. The TVS was tested with surrogate waste at the Clemson University Environmental Systems Engineering Department`s (ESED) DOE/Industry Center for Vitrification Research prior to being shipped to the DOE Oak Ridge Reservation (ORR) K-25 site for treatment of mixed waste. This testing, along with additional testing at ORR, proved that the TVS would be able to successfully treat mixed waste. These surrogate tests consistently produced glass that met the EPA Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure (TCLP). Performance of the system resulted in acceptable emissions of regulated metals from the offgas system. The TVS is scheduled to begin mixed waste operations at ORR in June 1997.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Zamecnik, J. R.; Young, S. R.; Hansen, E. K. & Whitehouse, J. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conduct of operations implementation plan (open access)

Conduct of operations implementation plan

This implementation plan describes the process and provides information and schedules that are necessary to implement and comply with the Department of Energy (DOE) Order 5480.19, {open_quotes}Conduct of Operations{close_quotes} (CoOp). This plan applies to all Pinellas Plant operations and personnel. Generally, this Plan discusses how DOE Order 5480.19 will be implemented at the Pinellas Plant.
Date: February 20, 1991
Creator: Anderson, Christie K. & Hall, Raymond L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Timing and firing system requirements for Area 410 (open access)

Timing and firing system requirements for Area 410

None
Date: February 20, 1962
Creator: Dobson, D. A.; Pipkorn, D. N. & Selden, R. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser welding and collagen crosslinks (open access)

Laser welding and collagen crosslinks

Strength and stability of laser-welded tissue may be influenced, in part, by effects of laser exposure on collagen crosslinking. We therefore studied effects of diode laser exposure (805 nm, 1-8 watts, 30 seconds) + indocyanine green dye (ICG) on calf tail tendon collagen crosslinks. Effect of ICG dye alone on crosslink content prior to laser exposure was investigated; unexpectedly, we found that ICG-treated tissue had significantly increased DHLNL and OHP, but not HLNL. Laser exposure after ICG application reduced elevated DHLNL and OHP crosslink content down to their native levels. The monohydroxylated crosslink HLNL was inversely correlated with laser output (p<0.01 by linear regression analysis). DHLNL content was highly correlated with content of its maturational product, OHP, suggesting that precursor-product relations are maintained. We conclude that: (1)ICG alone induces DHLNL and OHP crosslink formation; (2)subsequent laser exposure reduces the ICG-induced crosslinks down to native levels; (3)excessive diode laser exposure destroys normally occurring HLNL crosslinks.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Reiser, K. M.; Last, J. A.; Small, W., IV; Maitland, D. J.; Heredia, N. J.; Da Silva, L. B. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recommendations to NWIG on the implementation of need-to-know access controls in an electronic information environment (open access)

Recommendations to NWIG on the implementation of need-to-know access controls in an electronic information environment

This report discusses `Recommendatins to NWIG on the Implementation of Need-To-Know Access Controls in an Electronic Information Environment`.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Ames, H. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
FY97 ICCS prototype specification (open access)

FY97 ICCS prototype specification

The ICCS software team will implement and test two iterations of their software product during FY97. The first of these iterations will concentrate on construction of selected framework components; the subsequent iteration will extend the product and perform measurements of performance based on emulated FEP devices. This document specifies the products to be delivered in that first prototype and projects the direction that the second prototype will take. Detailed specification of the later iteration will be written when the results of the first iteration are complete. The selection of frameworks to be implemented early is made on a basis of risk analysis from the point of view of future development in the ICCS project. The prototype will address risks in integration of object- oriented components, in refining our development process, and in emulation testing for FEP devices. This document is a specification that identifies products and processes to undertake for resolving these risks. The goals of this activity are to exercise our development process at a modest scale and to probe our architecture plan for fundamental limits and failure modes. The product of the iterations will be the framework software which will be useful in future ICCS code. Thus the …
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Woodruff, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Requirements for a Need-to-Know (NTK) architecture. Revision 1 (open access)

Requirements for a Need-to-Know (NTK) architecture. Revision 1

Purpose of this document is to present the requirements for a system architecture which can be used to transfer and access information in environments where the separation of information on the basis of need-to-know must be maintained. Such an architecture will allow users to easily retrieve information objects from single sources rather than to store local copies, thereby improving access control and reliability of information. The requirements were developed to meet the need-to-know requirements for a number of DOE initiatives, including weapons data archiving, ASCI, ADAPT, ES, and AM-NII.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An in-house alternative to traditional SDI services at Argonne National Laboratory (open access)

An in-house alternative to traditional SDI services at Argonne National Laboratory

Selective Dissemination of Information (SDIs) are based on automated, well-defined programs that regularly produce precise, relevant bibliographic information. Librarians have typically turned to information vendors such as Dialog or STN international to design and implement these searches for their users in business, academia, and the science community. Because Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) purchases the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) Current Contents tapes (all subject areas excluding Humanities). ANL scientists enjoy the benefit of in-house developments with BASISplus software programming and no longer need to turn to outside companies for reliable SDI service. The database and its customized services are known as ACCESS (Argonne Current Contents Electronic Search Service). Through collaboration with librarians on Boolean logic and selection of terms, users can now design their own personal profiles to comb the new data, thereby avoiding service fees from outside providers. Based on the feedback from scientists, it seems that this new service can help transform the ANL distributed libraries into more efficient central functioning entities that better serve the users. One goal is to eliminate the routing of paper copies of many new journal issues to different library locations for users to browse; instead users may be expected to rely more …
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Noel, R.E. & Dominiak, R.R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computational physical oceanography -- A comprehensive approach based on generalized CFD/grid techniques for planetary scale simulations of oceanic flows. Final report, September 1, 1995--August 31, 1996 (open access)

Computational physical oceanography -- A comprehensive approach based on generalized CFD/grid techniques for planetary scale simulations of oceanic flows. Final report, September 1, 1995--August 31, 1996

The original intention for this work was to impart the technology that was developed in the field of computational aeronautics to the field of computational physical oceanography. This technology transfer involved grid generation techniques and solution procedures to solve the governing equations over the grids thus generated. Specifically, boundary fitting non-orthogonal grids would be generated over a sphere taking into account the topography of the ocean floor and the topography of the continents. The solution methodology to be employed involved the application of an upwind, finite volume discretization procedure that uses higher order numerical fluxes at the cell faces to discretize the governing equations and an implicit Newton relaxation technique to solve the discretized equations. This report summarizes the efforts put forth during the past three years to achieve these goals and indicates the future direction of this work as it is still an ongoing effort.
Date: February 20, 1997
Creator: Beddhu, M.; Jiang, M.Y.; Whitfield, D.L.; Taylor, L.K. & Arabshahi, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Partnership Opportunities with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (open access)

Partnership Opportunities with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is ``bringing science to life'' through the creation of knowledge; the invention of new tools and techniques; the scientific analysis of complex situations; and the design, construction and operation of research facilities used by scientists and engineers from throughout the world.
Date: February 20, 2000
Creator: Payne, Terry L. & Coxon, Gary D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library