Molecular dynamic simulations, {sup 6}Li solid state NMR and ultraphosphate glasses (open access)

Molecular dynamic simulations, {sup 6}Li solid state NMR and ultraphosphate glasses

The author's laboratory continues to use NMR to investigate the structure and dynamics in amorphous materials, including the local structure of ultraphosphate glasses. Changes in the alkali environment in these phosphate glasses as a function of modifier concentration has recently been probed using {sup 6}Li and {sup 23}Na solid state NMR. Molecular dynamic (MD) simulations have also been performed in an attempt to gain additional insight into the variations of the local structure. Interestingly, although there are distinct variations in the Li coordination number as well as the Li-O bond lengths in the MD simulations (with a minimum or maximum in these parameters near the 20% Li{sub 2}O concentration), a linear change in the {sup 6}Li NMR chemical shift is observed between 5 and 50% Li{sub 2}O mole fraction. One would expect that such variations should be observable in the NMR chemical shift. In an attempt to understand this behavior the author has performed empirical calculation of the {sup 6}Li NMR chemical shift directly from the structures obtained in the MD simulations. It has been argued that the NMR chemical shift of alkali species can be related to a chemical shift parameter A, where A is defined as the summation …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: ALAM,TODD M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of inelastic analysis in cask design (open access)

Use of inelastic analysis in cask design

In this paper, the advantages and disadvantages of inelastic analysis are discussed. Example calculations and designs showing the implications and significance of factors affecting inelastic analysis are given. From the results described in this paper it can be seen that inelastic analysis provides an improved method for the design of casks. It can also be seen that additional code and standards work is needed to give designers guidance in the use of inelastic analysis. Development of these codes and standards is an area where there is a definite need for additional work. The authors hope that this paper will help to define the areas where that need is most acute.
Date: May 15, 2000
Creator: AMMERMAN,DOUGLAS J. & BREIVIK,NICOLE L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commodity multi-processor systems in the ATLAS level-2 trigger (open access)

Commodity multi-processor systems in the ATLAS level-2 trigger

Low cost SMP (Symmetric Multi-Processor) systems provide substantial CPU and I/O capacity. These features together with the ease of system integration make them an attractive and cost effective solution for a number of real-time applications in event selection. In ATLAS the authors consider them as intelligent input buffers (active ROB complex), as event flow supervisors or as powerful processing nodes. Measurements of the performance of one off-the-shelf commercial 4-processor PC with two PCI buses, equipped with commercial FPGA based data source cards (microEnable) and running commercial software are presented and mapped on such applications together with a long-term program of work. The SMP systems may be considered as an important building block in future data acquisition systems.
Date: May 23, 2000
Creator: Abolins, M.; Blair, R.; Bock, R.; Bogaerts, A.; Dawson, J.; Ermoline, Y. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Polycube oxidation and factors affecting the concentrations of gaseous products (open access)

Polycube oxidation and factors affecting the concentrations of gaseous products

The polycubes stored at the Hanford Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP) have been identified in a Vulnerability Assessment as material that requires a stabilization process in support of the Defense Nuclear Facility Safety Board Recommendation 94-1. The baseline plan involves a pyrolysis process to separate out the plutonium and uranium oxides before the remaining material is packaged for interim storage, in accordance with the Record of Decision (ROD), issued June 25, 1996, for the Plutonium Finishing Plant Stabilization Final Environmental Impact Statement, DOE/EIS-0244-F. The polycubes were manufactured at Hanford in the 1960s for use in criticality studies to determine the hydrogen-to-fissile atom ratios for neutron moderation. A mixture of plutonium and/or uranium oxides and a polystyrene (vinyl benzene) matrix, cast into the shape of cubes, the polycubes simulated solutions containing high concentrations of fissile materials. The polycubes varied in size, typically 1/2 x 2 x 2 in. up to 2 x 2 x 2 in., and were sealed with a coating of aluminum paint and/or tape (PVC or Shurtape). The estimated 1,600 polycubes (calculated 179,165 grams net weight) stored at PFP were packed in vented food cans with five to eight cubes per can to accommodate gas generation by radiolysis. Some …
Date: May 4, 2000
Creator: Abrefah, J.; MacFarlan, P. J. & Sell, R. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reduction of Tropical Cloudiness by Soot (open access)

Reduction of Tropical Cloudiness by Soot

Measurements and models show that enhanced aerosol concentrations can augment cloud albedo not only by increasing total droplet cross-sectional area, but also by reducing precipitation and thereby increasing cloud water content and cloud coverage. Aerosol pollution is expected to exert a net cooling influence on the global climate through these conventional mechanisms. Here we demonstrate an opposite mechanism through which aerosols can reduce cloud cover and thus significantly offset aerosol-induced radiative cooling at the top of the atmosphere on a regional scale. In model simulations the daytime clearing of trade cumulus is hastened and intensified by solar heating in dark haze (as found over much of the northern Indian Ocean during the northeast monsoon).
Date: May 8, 2000
Creator: Ackerman, A. S.; Toon, O. B.; Stevens, D. E.; Heymsfield, A. J. & Ramanathan, V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Composition and structure of sputter deposited erbium hydride thin films (open access)

Composition and structure of sputter deposited erbium hydride thin films

Erbium hydride thin films are grown onto polished, a-axis {alpha} Al{sub 2}O{sub 3} (sapphire) substrates by reactive ion beam sputtering and analyzed to determine composition, phase and microstructure. Erbium is sputtered while maintaining a H{sub 2} partial pressure of 1.4 x 10{sup {minus}4} Torr. Growth is conducted at several substrate temperatures between 30 and 500 C. Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS) and elastic recoil detection analyses after deposition show that the H/Er areal density ratio is approximately 3:1 for growth temperatures of 30, 150 and 275 C, while for growth above {approximately}430 C, the ratio of hydrogen to metal is closer to 2:1. However, x-ray diffraction shows that all films have a cubic metal sublattice structure corresponding to that of ErH{sub 2}. RBS and Auger electron that sputtered erbium hydride thin films are relatively free of impurities.
Date: May 10, 2000
Creator: Adams, David P.; Romero, Juan A.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Floro, Jerrold A. & Banks, James C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank Characterization Report for Single Shell Tank (SST) 241-TX-118 (open access)

Tank Characterization Report for Single Shell Tank (SST) 241-TX-118

None
Date: May 5, 2000
Creator: Adams, M. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experience with copper oxide production in antiproton source components at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (open access)

Experience with copper oxide production in antiproton source components at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

The Antiproton (Pbar) Source at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is a facility comprised of a target station, two rings called the Debuncher and Accumulator and the transport lines between those rings and the remainder of the particle accelerator complex. Water is by far the most common medium for carrying excess heat away from components, primarily electromagnets, in this facility. The largest of the water systems found in Pbar is the 95 degree Fahrenheit Low Conductivity Water (LCW) system. LCW is water which has had free ions removed, increasing its resistance to electrical current. This water circuit is used to cool magnets, power supplies, and stochastic cooling components and typically has a resistivity of 11--18 megaohms-cm. For more than ten years the Antiproton rings were plagued with overheating magnets due to plugged water-cooling channels. Various repairs have been tried over the years with no permanent success. Throughout all of this time, water samples have indicated copper oxide, CuO, as the source of the contamination. Matters came to a head in early 1997 following a major underground LCW leak between the Central Utilities Building and the Antiproton Rings enclosures. Over a span of several weeks following system turn-on, some twenty magnets overheated …
Date: May 10, 2000
Creator: Ader, Christine R.; Jr., Elvin R. Harms & Morgan, and James P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photoconductive properties of GaAs{sub 1{minus}x}N{sub x} double heterostructures as a function of excitation wavelength (open access)

Photoconductive properties of GaAs{sub 1{minus}x}N{sub x} double heterostructures as a function of excitation wavelength

The ternary semiconductor GaAs{sub 1{minus}x}N{sub x} with 0 < x < 0.3 can be grown epitaxially on GaAs and has a very large bowing coefficient. The alloy bandgap can be reduced to about 1.0 eV with about a 3% nitrogen addition. In this work, the authors measured the internal spectral response and recombination lifetime of a number of alloys using the ultra-high frequency photoconductive decay (UHFPCD) method. The data shows that the photoconductive excitation spectra of the GaAs{sub 0.97}N{sub 0.03} alloy shows a gradual increase in response through the absorption edge near E{sub g}. This contrasts with most direct bandgap semiconductors that show a steep onset of photoresponse at E{sub g}. The recombination lifetimes frequently are much longer than expected from radiative recombination and often exceeded 1.0{mu}s. The data were analyzed in terms of a band model that includes large potential fluctuations in the conduction band due to the random distribution of nitrogen atoms in the alloy.
Date: May 22, 2000
Creator: Ahrenkiel, R. K.; Mascarenhas, A.; Johnston, S. W.; Zhang, Y.; Friedman, D. J. & Vernon, S. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
FACT (Version 2.0) - Subsurface Flow and Contaminant Transport Documentation and User's Guide (open access)

FACT (Version 2.0) - Subsurface Flow and Contaminant Transport Documentation and User's Guide

This report documents a finite element code designed to model subsurface flow and contaminant transport, named FACT. FACT is a transient three-dimensional, finite element code designed to simulate isothermal groundwater flow, moisture movement, and solute transport in variably saturated and fully saturated subsurface porous media.
Date: May 5, 2000
Creator: Aleman, S. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contained rocket motor burn demonstrations in X-tunnel: Final report for the DoD/DOE Joint Demilitarization Technology Program (open access)

Contained rocket motor burn demonstrations in X-tunnel: Final report for the DoD/DOE Joint Demilitarization Technology Program

Three low-pressure rocket motor propellant burn tests were performed in a large, sealed test chamber located at the X-tunnel complex on the Department of Energy's Nevada Test Site in the period May--June 1997. NIKE rocket motors containing double base propellant were used in two tests (two and four motors, respectively), and the third test used two improved HAWK rocket motors containing composite propellant. The preliminary containment safety calculations, the crack and burn procedures used in each test, and the results of various measurements made during and after each test are all summarized and collected in this document.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Allendorf, S. W.; Bellow, B. W. & Boehm, R. f.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Container Refurbishment Cycle Time Reduction (CTR) Project (open access)

Container Refurbishment Cycle Time Reduction (CTR) Project

In mid-1999, a Cycle Time Reduction (CTR) project was initiated by senior management to improve the overall efficiency of the Container Refurbishment process. A cross-functional team was formed by the Industrial Engineering Services group within Product Certification Organization to evaluate the current process and to propose necessary changes for improvement. The CTR team efforts have resulted in increased productivity equaling approximately $450K per year. The effort also significantly reduced the wait time required necessary to start assembly work on the shop floor. Increasing daily production time and identifying delays were key team goals. Following is a brief summary of accomplishments: (A) Productivity Improvements: (1) Reduced Radcon survey time for empty containers: (i) 50% at 9720-3 (ii) 67% at 9204-2 and (iii) 100% at 9212; (2) Eliminated container inspections at 9720-3; (3) Reduced charged time (includes hands-on labor and support functions) per empty container by 25%; (4) Reduced cycle time to refurbish a container by 25%. (Dramatic wait time reduction -Assembly); (5) Reduced the time for 9212 to receive empty, refurbished containers by 67-80%; (6) Reduced the time for 9204-2E to receive empty, refurbished containers from 1 day to immediate; (7) Implemented software to track time charged per container for continuous …
Date: May 15, 2000
Creator: Aloi, Tim; Anthony, Perry; Blair, Tom; Forester, Celina; Hall, Ken; Hawk, Todd et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Poland petroleum refinery sludge lagoon demonstration project (open access)

Poland petroleum refinery sludge lagoon demonstration project

The US Department of Energy and the Institute for Ecology of Industrial Area have been working together to develop mutually beneficial, cost-effective environmental remediation technologies such as the demonstration of bioremediation techniques for the clean up of acidic petroleum sludge impacted soils at an oil refinery in southern Poland. After an expedited site characterization, treatability study, and a risk assessment study, a remediation strategy was devised. The waste material was composed primarily of high molecular weight paraffinic and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons. A biopile design which employed a combination of passive and active aeration in conjunction with nutrient and surfactant application as used to increase the biodegradation of the contaminants of concern.
Date: May 5, 2000
Creator: Altman, D. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Post-remediation biomonitoring of pesticides and other contaminants in marine waters and sediment near the United Heckathorn Superfund Site, Richmond, California (open access)

Post-remediation biomonitoring of pesticides and other contaminants in marine waters and sediment near the United Heckathorn Superfund Site, Richmond, California

Marine sediment remediation at the United Heckathorn Superfund Site was completed in April 1997. Water and mussel tissues were sampled in February 1999 from four stations near Lauritzen Canal in Richmond, California, for Year 2 of post-remediation monitoring of marine areas near the United Heckathorn Site. Dieldrin and dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane (DDT) were analyzed in water samples, tissue samples from resident mussels, and tissue samples from transplanted mussels deployed for 4 months. Concentrations of dieldrin and total DDT in water and total DDT in tissue were compared with Year 1 of post-remediation monitoring, and with preremediation data from the California State Mussel Watch program (tissues) and the Ecological Risk Assessment for the United Heckathorn Superfund Site (tissues and water). Mussel tissues were also analyzed for polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB), which were detected in sediment samples. Chlorinated pesticide concentrations in water samples were similar to preremediation levels and did not meet remediation goals. Mean dieidrin concentrations in water ranged from 0.62 rig/L to 12.5 ng/L and were higher than the remediation goal (0.14 ng/L) at all stations. Mean total DDT concentrations in water ranged from 14.4 ng/L to 62.3 ng/L and exceeded the remediation goal (0.59 ng/L) at all stations. The highest concentrations …
Date: May 26, 2000
Creator: Antrim, LD & Kohn, NP
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Post-Remediation Biomonitoring of Pesticides and Other Contaminants in Marine Waters and Sediment Near the United Heckathorn Superfund Site, Richmond, California (open access)

Post-Remediation Biomonitoring of Pesticides and Other Contaminants in Marine Waters and Sediment Near the United Heckathorn Superfund Site, Richmond, California

Post-Remediation Biomonitoring of Pesticides and Other Contaminants in Marine Waters and Sediment Near the United Heckathorn Superfund Site, Richmond, California
Date: May 26, 2000
Creator: Antrim, Lyle D. & Kohn, Nancy P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary report of Session II: Dual harmonics, blow-up and instabilities (open access)

Summary report of Session II: Dual harmonics, blow-up and instabilities

There are 6 presentations in this session: (1) Dual harmonic rf operation in the CERN PSB; (2) Using multi-harmonic rf system in the SPS; (3) Blow-up methods tested in the CPS; (4) Broad-band impedance for long bunches; (5) single-bunch instability below transition energy; and (6) Reducing the impedance of the 200 MHz travelling wave cavities.
Date: May 2, 2000
Creator: Arduini, Weiren Chou and Gianluigi
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Continuum-Based FEM Modeling of Ceramic Powder Compaction Using a Cap-Plasticity Constitutive Model (open access)

Continuum-Based FEM Modeling of Ceramic Powder Compaction Using a Cap-Plasticity Constitutive Model

Software has been developed and extended to allow finite element (FE) modeling of ceramic powder compaction using a cap-plasticity constitutive model. The underlying, general-purpose FE software can be used to model even the most complex three-dimensional (3D) geometries envisioned. Additionally, specialized software has been developed within this framework to address a general subclass of axisymmetric compacts that are common in industry. The expertise required to build the input deck, run the FE code, and post-process the results for this subclass of compacts is embedded within the specialized software. The user simply responds to a series of prompts, evaluates the quality of the FE mesh that is generated, and analyzes the graphical results that are produced. The specialized software allows users with little or no FE expertise to benefit from the tremendous power and insight that FE analysis can bring to the design cycle. The more general underlying software provides complete flexibility to model more complicated geometries and processes of interest to ceramic component manufacturers but requires significantly more user interaction and expertise.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Arguello, Jose G., Jr.; Fossum, Arlo F.; Zeuch, David H. & Ewsuk, Kevin G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Moments of the proton F{sub 2} structure function at low Q{sup 2} (open access)

Moments of the proton F{sub 2} structure function at low Q{sup 2}

The authors review the status of inclusive electron-proton scattering F{sub 2} structure function data in both the nucleon resonance region and the deep inelastic region, at momentum transfers below 5 (GeV/c){sup 2}. From these data they construct moments of F{sub 2}, down to momentum transfers of Q{sup 2}{approx}0.1(GeV/c){sup 2}. The second moment is only slowly varying with Q{sup 2} down to Q{sup 2}{approx}1, which is a reflection of duality. Below Q{sup 2} of 1 (GeV/c){sup 2}, the Q{sup 2} dependence of the moments is predominantly governed by the elastic contribution, whereas the inelastic channels still seem governed by local duality.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Armstrong, C. S.; Ent, R.; Keppel, C. E.; Liuti, S.; Niculescu, G. & Niculescu, I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parallel Processing of a Groundwater Contaminant Code (open access)

Parallel Processing of a Groundwater Contaminant Code

The U. S. Department of Energy’s Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL) is conducting a field test of experimental enhanced bioremediation of trichoroethylene (TCE) contaminated groundwater. TCE is a chlorinated organic substance that was used as a solvent in the early years of the INEEL and disposed in some cases to the aquifer. There is an effort underway to enhance the natural bioremediation of TCE by adding a non-toxic substance that serves as a feed material for the bacteria that can biologically degrade the TCE.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Arnett, Ronald Chester & Greenwade, Lance Eric
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of the Axial Anomaly using the {gamma}p {yields} {pi}{sup +}P{pi}{sup 0} n Reaction Near Threshold (open access)

Study of the Axial Anomaly using the {gamma}p {yields} {pi}{sup +}P{pi}{sup 0} n Reaction Near Threshold

This experiment was one of the first photoproduction experiments performed at Jefferson Lab using the CLAS and the Photon Tagger. The event reconstruction and the photon flux determination procedures have been developed and were proven to work well as we can see from the cross section measurement of the {gamma}p {yields} {pi}{sup +}n reaction. The preliminary results at CLAS for this reaction agree very well with previous world data. The analysis procedure has been developed to analyze the double-pion photoproduction. The differential cross sections for the {gamma}p {yields} P{pi}{sup +}{pi}{sup 0}n reaction have been measured with incident photon energies between 1 and 2 GeV. The Chew-Low extrapolation technique was used to extract the associated {gamma}{pi} {yields} {pi}{pi} cross sections from the differential cross sections. The extrapolation procedure of extracting the pole cross section has been explored. F{sup 3{pi}} was obtained from the {gamma}{pi} {yields} {pi}{pi} cross sections. The results show a momentum dependence of the F{sup 3{pi}} amplitude in which they agree with Holstein's calculation. These measurements test fundamental predictions of low energies QCD. Future work on this analysis will help reduce the uncertainty in F{sup 3{pi}}, and extend the measurements to the lower and higher s regions.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: Asavapibhop, Burin
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program Facilities Newsletter, April 2000 (open access)

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program Facilities Newsletter, April 2000

Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program, articles about weather and atmospheric phenomena, and other related topics.
Date: May 5, 2000
Creator: Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program (U.S.)
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pthreads vs MPI Parallel Performance of Angular-Domain Decomposed S (open access)

Pthreads vs MPI Parallel Performance of Angular-Domain Decomposed S

Two programming models for parallelizing the Angular Domain Decomposition (ADD) of the discrete ordinates (S{sub n}) approximation of the neutron transport equation are examined. These are the shared memory model based on the POSIX threads (Pthreads) standard, and the message passing model based on the Message Passing Interface (MPI) standard. These standard libraries are available on most multiprocessor platforms thus making the resulting parallel codes widely portable. The question is: on a fixed platform, and for a particular code solving a given test problem, which of the two programming models delivers better parallel performance? Such comparison is possible on Symmetric Multi-Processors (SMP) architectures in which several CPUs physically share a common memory, and in addition are capable of emulating message passing functionality. Implementation of the two-dimensional,(S{sub n}), Arbitrarily High Order Transport (AHOT) code for solving neutron transport problems using these two parallelization models is described. Measured parallel performance of each model on the COMPAQ AlphaServer 8400 and the SGI Origin 2000 platforms is described, and comparison of the observed speedup for the two programming models is reported. For the case presented in this paper it appears that the MPI implementation scales better than the Pthreads implementation on both platforms.
Date: May 7, 2000
Creator: Azmy, Y. Y. & Barnett, D. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Failure analysis of beryllium tile assembles following high heat flux testing for the ITER program (open access)

Failure analysis of beryllium tile assembles following high heat flux testing for the ITER program

The following document describes the processing, testing and post-test analysis of two Be-Cu assemblies that have successfully met the heat load requirements for the first wall and dome sections for the ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) fusion reactor. Several different joint assemblies were evaluated in support of a manufacturing technology investigation aimed at diffusion bonding or brazing a beryllium armor tile to a copper alloy heat sink for fusion reactor applications. Judicious selection of materials and coatings for these assemblies was essential to eliminate or minimize interactions with the highly reactive beryllium armor material. A thin titanium layer was used as a diffusion barrier to isolate the copper heat sink from the beryllium armor. To reduce residual stresses produced by differences in the expansion coefficients between the beryllium and copper, a compliant layer of aluminum or aluminum-beryllium (AlBeMet-150) was used. Aluminum was chosen because it does not chemically react with, and exhibits limited volubility in, beryllium. Two bonding processes were used to produce the assemblies. The primary process was a diffusion bonding technique. In this case, undesirable metallurgical reactions were minimized by keeping the materials in a solid state throughout the fabrication cycle. The other process employed an aluminum-silicon layer …
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: B. C. Odegard, Jr.; Cadden, C. H. & Yang, N. Y. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
LEDA BEAM DIAGNOSTICS INSTRUMENTATION: BEAM POSITION MONITORS (open access)

LEDA BEAM DIAGNOSTICS INSTRUMENTATION: BEAM POSITION MONITORS

The Low Energy Demonstration Accelerator (LEDA) facility located at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) accelerates protons to an energy of 6.7-MeV and current of 100-mA operating in either a pulsed or cw mode. Of key importance to the commissioning and operations effort is the Beam Position Monitor system (BPM). The LEDA BPM system uses five micro-stripline beam position monitors processed by log ratio processing electronics with data acquisition via a series of custom TMS32OC40 Digital Signal Processing (DSP) boards. Of special interest to this paper is the operation of the system, the log ratio processing, and the system calibration technique. This paper will also cover the DSP system operations and their interaction with the main accelerator control system.
Date: May 1, 2000
Creator: BARR, D. & AL, ET
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library