2000 Engineering Annual Summary (open access)

2000 Engineering Annual Summary

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Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Gerich, C
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparative experimental study of media access protocols for wireless radio networks (open access)

A Comparative experimental study of media access protocols for wireless radio networks

We conduct a comparative experimental analysis of three well known media access protocols: 802.11, CSMA, and MACA for wireless radio networks. Both fixed and ad-hoc networks are considered. The experimental analysis was carried out using GloMoSim: a tool for simulating wireless networks. The main focus of experiments was to study how (i) the size of the network, (ii) number of open connections, (iii) the spatial location of individual connections, (iv) speed with which individual nodes move and (v) protocols higher up in the protocol stack (e,g. routing layer) affect the performance of the media access sublayer protocols. The performance of the protocols was measured w.r.t. three important parameters: (1) number of received packets, (2) average latency of each packet, and (3) throughput. The following general qualitative conclusions were obtained; some of the conclusions reinforce the earlier claims by other researchers. (1) Although 802.11 performs better than the other two protocols with respect to fairness of transmission, packets dropped, and latency, its performance is found to (i) show a lot of variance with changing input parameters and (ii) the overall performance still leaves a lot of room for improvement. (2) CSMA does not perform too well under the fairness criteria, however, …
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Barrett, C. L. (Christopher L.); Drozda, M. (Martin) & Marathe, M. V. (Madhav V.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Core Benchmarks Descriptions (open access)

Core Benchmarks Descriptions

Actual regulations while designing of new fuel cycles for nuclear power installations comprise a calculational justification to be performed by certified computer codes. It guarantees that obtained calculational results will be within the limits of declared uncertainties that are indicated in a certificate issued by Gosatomnadzor of Russian Federation (GAN) and concerning a corresponding computer code. A formal justification of declared uncertainties is the comparison of calculational results obtained by a commercial code with the results of experiments or of calculational tests that are calculated with an uncertainty defined by certified precision codes of MCU type or of other one. The actual level of international cooperation provides an enlarging of the bank of experimental and calculational benchmarks acceptable for a certification of commercial codes that are being used for a design of fuel loadings with MOX fuel. In particular, the work is practically finished on the forming of calculational benchmarks list for a certification of code TVS-M as applied to MOX fuel assembly calculations. The results on these activities are presented.
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Pavlovichev, A.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced Detection of Proteins in Microchip Separations by On-Chip Preconcentration (open access)

Enhanced Detection of Proteins in Microchip Separations by On-Chip Preconcentration

Microfluidic chips incorporating a semiporous glass filter were used to electrokinetically concentrate proteins on-chip prior to injection and electrophoretic analysis. Signal enhancements of >100-fold could be achieved for the microchip analysis of both native and SDS-denatured proteins using this technique.
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Foote, R. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated simulation environment for lighting design (open access)

Integrated simulation environment for lighting design

Lighting design involves the consideration of multiple performance criteria, from the earliest stages of conceptual design, through various stages of controls and operation in a project's life cycle. These criteria include: (1) the quantitative analysis of illuminance and luminance distribution due to daylighting and electric lighting; (2) qualitative analysis of the lighting design with photometrically accurate renderings of the designed environment; (3) analysis of energy implications of daylighting and electric lighting design and operation;, and (4) analysis of control strategies and sensor placement for maximizing energy savings from lighting control while providing visual comfort. In this paper we describe the development of an integrated decision-making environment that brings together several different tools, and provides the data management and process control required for a multi-criterion support of the design and operation of daylighting and electric lighting systems. The result is a powerful design and decision-making environment to meet the diverse and evolving needs of lighting designers and operators.
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Pal, Vineeta & Papamichael, Konstantinos
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laboratory Directed Research and Development FY 2000 Annual Report (open access)

Laboratory Directed Research and Development FY 2000 Annual Report

This Annual Report provides an overview of the FY2000 Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) Program at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and presents a summary of the results achieved by each project during the year.
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Al-Ayat, R
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Long-Term Risk From Actinides in the Environment: Modes of Mobility (open access)

Long-Term Risk From Actinides in the Environment: Modes of Mobility

Laboratory soil column experiments were conducted to investigate the migration of plutonium in soils from the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) and the Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site.
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Ibrahim, Shawki
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Methods for Addressing Uncertainty and Variability to Characterize Potential Health Risk from Trichloroethylene-Contaminated Ground Water at Beale Air Force Base in California:Integration of Uncertainty and Variability in Pharmacokinetics and Dose-Response (open access)

Methods for Addressing Uncertainty and Variability to Characterize Potential Health Risk from Trichloroethylene-Contaminated Ground Water at Beale Air Force Base in California:Integration of Uncertainty and Variability in Pharmacokinetics and Dose-Response

Traditional estimates of health risk are typically inflated, particularly if cancer is the dominant endpoint and there is fundamental uncertainty as to mechanism(s) of action. Risk is more realistically characterized if it accounts for joint uncertainty and interindividual variability within a systematic probabilistic framework to integrate the joint effects on risk of distributed parameters of all (linear as well as nonlinear) risk-extrapolation models involved. Such a framework was used to characterize risks to potential future residents posed by trichloroethylene (TCE) in ground water at an inactive landfill site on Beale Air Force Base in California. Variability and uncertainty were addressed in exposure-route-specific estimates of applied dose, in pharmacokinetically based estimates of route-specific metabolized fractions of absorbed TCE, and in corresponding biologically effective doses estimated under a genotoxic/linear (MA{sub G}) vs. a cytotoxic/nonlinear (MA{sub c}) mechanistic assumption for TCE-induced cancer. Increased risk conditional on effective dose was estimated under MA{sub G} based on seven rodent-bioassay data sets, and under MA{sub c} based on mouse hepatotoxicity data. Mean and upper-bound estimates of combined risk calculated by the unified approach were <10{sup -6} and 10{sup -4}, respectively, while corresponding estimates based on traditional deterministic methods were >10{sup -5} and 10{sup -4}, respectively. It …
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Bogen, K T
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
US NEUTRINO FACTORY STUDIES. (open access)

US NEUTRINO FACTORY STUDIES.

The design and simulated performance of a second feasibility study are presented. The efficiency of producing muons is {approx} 0.17 {micro}/p with 24 GeV protons. This study was sponsored by the BNL Director, with BNL site specific driver and layout. It was a follow on to the First Study sponsored by the Fermilab Director, with Fermilab site specific driver and layout, and was the main US collaboration conceptual effort during the past year. Other studies, and technical work by the collaboration is reported in other papers.
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: OZAKI,S. PALMER,R. B. ZISMAN,M. S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library