Air Emission Inventory for the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory - Calendar Year 1999 Emission Report (open access)

Air Emission Inventory for the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory - Calendar Year 1999 Emission Report

This report presents the 1999 calendar year update of the Air Emission Inventory for the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL). The INEEL Air Emission Inventory documents sources and emissions of nonradionuclide pollutants from operations at the INEEL. The report describes the emission inventory process and all of the sources at the INEEL, and provides nonradionuclide emissions estimates for stationary sources.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Zohner, S.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition of CdTe for high efficiency thin film PV devices: Annual subcontract report, 26 January 1999--25 January 2000 (open access)

Atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition of CdTe for high efficiency thin film PV devices: Annual subcontract report, 26 January 1999--25 January 2000

ITN's three year project Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Vapor Deposition (APCVD) of CdTe for High Efficiency Thin Film PV Devices has the overall objectives of improving thin film CdTe PV manufacturing technology and increasing CdTe PV device power conversion efficiency. CdTe deposition by APCVD employs the same reaction chemistry as has been used to deposit 16% efficient CdTe PV films, i.e., close spaced sublimation, but employs forced convection rather than diffusion as a mechanism of mass transport. Tasks of the APCVD program center on demonstration of APCVD of CdTe films, discovery of fundamental mass transport parameters, application of established engineering principles to the deposition of CdTe films, and verification of reactor design principles which could be used to design high throughput, high yield manufacturing equipment. Additional tasks relate to improved device measurement and characterization procedures that can lead to a more fundamental understanding of CdTe PV device operation and ultimately to higher device conversion efficiency and greater stability. Under the APCVD program, device analysis goes beyond conventional one-dimensional device characterization and analysis toward two dimension measurements and modeling. Accomplishments of the second year of the APCVD subcontract include: deposition of the first APCVD CdTe; identification of deficiencies in the first generation …
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Meyers, P. V.; Kee, R.; Wolden, C.; Kestner, J.; Raja, L.; Kaydanov, V. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
B1 magnet harmonics (open access)

B1 magnet harmonics

During the B0 Overpass construction for the CDF detector at Fermilab, 33 B1 magnets were measured using a bucked tangential coil. Measurements were made on the midplane, at the centerline and at {+-} 1 inch horizontal displacement. Since the coil was only 62 inches long, measurements were made at four longitudinal positions. Because of the design of the Main Ring, it was sufficient to combine data from all positions and report the harmonic spectrum for the magnet as a whole. For modeling the Scrounge-atron, it is more useful to treat each measurement position separately. The author reports here an analysis of the harmonic spectra at each probe position, based on the original data.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Barnes, P. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Building Scale Simulation in Support of Field Experiments around Salt Lake City (open access)

Building Scale Simulation in Support of Field Experiments around Salt Lake City

Numerical modeling of the urban boundary layer is complicated by the need to describe airflow patterns outside of the computational domain. These patterns have an impact on how successfully the simulation is able to model the turbulence associated with the urban boundary layer. This talk presents experiments with the model boundary conditions for simulations that were done to support two Department of Energy observational programs involving the Salt Lake City basin. The Chemical/Biological Non-proliferation Program (CBNP) is concerned with the effects of buildings on influencing dispersion patterns in urban environments. The Vertical Transport and Mixing Program (VTMX) investigating mixing mechanisms in the stable boundary layer and how they are influenced by the channeling caused by drainage flows or by obstacles such as building complexes. Both of these programs are investigating the turbulent mixing caused by building complexes and other urban obstacles.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Stevens, David E.; Calhoun, Ronald J.; Chan, Stevens T.; Lee, Robert L.; Leone, John M. & Shinn, Joseph H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
CdS Nanocrystals Formed in SiO{sub 2} Substrates by Ion Implantation (open access)

CdS Nanocrystals Formed in SiO{sub 2} Substrates by Ion Implantation

None
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Desnica, U.V.; Ivanda, M.; Gamulin, O.; Tonejc, A.M.; White, C.W.; Sonder, E. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characteristics of Trap-Filled Gallium Arsenide Photoconductive Switches Used in High Gain Pulsed Power Applications (open access)

Characteristics of Trap-Filled Gallium Arsenide Photoconductive Switches Used in High Gain Pulsed Power Applications

The electrical properties of semi-insulating (SI) Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) have been investigated for some time, particularly for its application as a substrate in microelectronics. Of late this material has found a variety of applications other than as an isolation region between devices, or the substrate of an active device. High resistivity SI GaAs is increasingly being used in charged particle detectors and photoconductive semiconductor switches (PCSS). PCSS made from these materials operating in both the linear and non-linear modes have applications such as firing sets, as drivers for lasers, and in high impedance, low current Q-switches or Pockels cells. In the non-linear mode, it has also been used in a system to generate Ultra-Wideband (UWB) High Power Microwaves (HPM). The choice of GaAs over silicon offers the advantage that its material properties allow for fast, repetitive switching action. Furthermore photoconductive switches have advantages over conventional switches such as improved jitter, better impedance matching, compact size, and in some cases, lower laser energy requirement for switching action. The rise time of the PCSS is an important parameter that affects the maximum energy transferred to the load and it depends, in addition to other parameters, on the bias or the average field …
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Islam,N.E.; Schamiloglu,E.; Mar,Alan; Loubriel,Guillermo M.; Zutavern,Fred J. & Joshi,R.P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical and Isotopic Composition and Gas Concentrations of Ground Water and Surface Water from Selected Sites At and Near the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory, Idaho, 1994-97 (open access)

Chemical and Isotopic Composition and Gas Concentrations of Ground Water and Surface Water from Selected Sites At and Near the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory, Idaho, 1994-97

>From May 1994 through May 1997, the US Geological Survey, in cooperation with the US Department of Energy, collected water samples from 86 wells completed in the Snake River Plain aquifer at and near the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory. The samples were analyzed for a variety of chemical constituents including all major elements and 22 trace elements. Concentrations of scandium, yttrium, and the lanthanide series were measured in samples from 11 wells and 1 hot spring. The data will be used to determine the fraction of young water in the ground water. The fraction of young water must be known to calculate the ages of ground water using chlorofluorocarbons. The concentrations of the isotopes deuterium, oxygen-18, carbon-13, carbon-14, and tritium were measured in many ground water, surface-water and spring samples. The isotopic composition will provide clues to the origin and sources of water in the Snake River Plain aquifer. Concentrations ! of helium-3 , helium-4, total helium, and neon were measured in most groundwater samples, and the results will be used to determine the recharge temperature, and to date the ground waters.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Busenberg, E.; Plummer, L. N.; Doughten, M. W.; Widman, P. K. & Bartholomay, R. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coordination studies with PNNL's global change assessment model: integrated science modeling and applications to the human dimensions. Final technical report for period October 1996 - March 2000 (open access)

Coordination studies with PNNL's global change assessment model: integrated science modeling and applications to the human dimensions. Final technical report for period October 1996 - March 2000

This report outlines the progress on the development and application of Integrated Science Assessment Model (ISAM) supported by the DOE Program on Health and Environmental Research: Environmental Sciences Program under Grant No. DOE DFGO2-96ER62284. As part of this research proposal, we designed the model that better represent spatial variations and treat the process relevant towards evaluating the biogeochemical cycles important to determining atmospheric composition and resulting climatic effects at the regional scale. The process level understanding of regional impacts into the Integrated Assessment (IA) model will help to improve the understanding of climate change impacts and extend the range of issues, which can be addressed in an IA framework. On the application front, the newly developed model has been applied to a selected set of studies to address policy related questions on climate change, in particular, the role of forestry, and land-use for historical greenhouse gas emissions; projections of future methane emissions; a research study related to energy implications of future stabilization of atmospheric CO{sub 2} content; and radiative forcing and estimation of a number of important greenhouse gases. In the following, the significant findings from the DOE supported study are outlined.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Wuebbles, Donald J. & Atul, Jain
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defense Outsurcing: OMB Circular A-76 Policy and Options for Congress-Proceedings of a CRS Seminar (open access)

Defense Outsurcing: OMB Circular A-76 Policy and Options for Congress-Proceedings of a CRS Seminar

None
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Bailey Grasso, Valerie
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design and first tests of the CDF Run 2 farms (open access)

Design and first tests of the CDF Run 2 farms

The high energy physics experiment CDF, located in the anti-proton-proton collider at Fermilab, will write data in Run 2 at a rate of 20 MByte/s, twenty times the rate of Run 1. The offline production system must be able to handle this rate. Components of that system include a large PC farm, I/O systems to read/write data to and from mass storage, and a system to split the reconstructed data into physics streams which are required for analysis. All of the components must work together seamlessly to ensure the necessary throughput. A description will be given of the overall hardware and software design for the system. A small prototype farm has been used for about one year to study performance, to test software designs and for the first Mock Data Challenge. Results from the tests and experience from the first Mock Data Challenge will be discussed. The hardware for the first production farm is in place and will be used for the second Mock Data Challenge. Finally, the possible scaling of the system to handle larger rates foreseen later in Run 2 will be described.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: al., Jaroslav Antos et
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct energy conversion in fission reactors: A U.S. NERI project (open access)

Direct energy conversion in fission reactors: A U.S. NERI project

In principle, the energy released by a fission can be converted directly into electricity by using the charged fission fragments. The first theoretical treatment of direct energy conversion (DEC) appeared in the literature in 1957. Experiments were conducted over the next ten years, which identified a number of problem areas. Research declined by the late 1960's due to technical challenges that limited performance. Under the Nuclear Energy Research Initiative the authors are determining if these technical challenges can be overcome with todays technology. The authors present the basic principles of DEC reactors, review previous research, discuss problem areas in detail, and identify technological developments of the last 30 years that can overcome these obstacles. As an example, the fission electric cell must be insulated to avoid electrons crossing the cell. This insulation could be provided by a magnetic field as attempted in the early experiments. However, from work on magnetically insulated ion diodes they know how to significantly improve the field geometry. Finally, a prognosis for future development of DEC reactors will be presented .
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Slutz, Stephen A.; Seidel, David B.; Polansky, Gary F.; Rochau, Gary E.; Lipinski, Ronald J.; Besenbruch, G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Future Lepton Colliders and Laser Acceleration (open access)

Future Lepton Colliders and Laser Acceleration

Future high energy colliders along with their physics potential, and relationship to new laser technology are discussed. Experimental approaches and requirements for New Physics exploration are also described.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Parsa, Z.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
H-Morph: An indirect approach to advancing front hex meshing (open access)

H-Morph: An indirect approach to advancing front hex meshing

H-Morph is a new automatic algorithm for the generation of a hexahedral-dominant finite element mesh for arbitrary volumes. The H-Morph method starts with an initial tetrahedral mesh and systematically transforms and combines tetrahedral into hexahedra. It uses an advancing front technique where the initial front consists of a set of prescribed quadrilateral surface facets. Fronts are individually processed by recovering each of the six quadrilateral faces of a hexahedron from the tetrahedral mesh. Recovery techniques similar to those used in boundary constrained Delaunay mesh generation are used. Tetrahedral internal to the six hexahedral faces are then removed and a hexahedron is formed. At any time during the H-Morph procedure a valid mixed hexahedral-tetrahedral mesh is in existence within the volume. The procedure continues until no tetrahedral remain within the volume, or tetrahedral remain which cannot be transformed or combined into valid hexahedral elements. Any remaining tetrahedral are typically towards the interior of the volume, generally a less critical region for analysis. Transition from tetrahedral to hexahedra in the final mesh is accomplished through pyramid shaped elements. Advantages of the proposed method include its ability to conform to an existing quadrilateral surface mesh, its ability to mesh without the need to …
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: OWEN,STEVEN J. & SAIGAL,SUNIL
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hex-dominant mesh generation using 3D constrained triangulation (open access)

Hex-dominant mesh generation using 3D constrained triangulation

A method for decomposing a volume with a prescribed quadrilateral surface mesh, into a hexahedral-dominated mesh is proposed. With this method, known as Hex-Morphing (H-Morph), an initial tetrahedral mesh is provided. Tetrahedral are transformed and combined starting from the boundary and working towards the interior of the volume. The quadrilateral faces of the hexahedra are treated as internal surfaces, which can be recovered using constrained triangulation techniques. Implementation details of the edge and face recovery process are included. Examples and performance of the H-Morph algorithm are also presented.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Owen, Steven J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inexpensive, High-Performance, Electron Gun. Final report (open access)

Inexpensive, High-Performance, Electron Gun. Final report

None
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Bluem, H.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interprocessor communication with memory constraints (open access)

Interprocessor communication with memory constraints

Many parallel applications require periodic redistribution of workloads and associated data. In a distributed memory computer, this redistribution can be difficult if limited memory is available for receiving messages. The authors propose a model for optimizing the exchange of messages under such circumstances which they call the minimum phase remapping problem. They first show that the problem is NP-Complete, and then analyze several methodologies for addressing it. First, they show how the problem can be phrased as an instance of multi-commodity flow. Next, they study a continuous approximation to the problem. They show that this continuous approximation has a solution which requires at most two more phases than the optimal discrete solution, but the question of how to consistently obtain a good discrete solution from the continuous problem remains open. Finally, they devise a simple and practical approximation algorithm for the problem with a bound of 1.5 times the optimal number of phases.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: PINAR,ALI & HENDRICKSON,BRUCE A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Load balancing fictions, falsehoods and fallacies (open access)

Load balancing fictions, falsehoods and fallacies

Effective use of a parallel computer requires that a calculation be carefully divided among the processors. This load balancing problem appears in many guises and has been a fervent area of research for the past decade or more. Although great progress has been made, and useful software tools developed, a number of challenges remain. It is the conviction of the author that these challenges will be easier to address if programmers first come to terms with some significant shortcomings in their current perspectives. This paper tries to identify several areas in which the prevailing point of view is either mistaken or insufficient. The goal is to motivate new ideas and directions for this important field.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: HENDRICKSON,BRUCE A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Macroscopic Description of Pressure-anisotropy-driven Collective Instability in Intense Charged Particle Beams (open access)

Macroscopic Description of Pressure-anisotropy-driven Collective Instability in Intense Charged Particle Beams

The macroscopic warm-fluid model developed by Lund and Davidson [Phys.Plasmas 5, 3028 (1998)] is used in the smooth-focusing approximation to investigate detailed stability properties of an intense charged particle beam with pressure anisotropy, assuming small-amplitude electrostatic pertubations about a waterbag equilibrium.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Strasburg, Sean & Davidson, Ronald C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurements of Conversion Efficiency for a Flat Plate Thermophotovoltaic System Using a Photonic Cavity Test System (open access)

Measurements of Conversion Efficiency for a Flat Plate Thermophotovoltaic System Using a Photonic Cavity Test System

The performance of a 1 cm{sup 2} thermophotovoltaic (TPV) module was recently measured in a photonic cavity test system. A conversion efficiency of 11.7% was measured at a radiator temperature of 1076 C and a module temperature of 29.9 C. This experiment achieved the highest direct measurement of efficiency for an integrated TPV system. Efficiency was calculated from the ratio of the peak (load matched) electrical power output and the heat absorption rate. Measurements of these two parameters were made simultaneously to assure the validity of the measured efficiency value. This test was conducted in a photonic cavity which mimicked a typical flat-plate TPV system. The radiator was a large, flat graphite surface. The module was affixed to the top of a copper pedestal for heat absorption measurements. The heat absorption rate was proportional to the axial temperature gradient in the pedestal under steady-state conditions. The test was run in a vacuum to eliminate conductive and convective heat transfer mechanisms. The photonic cavity provides the optimal test environment for TPV efficiency measurements because it incorporates all important physical phenomena found in an integrated TPV system: high radiator emissivity and blackbody spectral shape, photon recycling, Lambertian distribution of incident radiation and …
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Brown, E. J.; Ballinger, C. T.; Burger, S. R.; Charache, G. W.; Danielson, L. R.; DePoy, D. M. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monte Carlo evaluation of passive NMIS for assay of plutonium in shielded containers (open access)

Monte Carlo evaluation of passive NMIS for assay of plutonium in shielded containers

Preliminary Monte Carlo simulations have demonstrated that passive Nuclear Materials Identification System (NMIS) measurements can be used to determine the mass of Pu in AT400-R containers with measurement times as short as a few minutes. The sensitivity of the proposed detectors to gamma rays should enhance this measurement method because the gamma rays from fission, induced or spontaneous, escape this container more easily than neutrons. In these calculations, the container contained two Pu spheres with mass varying between 0.5 and 2 Kg with {approximately}6 wt% {sup 240 }Pu.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: T.E. Valentine, L.G. Chiang, J.T. Mihalczo
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
MUON STORAGE RINGS - NEUTRINO FACTORIES (open access)

MUON STORAGE RINGS - NEUTRINO FACTORIES

The concept of a muon storage ring based Neutrino Source (Neutrino Factory) has sparked considerable interest in the High Energy Physics community. Besides providing a first phase of a muon collider facility, it would generate more intense and well collimated neutrino beams than currently available. The BNL-AGS or some other proton driver would provide an intense proton beam that hits a target, produces pions that decay into muons. The muons must be cooled, accelerated and injected into a storage ring with a long straight section where they decay. The decays occurring in the straight sections of the ring would generate neutrino beams that could be directed to detectors located thousands of kilometers away, allowing studies of neutrino oscillations with precisions not currently accessible. For example, with the neutrino source at BNL, detectors at Soudan, Minnesota (1,715 km), and Gran Sasso, Italy (6,527 km) become very interesting possibilities. The feasibility of constructing and operating such a muon-storage-ring based Neutrino-Factory, including geotechnical questions related to building non-planar storage rings (e.g. at 8{degree} angle for BNL-Soudan, and 3{degree} angle for BNL-Gran Sasso) along with the design of the muon capture, cooling, acceleration, and storage ring for such a facility is being explored by …
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: PARSA,Z.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The natural latitudinal distribution of atmospheric CO{sub 2}. (open access)

The natural latitudinal distribution of atmospheric CO{sub 2}.

None
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Taylor, J. A. & Orr, J. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Accuracy of X-Ray Spectra Modeling of Inertial Confinement Fusion Plasmas (open access)

On the Accuracy of X-Ray Spectra Modeling of Inertial Confinement Fusion Plasmas

We have performed x-ray spectroscopic experiments in homogeneous gas bag plasmas where we independently measure the temperature with Thomson scattering. We find that collisional radiative (kinetics) modeling of the intensities of the He-{beta} line and its dielectronic capture satellites is generally in agreement with the measured spectra. On the other hand, for the particular case of satellites arising from inner-shell electron collisional excitation, we find discrepancies of up to a factor of two between experiment and kinetics models. We have ruled out possible effects on the line emission due to plasma gradients, radiative transport, and suprathermal electron excitation leaving errors in the atomic physics modeling to be the most likely explanation. The determination that there are problems with the collisionally populated states is important for the interpretation of inertial confinement fusion capsule implosions where electron densities and temperature have been measured using the spectral line shape of the He-{beta} transition of Ar XVII. The analysis of the implosion data has required Stark broadening calculations coupled to a kinetics model to calculate the detailed line intensities and widths. Despite remaining discrepancies, the good agreement between the experimental dielectronic capture satellites and the HULLAC calculations suggests that HULLAC is a more appropriate …
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Glenzer, S. H.; Fournier, K. B.; Hammel, B. A.; Lee, L. W.; MacGowan, B. J. & Back, C. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the discontinuity of the costates for optimal control problems with Coulomb friction (open access)

On the discontinuity of the costates for optimal control problems with Coulomb friction

This work points out that the costates are actually discontinuous functions of time for optimal control problems with Coloumb friction. In particular these discontinuities occur at the time points where the velocity of the system changes sign. To the authors knowledge, this has not been noted before. This phenomenon is demonstrated on a minimum-time problem with Coloumb friction and the consistency of discontinuous costates and switching functions with respect to the input switches is shown.
Date: May 30, 2000
Creator: Driessen, Brian & Sadegh, Nader
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library