Resource Type

States

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.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Groundwater Flow and Transport Calculations Supporting the Immobilized Low-Activity Waste Disposal Facility Performance Assessment (open access)

Groundwater Flow and Transport Calculations Supporting the Immobilized Low-Activity Waste Disposal Facility Performance Assessment

This report summarizes the Hanford Site-Wide Groundwater Model and its application to the Immobilized Low-Activity Waste (ILAW) Disposal Facility Performance Assessment (PA). The site-wide model and supporting local-scale models are used to evaluate impacts from the transport of contaminants at a hypothetical well 100 m downgradient of the disposal facilities and to evaluate regional flow conditions and transport from the ILAW disposal facilities to the Columbia River. These models were used to well-intercept factors (WIFs) or dilution factors from a given areal flux of a hypothetical contaminant released to the unconfined aquifer from the ILAW disposal facilities for two waste-disposal options: (1) a remote-handled trench concept and (2) a concrete-vault concept. These WIFs are being used in conjunction with calculations of released contaminant fluxes through the vadose zone to estimate potential impacts from radiological and hazardous chemical contaminants within the ILAW disposal facility at compliance points.
Date: December 4, 2000
Creator: Bergeron, Marcel P & Wurstner, Signe K
System: The UNT Digital Library
Groundwater Flow and Transport Calculations Supporting the Immobilized Low-Activity Waste Disposal Facility Performance Assessment (open access)

Groundwater Flow and Transport Calculations Supporting the Immobilized Low-Activity Waste Disposal Facility Performance Assessment

This report summarizes the Hanford Site-Wide Groundwater Model and its application to the Immobilized Low-Activity Waste (ILAW) Disposal Facility Performance Assessment (PA). The site-wide model and supporting local-scale models are used to evaluate impacts from the transport of contaminants at a hypothetical well 100 m downgradient of the disposal facilities and to evaluate regional flow conditions and transport from the ILAW disposal facilities to the Columbia River. These models were used to well-intercept factors (WIFs) or dilution factors from a given areal flux of a hypothetical contaminant released to the unconfined aquifer from the ILAW disposal facilities for two waste-disposal options: 1) a remote-handled trench concept and 2) a concrete-vault concept. The WIF is defined as the ratio of the concentration at a well location in the aquifer to the concentration of infiltrating water entering the aquifer. These WIFs are being used in conjunction with calculations of released contaminant fluxes through the vadose zone to estimate potential impacts from radiological and hazardous chemical contaminants within the ILAW disposal facility at compliance points.
Date: December 4, 2000
Creator: Bergeron, Marcel P. & Wurstner, Signe K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preparation of Phased and Merged Safety Analysis Reports for New DOE Nuclear Facilities (open access)

Preparation of Phased and Merged Safety Analysis Reports for New DOE Nuclear Facilities

The Spent Nuclear Fuels Project (SNFP) is charged with moving to storage 2,100 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel elements left over from plutonium production at DOE'S Hanford site in Washington state. Two new facilities, the Cold Vacuum Drying Facility (CVDF) and the Canister Storage Building (CSB) are in final construction. In order to meet aggressive schedule commitments, the SNFP chose to prepare the safety analysis reports (SAR's) in phases that covered only specific portions of each facility's design as it was built. Each SAR also merged the preliminary and final safety analysis reports into a single SAR, thereby covering all aspects of design, construction, and operation for that portion (phase) of the facility. A policy of ''NRC equivalency'' was also implemented in parallel with this effort, with the goal of achieving a rigor of safety analysis equivalent to that of NRC-licensed fuel processing facilities. DOE Order 5480.23. ''Nuclear Safety Analysis Reports'' allows preparation of both a phased and a merged SAR to accelerate construction schedules. However, project managers must be aware that such acceleration is not guaranteed. Managers considering this approach for their project should be cognizant of numerous obstacles that will be encountered. Merging and phasing SAR's will …
Date: April 4, 2000
Creator: Bishop, G. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Savannah River Site generic data base development (open access)

Savannah River Site generic data base development

This report describes the results of a project to improve the generic component failure database for the Savannah River Site (SRS). Additionally, guidelines were developed further for more advanced applications of database values. A representative list of components and failure modes for SRS risk models was generated by reviewing existing safety analyses and component failure data bases and from suggestions from SRS safety analysts. Then sources of data or failure rate estimates were identified and reviewed for applicability. A major source of information was the Nuclear Computerized Library for Assessing Reactor Reliability, or NUCLARR. This source includes an extensive collection of failure data and failure rate estimates for commercial nuclear power plants. A recent Idaho National Engineering Laboratory report on failure data from the Idaho Chemical Processing Plant was also reviewed. From these and other recent sources, failure data and failure rate estimates were collected for the components and failure modes of interest. For each component failure mode, this information was aggregated to obtain a recommended generic failure rate distribution (mean and error factor based on a lognormal distribution). Results are presented in a table in this report. A major difference between generic database and previous efforts is that this …
Date: January 4, 2000
Creator: Blanchard , A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integration of FBTol into CADKEY (open access)

Integration of FBTol into CADKEY

A well-known but unsolved issue among CAD (Computer-Aided Design) modelers is their inability to advance the representation of non-shape information beyond the confines of decorative annotations. Experts recognized that this issue is the missing piece toward achieving both true product modeling and toward satisfying advanced solid-based applications' requirement for an enhanced representation of meaningful non-shape attributes--particularly product tolerances. Feature-Based Tolerancing (FBTol) is an enabling component technology that augments solid-based systems with a complete and unambiguous representation of tolerances. No commercial CAD system on the market contains the capabilities that FM and T's (Federal Manufacturing and Technologies) FBTol technology provides. This project was needed to infuse additional quality into the design of manufacturable products. Ensuring the quality of tolerance designs before delivery of designs will avoid significant costs encountered if errors were to be found later in the product life cycle. The union of CADKEY and FBTol will aid in product design defect detection and provide downstream applications with explicit non-shape information.
Date: May 4, 2000
Creator: Brown, C.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Economic Energy Savings Potential in Federal Buildings (open access)

Economic Energy Savings Potential in Federal Buildings

None
Date: October 4, 2000
Creator: Brown, D. R.; Dirks, J. A. & Hunt, D. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Economic Energy Savings Potential in Federal Buildings (open access)

Economic Energy Savings Potential in Federal Buildings

The primary objective of this study was to estimate the current life-cycle cost-effective (i.e., economic) energy savings potential in Federal buildings and the corresponding capital investment required to achieve these savings, with Federal financing. Estimates were developed for major categories of energy efficiency measures such as building envelope, heating system, cooling system, and lighting. The analysis was based on conditions (building stock and characteristics, retrofit technologies, interest rates, energy prices, etc.) existing in the late 1990s. The potential impact of changes to any of these factors in the future was not considered.
Date: September 4, 2000
Creator: Brown, Daryl R.; Dirks, James A. & Hunt, Diane M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated Safety Management System Phase 1 and 2 Verification for the Environmental Restoration Contractor Volumes 1 and 2 (open access)

Integrated Safety Management System Phase 1 and 2 Verification for the Environmental Restoration Contractor Volumes 1 and 2

DOE Policy 450.4 mandates that safety be integrated into all aspects of the management and operations of its facilities. The goal of an institutionalized Integrated Safety Management System (ISMS) is to have a single integrated system that includes Environment, Safety, and Health requirements in the work planning and execution processes to ensure the protection of the worker, public, environment, and the federal property over the life cycle of the Environmental Restoration (ER) Project. The purpose of this Environmental Restoration Contractor (ERC) ISMS Phase MI Verification was to determine whether ISMS programs and processes were institutionalized within the ER Project, whether these programs and processes were implemented, and whether the system had promoted the development of a safety conscious work culture.
Date: April 4, 2000
Creator: CARTER, R.P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
STEW: A Nonlinear Data Modeling Computer Program (open access)

STEW: A Nonlinear Data Modeling Computer Program

A nonlinear data modeling computer program, STEW, employing the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm, has been developed to model the experimental {sup 239}Pu(n,f) and {sup 235}U(n,f) cross sections. This report presents results of the modeling of the {sup 239}Pu(n,f) and {sup 235}U(n,f) cross-section data. The calculation of the fission transmission coefficient is based on the double-humped-fission-barrier model of Bjornholm and Lynn. Incident neutron energies of up to 5 MeV are considered.
Date: March 4, 2000
Creator: Chen, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Emergency Farm Assistance in FY2000: Description and State Distribution (open access)

Emergency Farm Assistance in FY2000: Description and State Distribution

None
Date: October 4, 2000
Creator: Chite, Ralph M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Statistical evaluation of effluent monitoring data for the 200 Area Treated Effluent Disposal Facility (open access)

Statistical evaluation of effluent monitoring data for the 200 Area Treated Effluent Disposal Facility

The 200 Area Treated Effluent Disposal Facility (TEDF) consists of a pair of infiltration basins that receive wastewater originating from the 200 West and 200 East Areas of the Hanford Site. TEDF has been in operation since 1995 and is regulated by State Waste Discharge Permit ST 4502 (Ecology 1995) under the authority of Chapter 90.48 Revised Code of Washington (RCW) and Washington Administrative Code (WAC) Chapter 173-216. The permit stipulates monitoring requirements for effluent (or end-of-pipe) discharges and groundwater monitoring for TEDF. Groundwater monitoring began in 1992 prior to TEDF construction. Routine effluent monitoring in accordance with the permit requirements began in late April 1995 when the facility began operations. The State Waste Discharge Permit ST 4502 included a special permit condition (S.6). This condition specified a statistical study of the variability of permitted constituents in the effluent from TEDF during its first year of operation. The study was designed to (1) demonstrate compliance with the waste discharge permit; (2) determine the variability of all constituents in the effluent that have enforcement limits, early warning values, and monitoring requirements (WHC 1995); and (3) determine if concentrations of permitted constituents vary with season. Additional and more frequent sampling was conducted …
Date: April 4, 2000
Creator: Chou, C. J. & Johnson, V. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Establishment of the International Power Institute. Final technical report (open access)

Establishment of the International Power Institute. Final technical report

The International Power Institute, in collaboration with American industries, seeks to address technical, political, economic and cultural issues of developing countries in the interest of facilitating profitable transactions in power related infrastructure projects. IPI works with universities, governments and commercial organizations to render project-specific recommendations for private-sector investment considerations. IPI also established the following goals: Facilitate electric power infrastructure transactions between developing countries and the US power industry; Collaborate with developing countries to identify development strategies to achieve energy stability; and Encourage market driven solutions and work collaboratively with other international trade energy, technology and banking organizations.
Date: August 4, 2000
Creator: Coles, Julius E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High efficiency thin film CdTe and a-Si based solar cells (open access)

High efficiency thin film CdTe and a-Si based solar cells

This report describes work done by the University of Toledo during the first year of this subcontract. During this time, the CdTe group constructed a second dual magnetron sputter deposition facility; optimized reactive sputtering for ZnTe:N films to achieve 10 ohm-cm resistivity and {approximately}9% efficiency cells with a copper-free ZnTe:N/Ni contact; identified Cu-related photoluminescence features and studied their correlation with cell performance including their dependence on temperature and E-fields; studied band-tail absorption in CdS{sub x}Te{sub 1{minus}x} films at 10 K and 300 K; collaborated with the National CdTe PV Team on (1) studies of high-resistivity tin oxide (HRT) layers from ITN Energy Systems, (2) fabrication of cells on the HRT layers with 0, 300, and 800-nm CdS, and (3) preparation of ZnTe:N-based contacts on First Solar materials for stress testing; and collaborated with Brooklyn College for ellipsometry studies of CdS{sub x}Te{sub 1{minus}x} alloy films, and with the University of Buffalo/Brookhaven NSLS for synchrotron X-ray fluorescence studies of interdiffusion in CdS/CdTe bilayers. The a-Si group established a baseline for fabricating a-Si-based solar cells with single, tandem, and triple-junction structures; fabricated a-Si/a-SiGe/a-SiGe triple-junction solar cells with an initial efficiency of 9.7% during the second quarter, and 10.6% during the fourth quarter (after …
Date: January 4, 2000
Creator: Compaan, A. D.; Deng, X. & Bohn, R. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
MAXIMIZING CRITICALITY CONTROL COVERAGE FOR GEOLOGIC DISPOSAL OF DOE SNF (open access)

MAXIMIZING CRITICALITY CONTROL COVERAGE FOR GEOLOGIC DISPOSAL OF DOE SNF

None
Date: February 4, 2000
Creator: DAVIS, J. WESLEY
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pilot States Program report: Home energy ratings systems and energy-efficient mortgages (open access)

Pilot States Program report: Home energy ratings systems and energy-efficient mortgages

This report covers the accomplishments of the home energy ratings systems/energy-efficient mortgages (HERS/EEMs) pilot states from 1993 through 1998, including such indicators as funding, ratings and EEMs achieved, active raters, and training and marketing activities. A brief description of each HERS program's evolution is included, as well as their directors' views of the programs' future prospects. Finally, an analysis is provided of successful HERS program characteristics and factors that appear to contribute to HERS program success.
Date: April 4, 2000
Creator: Farhar, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance for Beneficial Use for the Canister Cleaning System for the K West basin Project A-2A (open access)

Acceptance for Beneficial Use for the Canister Cleaning System for the K West basin Project A-2A

This documents the documentation that is required to be turned over to Operations with the Canister Cleaning System (CCS). The Acceptance for Beneficial Use will be updated as required prior to turnover. This document is prepared for the purposes of documenting an agreement among the various disciplines and organizations within the Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project as to what is required in terms of installed components of the CCS. This documentation will be used to achieve project closeout and turnover of ownership of the CCS to K Basins Operations.
Date: April 4, 2000
Creator: Farwick, C. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molecular electronic spectroscopy. Final progress report for period June 1, 2000 - May 31, 2001 (open access)

Molecular electronic spectroscopy. Final progress report for period June 1, 2000 - May 31, 2001

None
Date: August 4, 2000
Creator: Field, Robert W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Congressional Overrides of Presidential Vetoes (open access)

Congressional Overrides of Presidential Vetoes

This report contains the congressional overrides of presidential vetoes up until November 2000.
Date: November 4, 2000
Creator: Galemore, Gary L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Congressional Overrides of Presidential Vetoes (open access)

Congressional Overrides of Presidential Vetoes

The President’s veto is effective not only in preventing the passage of legislation undesirable to the President, but also as a threat, sometimes forcing Congress to modify legislation before it is presented to the President. However, as a veto threat is carried out, Congress is faced with choices: letting the veto stand, the difficult task of overriding the veto, meeting the President’s objections and sending a new bill forward, or resubmitting the same provisions under a new bill number.
Date: November 4, 2000
Creator: Galemore, Gary L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Presidential Veto and Congressional Procedure (open access)

The Presidential Veto and Congressional Procedure

None
Date: November 4, 2000
Creator: Galemore, Gary L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Presidential Vetoes, 1789-Present: A Summary Overview (open access)

Presidential Vetoes, 1789-Present: A Summary Overview

None
Date: November 4, 2000
Creator: Galemore, Gary L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Latin American Technology Initiative (LAT). Final technical report (open access)

Latin American Technology Initiative (LAT). Final technical report

This report explains why Monterrey, Mexico was chosen for the site of the Alternative Fuels Trade Mission (April 12-14, 2000), identifies some of the opportunities and challenges for U.S. businesses in Monterrey, identifies useful resources for U.S. companies doing business in Mexico, and details the process, execution, and results leading from the Trade Mission.
Date: August 4, 2000
Creator: Gallegos, Rolando
System: The UNT Digital Library