Effect of resonant microwave power on a PIG ion source. Revision (open access)

Effect of resonant microwave power on a PIG ion source. Revision

We have investigated the effect of applying microwave power at the electron cyclotron frequency on the characteristics of the ion beam extracted from a hot-cathode PIG ion source. No change was seen in the ion charge state distribution. A small but significant reduction in the beam noise level was seen, and it is possible that the technique may find application in situations where beam quiescence is important. 32 refs., 2 figs.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Brown, I.G.; Galvin, J.E.; Gavin, B.F. & MacGill, R.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status Review of Wildlife Mitigation at Columbia Basin Hydroelectric Projects, Oregon Facilities, Final Report. (open access)

Status Review of Wildlife Mitigation at Columbia Basin Hydroelectric Projects, Oregon Facilities, Final Report.

The report presents a review and documentation of existing information on wildlife resources at Columbia River Basin hydroelectric facilities within Oregon. Effects of hydroelectric development and operation; existing agreements; and past, current and proposed wildlife mitigation, enhancement, and protection activities were considered. (ACR)
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Bedrossian, Karen L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron and gamma-ray dose measurements at various distances from the Little Boy replica (open access)

Neutron and gamma-ray dose measurements at various distances from the Little Boy replica

We measured neutron and gamma-ray dose rates at various distances from the Little Boy-Comet Critical Assembly at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) in April of 1983. The Little Boy-Comet Assembly is a replica of the atomic weapon detonated over Hiroshima, designed to be operated at various steady-state power levels. The selected distances for measurement ranged from 107 m to 567 m. Gamma-ray measurements were made with a Reuter-Stokes environmental ionization chamber which has a sensitivity of 1.0 ..mu..R/hour. Neutron measurements were made with a pulsed-source remmeter which has a sensitivity of 0.1 ..mu..rem/hour, designed and built at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). 12 references, 7 figures, 6 tables.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Huntzinger, C.J. & Hankins, D.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy and Technology Review, August 1984 (open access)

Energy and Technology Review, August 1984

Three articles are presented. Article 1, earthquake safety at LLNL, discusses the intensive program to strengthen Laboratory structures, utilities and work stations, and to reduce personal risks undertaken at the Lab following the January 1980 earthquakes. An investigatin of the physiographic and seismologic setting of the LLNL site is discussed in article 2, geology of the Livermore Valley. Article 3 discusses monitoring groundwater quality at site 300. This system was designed to determine whether any groundwater contamination has occurred as a result of disposal operations of solid wastes from nonnuclear weapons component testing. Current analysis indicate that low levels of contamination are present.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering research progress report, October 1983-March 1984 (open access)

Engineering research progress report, October 1983-March 1984

Our intent in this progress report is to provide a summary of the activities pursued by members of the Mechanical Engineering (ME) Department's Engineering Research Program. The Program's mission is to do research for specific applications in mechanical-engineering fields that are of immediate or potential interest to the Laboratory. The FY84 Program comprises nine projects in four thrust areas in the ME Department. The thrust areas are: Surface Measurements and Characterization; Fabrication Technology; Materials Characterization and Behavior; and Computer-Aided Engineering. In the past, our research was supported almost exclusively by weapons programs; recently, however, we significantly increased our involvement in other Laboratory programs as well. In response to this change, we have established new procedures and guidelines for the submission, review, and selection of research proposals.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Woo, H.H.; Cherniak, J.C.; Hymer, J.D. & Kamelgarn, M.B. (eds.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical protection against ionizing radiation. Final report (open access)

Chemical protection against ionizing radiation. Final report

The scientific literature on radiation-protective drugs is reviewed. Emphasis is placed on the mechanisms involved in determining the sensitivity of biological material to ionizing radiation and mechanisms of chemical radioprotection. In Section I, the types of radiation are described and the effects of ionizing radiation on biological systems are reviewed. The effects of ionizing radiation are briefly contrasted with the effects of non-ionizing radiation. Section II reviews the contributions of various natural factors which influence the inherent radiosensitivity of biological systems. Inlcuded in the list of these factors are water, oxygen, thiols, vitamins and antioxidants. Brief attention is given to the model describing competition between oxygen and natural radioprotective substances (principally, thiols) in determining the net cellular radiosensitivity. Several theories of the mechanism(s) of action of radioprotective drugs are described in Section III. These mechanisms include the production of hypoxia, detoxication of radiochemical reactive species, stabilization of the radiobiological target and the enhancement of damage repair processes. Section IV describes the current strategies for the treatment of radiation injury. Likely areas in which fruitful research might be performed are described in Section V. 495 references.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Livesey, J. C.; Reed, D. J. & Adamson, L. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator and Fusion Research Division: summary of activities, 1983 (open access)

Accelerator and Fusion Research Division: summary of activities, 1983

The activities described in this summary of the Accelerator and Fusion Research Division are diverse, yet united by a common theme: it is our purpose to explore technologically advanced techniques for the production, acceleration, or transport of high-energy beams. These beams may be the heavy ions of interest in nuclear science, medical research, and heavy-ion inertial-confinement fusion; they may be beams of deuterium and hydrogen atoms, used to heat and confine plasmas in magnetic fusion experiments; they may be ultrahigh-energy protons for the next high-energy hadron collider; or they may be high-brilliance, highly coherent, picosecond pulses of synchrotron radiation.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
O(18) revived (open access)

O(18) revived

We present an O(18) theory which is pertubatively unifiable and which accounts for the absence of right-handed families in the low-energy world. The model gives rise to dramatic predictions for proton decay and for the Z/sup 0/ width.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Bagger, J.; Dimopoulos, S. & Masso, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive Waste Isolation in Salt: Peer Review of the Office of Nuclear Waste Isolation's Report on Functional Design Criteria for a Repository for High-Level Radioactive Waste (open access)

Radioactive Waste Isolation in Salt: Peer Review of the Office of Nuclear Waste Isolation's Report on Functional Design Criteria for a Repository for High-Level Radioactive Waste

This report summarizes Argonne's review of the Office of Nuclear Waste Isolation's (ONWI's) draft report entitled Functional Design Criteria for High-Level Nuclear Waste Repository in Salt, dated January 23, 1984. Recommendations are given for improving the ONWI draft report.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Hambley, D. F.; Russell, J. E.; Busch, J. S.; Harrison, W.; Edgar, D. E. & Tisue, M. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Look at energy compression as an assist for high power rf production (open access)

Look at energy compression as an assist for high power rf production

The desire to construct electron linacs of higher and higher energies, coupled with the realities of available funding and real estate, has forced machine designers to reassess the limitations in both accelerator gradient (MeV/m) and energy. The gradients achieved in current radio-frequency (RF) linacs are sometimes set by electrical breakdown in the accelerating structure, but are in most cases determined by the RF power level available to drive the linac. In this paper we will not discuss RF power sources in general, but rather take a brief look at several energy compression schemes which might be of service in helping to make better use of the sources we employ. We will, however, diverge for a bit and discuss what the RF power requirements are. 12 references, 21 figures, 3 tables.
Date: August 9, 1984
Creator: Birx, D. L.; Farkas, Z. D. & Wilson, P. B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of the St. Lucia geothermal resource: geologic, geophysical, and hydrogeochemical investigations (open access)

Evaluation of the St. Lucia geothermal resource: geologic, geophysical, and hydrogeochemical investigations

Separate abstracts were prepared for three papers. (MHR)
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Ander, M.; Goff, F.; Hanold, B.; Heiken, G.; Vuataz, F. & Wohletz, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Taus: a probe of new W and Z couplings (open access)

Taus: a probe of new W and Z couplings

If new heavier W's and/or Z's are discovered at the SSC, only partial information on their couplings to quarks and leptons can be obtained by studying their decays into electrons and muons. In particular, without polarized beams, one cannot distinguish between heavy W's which have left-handed (W/sub L/) or right-handed (W/sub R/) couplings to all fermions. Here, we study the tau decays of W/sub L/ and W/sub R/ and compute the distributions of the tau decay products. The most striking effect is W ..-->.. tau + N followed by tau ..-->.. ..pi.. nu/sub tau/; the pT distribution of the pion can distinguish W/sub L/ from W/sub R/ (without a measurement of the pion electric charge).
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Haber, H.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structure of charged-current interactions (open access)

Structure of charged-current interactions

The status of the quark mixing matrix is reviewed. New lower bounds on absolute value of sin delta and on sin ..beta../sin THETA in the Maiani representation follow from a maximum top quark mass of 50 GeV. Recent data relevant to possible S, P, and T couplings are reviewed, and new results on muon decay parameters eta and delta are presented. A new measurement of xiP/sub ..mu../delta/rho by a different technique has confirmed the recently published stringent new limit. Constraints on a possible right-handed W and the effect of various assumptions concerning the associated right-handed neutrino are disucssed. 39 references.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Strovink, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
JUPITER-II Program: ANL analysis of ZPPR-13A and ZPPR-13B (open access)

JUPITER-II Program: ANL analysis of ZPPR-13A and ZPPR-13B

The ZPPR-13 experiments provide basic physics data for radial-heterogeneous LMFBR cores of approximately 700 MWe size. Assemblies ZPPR-13A, ZPPR-13B and ZPPR-13C comprised the JUPITER-II cooperative program between US-DOE and PNC of Japan. The measurements were made between August 1982 and April 1984. This report describes in detail the results of the ANL analyses of phases 13A and 13B/1 and includes preliminary results for the later assemblies of phase 13B. The data were compiled primarily for discussions at the Third Jupiter Analysis Meeting to be held at ANL-West between September 11th and 14th, 1984.
Date: August 9, 1984
Creator: Collins, P.J. & Brumbach, S.B. (comps.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of the /sup 63/Cu activation foil for determining the neutron dose in the energy range of 1 eV to 1 MeV (open access)

Evaluation of the /sup 63/Cu activation foil for determining the neutron dose in the energy range of 1 eV to 1 MeV

The appropriateness of the /sup 63/Cu activation foil for determining the neutron dose in the energy region from 1 eV to 1 MeV has been investigated for spectra of seven different criticality accident configurations. A program was written for folding the published spectra with the /sup 63/Cu activation cross sections and with the fluence-to-dose or kerma conversion factors. It is shown that for these spectra the neutron dose and kerma result primarily from the energy region above 15 keV whereas the measured /sup 64/Cu activity is mainly determined by the fluence in the region between 1 eV and 15 keV. Uncertainties in the fluence spectrum in the low-energy region between 1 eV and 15 keV, which in reality do not affect the dose contribution, might lead to large deviations in the measured /sup 64/Cu activity and hence to the derived dose in the 1 eV to 1 MeV range. Use of /sup 10/B shielding for attenuating the fluence in the 1-eV to 15-keV region was evaluated, leading to the conclusion that the necessary amount of boron material is unacceptably large and would appreciably increase the cost of the dosimeter currently used at Los Alamos. The lower limit of neutron detectability …
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Eisen, Y.; Vasilik, D.G. & Brake, R.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct utilization of geothermal energy for Pagosa Springs, Colorado. Final report, June 1979-June 1984 (open access)

Direct utilization of geothermal energy for Pagosa Springs, Colorado. Final report, June 1979-June 1984

The Pagosa Springs Geothermal District Heating System was conceptualized, designed, and constructed between 1979 to 1984 under the US Department of Energy Program Opportunity Notice (PON) program to demonstrate the feasibility for utilizing moderate temperature geothermal resources for direct-use applications. The Pagosa Springs system successfully provides space heating to public buildings, school facilities, residences, and commercial establishments at costs significantly lower than costs of available conventional fuels. The Pagosa Springs project encompassed a full range of technical, institutional, and economic activities. Geothermal reservoir evaluations and testing were performed, and two productive approx.140/sup 0/F geothermal supply wells were successfully drilled and completed. Transmission and distribution system design, construction, startup, and operation were achieved with minimum difficulty. The geothermal system operation during the first two heating seasons has been fully reliable and well respected in the community. The project has proven that low to moderate-temperature waters can effectively meet required heating loads, even for harsh winter-mountain environments. The principal difficulty encountered has been institutional in nature and centers on the obtaining of the geothermal production well permits and the adjudicated water rights necessary to supply the geothermal hot water fluids for the full operating life of the system. 28 figs., 15 tabs.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Goering, S.W.; Garing, K.L. & Coury, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coherent QCD radiation from active and spectator jets at the SSC (open access)

Coherent QCD radiation from active and spectator jets at the SSC

A gauge theory model is given which accounts for spectator jet radiation, interference effects between spectator and active jets, and coherence corrections when final state quark and gluon jets overlap. A simple Abelian complex color charge model can be used to mimic the QCD coherence effects.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Formerly utilized MED/AEC sites Remedial Action Program. Report of the decontamination of Jones Chemical Laboratory, Ryerson Physical Laboratory, and Eckhart Hall, the University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois (open access)

Formerly utilized MED/AEC sites Remedial Action Program. Report of the decontamination of Jones Chemical Laboratory, Ryerson Physical Laboratory, and Eckhart Hall, the University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

The US Department of Energy (DOE) has implemented a program to decontaminate radioactively contaminated sites that were formerly utilized by the Manhattan Engineer District (MED) and/or the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) for activities that included handling of radioactive material. This program is referred to as the ''Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program'' (FUSRAP). Among these sites are Jones Chemical Laboratory, Ryerson Physical Laboratory, Kent Chemical Laboratory, and Eckhart Hall of The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Since 1977, the University of Chicago decontaminated Kent Chemical Laboratory as part of a facilities renovation program. All areas of Eckhart Hall, Ryerson Physical Laboratory, and Jones Chemical Laboratory that had been identified as contaminated in excess of current guidelines in the 1976-1977 surveys were decontaminated to levels where no contamination could be detected relative to natural backgrounds. All areas that required defacing to achieve this goal were restored to their original condition. The radiological evaluation of the sewer system, based primarily on the radiochemical analyses of sludge and water samples, indicated that the entire sewer system is potentially contaminated. While this evaluation was defined as part of this project, the decontamination of the sewer system was not included in the purview of this …
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Wynuveen, R.A.; Smith, W.H.; Sholeen, C.M. & Flynn, K.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Construction tolerances for low loss, dielectric coated, metallic waveguide for transmission optical radiation (open access)

Construction tolerances for low loss, dielectric coated, metallic waveguide for transmission optical radiation

The transmission of radiation, in a specific mode of interest for the IFELA, past a symmetric step in dielectric coating thickness has been calculated. The result shows that the transmission loss depends on the quantity (s/D)/sup 2/ and vanishes to first order in the ratio of the step s to the guide aperture D. With the reasonable assumption that this feature holds for all forms of surface imperfections, the attenuation length due to imperfections has been estimated. It is found that rms surface roughness of approx. 0.1 ..mu.. m leads to attenuation lengths of 25 km or greater.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Sandweiss, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microalgae harvesting and processing: a literature review (open access)

Microalgae harvesting and processing: a literature review

The objective of this report is to present a discussion of the literature review performed on methods of harvesting microalgae. There is no single best method of harvesting microalgae. The choice of preferable harvesting technology depends on algae species, growth medium, algae production, end product, and production cost benefit. Algae size is an important factor since low-cost filtration procedures are presently applicable only for harvesting fairly large microalgae. Small microalgae should be flocculated into larger bodies that can be harvested by one of the methods mentioned above. However, the cells' mobility affects the flocculation process, and addition of nonresidual oxidants to stop the mobility should be considered to aid flocculation. The decision between sedimentation or flotation methods depends on the density difference between the algae cell and the growth medium. For oil-laden algae with low cell density, flotation technologies should be considered. Moreover, oxygen release from algae cells and oxygen supersaturation conditions in growth medium support the use of flotation methods. If high-quality algae are to be produced for human consumption, continuous harvesting by solid ejecting or nozzle-type disc centrifuges is recommended. These centrifuges can easily be cleaned and sterilized. They are suitable for all types of microalgae, but their …
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Shelef, G.; Sukenik, A. & Green, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geometric Hamiltonian structures and perturbation theory (open access)

Geometric Hamiltonian structures and perturbation theory

We have been engaged in a program of investigating the Hamiltonian structure of the various perturbation theories used in practice. We describe the geometry of a Hamiltonian structure for non-singular perturbation theory applied to Hamiltonian systems on symplectic manifolds and the connection with singular perturbation techniques based on the method of averaging.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Omohundro, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Seven health physics calculator programs for the HP-41CV (open access)

Seven health physics calculator programs for the HP-41CV

Several user-oriented programs for the Hewlett-Packard HP-41CV are explained. The first program builds, stores, alters, and ages a list of radionuclides. This program only handles single- and double-decay chains. The second program performs convenient conversions for the six nuclides of concern in plutonium handling. The conversions are between mass, activity, and weight percents of the isotopes. The source can be aged and/or neutron generation rates can be computed. The third program is a timekeeping program that improves the process of manually estimating and tracking personnel exposure during high dose rate tasks by replacing the pencil, paper, and stopwatch method. This program requires a time module. The remaining four programs deal with computations of time-integrated air concentrations at various distances from an airborne release. Building wake effects, source depletion by ground deposition, and sector averaging can all be included in the final printout of the X/Q - Hanford and X/Q - Pasquill programs. The shorter versions of these, H/Q and P/Q, compute centerline or sector-averaged values and include a subroutine to facilitate dose estimation by entering dose factors and quantities released. The horizontal and vertical dispersion parameters in the Pasquill-Gifford programs were modeled with simple, two-parameter functions that agreed very well …
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Rittmann, P. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermoelectric generator and method for the fabrication thereof (open access)

Thermoelectric generator and method for the fabrication thereof

A thermoelectric generator using semiconductor elements for responding to a temperature gradient to produce electrical energy with all of the semiconductor elements being of the same type is disclosed. A continuous process for forming substrates on which the semiconductor elements and superstrates are deposited and a process for forming the semiconductor elements on the substrates are also disclosed. The substrates with the semiconductor elements thereon are combined with superstrates to form modules for use as thermoelectric generators.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Benson, D. K. & Tracy, C. E.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coolant mixing in LMFBR rod bundles and outlet plenum mixing transients. Final report (open access)

Coolant mixing in LMFBR rod bundles and outlet plenum mixing transients. Final report

This project principally undertook the investigation of the thermal hydraulic performance of wire wrapped fuel bundles of LMFBR configuration. Results obtained included phenomenological models for friction factors, flow split and mixing characteristics; correlations for predicting these characteristics suitable for insertion in design codes; numerical codes for analyzing bundle behavior both of the lumped subchannel and distributed parameter categories and experimental techniques for pressure velocity, flow split, salt conductivity and temperature measurement in water cooled mockups of bundles and subchannels. Flow regimes investigated included laminar, transition and turbulent flow under forced convection and mixed convection conditions. Forced convections conditions were emphasized. Continuing efforts are underway at MIT to complete the investigation of the mixed convection regime initiated here. A number of investigations on outlet plenum behavior were also made. The reports of these investigations are identified.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Todreas, N.E.; Cheng, S.K. & Basehore, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library