Am/Cm Canister Temperature Evaluation in Cim5 (open access)

Am/Cm Canister Temperature Evaluation in Cim5

To facilitate the evaluation of alternate canister designs, 2 canisters were outfitted with thermocouples at elevations of 1/2, 3 1/2, and 6 1/2 inches from the canister bottom. The canisters were fabricated from two inch diameter schedule 10 and two inch diameter schedule 40 stainless steel pipe. Each canister was filled with approximately 2 kilograms of 49 wt percent lanthanide (Ln) loaded 25SrABS glass during 5 inch Cylindrical Induction Melter (CIM5) runs for TTR Tasks 3.03 and 4.03. Melter temperature, total mass of glass poured, and the glass pour rates were almost identical in both runs. The schedule 40 canister has a slightly smaller ID compared to the schedule 10 canister and therefore filled to a level of 9.5 inches compared to 8.0 inches for the schedule 40 canister. The schedule 40 canister had an empty mass of 1906 grams compared to 919 grams for the schedule 10 canister. The schedule 10 canister was found to have a higher maximum surface temperature by about 50--100 C (depending on height) during the glass pour compared to the schedule 40 canister. The additional thermal mass of the schedule 40 canister accounts for this difference. Once filled with glass, each of the canisters …
Date: February 17, 2000
Creator: Baich, M. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chamber transport (open access)

Chamber transport

Heavy ion beam transport through the containment chamber plays a crucial role in all heavy ion fusion (HIF) scenarios. Here, several parameters are used to characterize the operating space for HIF beams; transport modes are assessed in relation to evolving target/accelerator requirements; results of recent relevant experiments and simulations of HIF transport are summarized; and relevant instabilities are reviewed. All transport options still exist, including (1) vacuum ballistic transport, (2) neutralized ballistic transport, and (3) channel-like transport. Presently, the European HIF program favors vacuum ballistic transport, while the US HIF program favors neutralized ballistic transport with channel-like transport as an alternate approach. Further transport research is needed to clearly guide selection of the most attractive, integrated HIF system.
Date: May 17, 2000
Creator: Olson, Craig L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program Facilities Newsletter, December 1999 (open access)

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program Facilities Newsletter, December 1999

Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program, articles about weather and atmospheric phenomena, and other related topics.
Date: January 17, 2000
Creator: Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program (U.S.)
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The UNT Digital Library
AC losses in conductors based on high {Tc} superconductors (open access)

AC losses in conductors based on high {Tc} superconductors

In electrical power devices, ac losses from a superconductor is a primary factor which determines their usefulness as commercial power equipment. For this reason, extensive studies have been carried out on the losses of Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}Ca{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub 10}/Ag, [Bi(2223)/Ag], tapes. These studies were mostly limited to a single isolated tape. However, a conductor in a power device is surrounded by other conductors and the precise magnetic field distribution around it is very different from that for a single conductor carrying currents or in ac fields. Since the precise field distribution in and around a superconductor is critical in determining the losses, it is very important to measure and to understand the losses in Bi(2223)/Ag tapes which are surrounded by other tapes as in a power device. Taking this fact into consideration, recently the authors have studied ac losses in stacks of Bi(2223)/Ag tapes in parallel and perpendicular applied fields and shown that they can calculate the losses in these cases utilizing the critical state model if a number of appropriate factors about properties of the tape are taken into a consideration. However, in a power device such as a transformer, magnetic fields near the ends of a solenoid …
Date: March 17, 2000
Creator: Suenaga, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Second Quarter Hanford Seismic Report for Fiscal Year 2000 (open access)

Second Quarter Hanford Seismic Report for Fiscal Year 2000

Hanford Seismic Monitoring provides an uninterrupted collection of high-quality raw and processed seismic data from the Hanford Seismic Network (HSN) for the US Department of Energy and its contractors. Hanford Seismic Monitoring also locates and identifies sources of seismic activity and monitors changes in the historical pattern of seismic activity at the Hanford Site. The data are compiled, archived, and published for use by the Hanford Site for waste management, Natural Phenomena Hazards assessments, and engineering design and construction. In addition, the seismic monitoring organization works with the Hanford Site Emergency Services Organization to provide assistance in the event of a significant earthquake on the Hanford Site. The HSN and the Eastern Washington Regional Network (EWRN) consist of 42 individual sensor sites and 15 radio relay sites maintained by the Hanford Seismic Monitoring staff. The HSN uses 21 sites and the EWRN uses 36 sites; both networks share 16 sites. The networks have 46 combined data channels because Gable Butte and Frenchman Hills East are three-component sites. The reconfiguration of the telemetry and recording systems was completed during the first quarter. All leased telephone lines have been eliminated and radio telemetry is now used exclusively. For the HSN, there were …
Date: July 17, 2000
Creator: Hartshorn, D. C.; Reidel, S. P. & Rohay, A. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamics of Capillary Evaporation. II. Free Energy Barriers (open access)

Dynamics of Capillary Evaporation. II. Free Energy Barriers

None
Date: July 17, 2000
Creator: Leung, Kevin & Luzar, Alenka
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fuel handling exclusion zone established to prevent spurious alarms to CAS neutron detectors in the IFSF (open access)

Fuel handling exclusion zone established to prevent spurious alarms to CAS neutron detectors in the IFSF

An experimental and calculational study has been performed to understand and prevent inadvertent activation of the criticality alarm system (CAS) from fuel-handling operations at the Irradiated Fuel Storage Facility. In conjunction with the study, the CAS neutron detectors were tested to verify the design specifications for gamma rejection capability and zero response limit. A minimum physical restrictive boundary around the CAS location was established based on a gamma ray dose rate limit of 10 rad/hr. The canister loaded with spent nuclear fuel must be moved in the area outside the exclusion zone so as not to trigger a false alarm from the CAS detectors.
Date: September 17, 2000
Creator: Kim, S. S. & Sterbentz, J. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bonding and hardness in nonhydrogenated carbon films with moderate sp(3) content (open access)

Bonding and hardness in nonhydrogenated carbon films with moderate sp(3) content

Amorphous carbon films with an s p{sup 3} content up to 25% and a negligible amount of hydrogen have been grown by evaporation of graphite and concurrent Ar{sup +} ion bombardment. The s p{sup 3} content is maximized for Ar{sup +} energies between 200 and 300 eV following a subplantation mechanism. Higher ion energies deteriorate the film due to sputtering and heating processes. The hardness of the films increases in the optimal assisting range from 8 to 18 GPa, and is explained by the crosslinking of graphitic planes through s p {sup 3} connecting site.
Date: April 17, 2000
Creator: Gago, R.; Jimenez, I.; Albella, J. M.; Climent-Font, A.; Caceres, D.; Vergara, I. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
First principles study of substituents in KTaO{sub 3} (open access)

First principles study of substituents in KTaO{sub 3}

The structural properties, energetics, and dynamics of Ca{sup 2+} and Mn{sup 2+} substituents in KTaO{sub 3} are investigated from first principles. It is found that Ca substitutes for both K and Ta ions. Oxygen vacancies bind to isolated Ca ions residing at Ta-sites, causing off-center Ca displacement and forming large dipoles. There is also evidence that oppositely charged defects may cluster together. The calculations predict that the activation energy for dipole reorientation via oxygen vacancy hopping within the first neighbor shell of Ta-substituting Ca or Mn exceeds 2 eV. On the other hand, Mn{sup 2+} substituting at the K-site displaces off center along the (100) direction, also forming a dipole. This dipole can reorient via Mn hopping motion with an activation energy of {approximately} 0.18 eV, in reasonable agreement with experiments. The authors argue that, in general, metal ion hopping at the A-site, not oxygen vacancy hopping, is responsible for the small activation energies found in experiments.
Date: May 17, 2000
Creator: Leung, Kevin
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of vacuum-multifoil insulation for long-life thermal batteries (open access)

Characterization of vacuum-multifoil insulation for long-life thermal batteries

The use of vacuum multifoil (VMF) container for thermal insulation in long-life thermal batteries was investigated in a proof-of-concept demonstration. An InvenTek-designed VMF container 4.9 inches in diameter by 10 inches long was used with an internally heated aluminum block, to simulate a thermal-battery stack. The block was heated to 525 C or 600 C and allowed to cool while monitoring the temperature of the block and the external case at three locations with time. The data indicate that it should be possible to build an equivalent-sized thermal battery that should last up to six hours, which would meet the requirements for a long-life sonobuoy application.
Date: April 17, 2000
Creator: GUIDOTTI,RONALD A.; REINHARDT,FREDERICK W. & KAUN,THOMAS
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Correlation Between Co-60 and X-Ray Exposures on Radiation-Induced Charge Buildup in Silicon-on-Insulator Buried Oxides (open access)

Correlation Between Co-60 and X-Ray Exposures on Radiation-Induced Charge Buildup in Silicon-on-Insulator Buried Oxides

Large differences in charge buildup in SOI buried oxides can result between x-ray and Co-60 irradiations. The effects of bias configuration and substrate type on charge buildup and hardness assurance issues are explored.
Date: February 17, 2000
Creator: Schwank, James R.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Loemker, Rhonda Ann; Draper, Bruce L.; Dodd, Paul E.; Witczak, Steven C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A model for technology assessment and commercialization for innovative disruptive technologies (open access)

A model for technology assessment and commercialization for innovative disruptive technologies

Disruptive technologies are scientific discoveries that break through the usual product technology capabilities and provide a basis for a new competitive paradigm as described by Anderson and Tushman [1990], Tushman and Rosenkopf [1992], and Bower and Christensen [1995]. Discontinuous innovations are products/processes/services that provide exponential improvements in the value received by the customer much in the same vein as Walsh [1996], Lynn, Morone and Paulson [1996], and Veryzer [1998]. For more on definitions of disruptive technologies and discontinuous innovations, see Walsh and Linton [1999] who provide a number of definitions for disruptive technologies and discontinuous innovations. Disruptive technologies and discontinuous innovations present a unique challenge and opportunity for R and D organizations seeking to build their commercialization efforts and to reinvent the corporation. These technologies do not have a proven path from scientific discovery to mass production and therefore require novel approaches. These critically important technologies are the wellspring of wealth creation and new competency generation but are not readily accepted by the corporate community. They are alternatively embraced and eschewed by the commercial community. They are finally accepted when the technology has already affected the industry or when the technological horse has already flown out of the hanger. Many …
Date: May 17, 2000
Creator: KASSICIEH, SULEIMAN K.; WALSH, STEVE; MCWHORTER,PAUL J.; CUMMINGS JR.,JOHN C.; WILLIAMS,W. DAVID & ROMIG JR.,ALTON D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improved framing and ductwork lower energy costs, McStain Enterprises - Longmont, CO: Building America Project summary fact sheet (open access)

Improved framing and ductwork lower energy costs, McStain Enterprises - Longmont, CO: Building America Project summary fact sheet

McStain Enterprises' new cottage-style homes built under the U.S. Department of Energy's Building America program are designed to greatly reduce energy costs and improve indoor air quality for their customers in Longmont, Colorado. In addition, energy-efficient features in the homes provide owners with greater durability and value, allow some buyers to qualify for special energy-efficient mortgages, and can result in higher resale values. Features include improved building envelope and air distribution systems, high-efficiency heating and cooling systems, improved indoor air quality, and Green Builder concepts from Colorado's Green Builder Program.
Date: March 17, 2000
Creator: Hendron, B.
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crossover from Thermal to Quantum Flux Creep in Various High-Tc Superconducting Thin Films (open access)

Crossover from Thermal to Quantum Flux Creep in Various High-Tc Superconducting Thin Films

None
Date: July 17, 2000
Creator: Jonsson-Akerman, B. J.; Venturini, Eugene L.; Siegal, Michael P.; Yun, S. H.; Karlsson, U. O. & Rao, K. V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
In-situ gamma-PHA measurements to support unconditional release of 235-F chiller units (open access)

In-situ gamma-PHA measurements to support unconditional release of 235-F chiller units

The Analytical Development Section of Savannah River Technology Center (SRTC) was requested by the Facility Decommission Division (FDD) to conduct in-situ gamma-ray pulse height analysis measurements to support the unconditional release of 235-F chiller units. The chiller units were used to cool process water in the 235-F facility. The measurements' main goal is to confirm that there is no process-related contaminants present on the chillers. For each of the two F-area clean water chillers, the authors have acquired ten gamma-ray pulse height analysis spectra. This report will discuss the purpose of the measurements, the experimental setup, data acquisition, calculations and results, and a conclusion of the study.
Date: February 17, 2000
Creator: Salaymeh, S.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tunneling spectroscopy of heavily underdoped crystals of Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub 8+{delta}} (open access)

Tunneling spectroscopy of heavily underdoped crystals of Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub 8+{delta}}

Crystals of Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub 8+{delta}} with optimal {Tc} = 95 K have been underdoped using two different methods and the superconducting gaps have been obtained by tunneling. In some cases, three different tunneling geometries have been utilized: point contact, STM and break junctions. The first doping method involves control of the oxygen content by annealing in various partial pressures of oxygen. These crystals exhibit a narrow spread of gap values over a wide doping range from overdoped ({Tc} = 56 K) to underdoped with {Tc} = 70 K. However, for underdoped crystals with {Tc} midpoints in the range 25 K--63 K, there is a dramatic increase in the spread of gap values which may signal the development of static phase separation of either chemical or electronic origin. To avoid possible chemical phase separation, the authors have explored another doping procedure which incorporates Dy substitution on the Ca site. These crystals exhibit a relatively narrow superconducting transition width and some preliminary tunneling spectra will be presented.
Date: February 17, 2000
Creator: Ozyuzer, L.; Zasadzinski, J. F.; Miyakawa, N.; Kendziora, C.; Jian, S.; Hinks, D. G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced spin-valve giant magneto-resistance in non-exchange biased sandwich films (open access)

Enhanced spin-valve giant magneto-resistance in non-exchange biased sandwich films

A large giant magnetoresistance (GMR) value of 7.5% has been measured in simple NiFeCo(1)/Cu/NiFeCo(2) sandwich films grown on a 30 {angstrom} Cr seed layer. This spin-valve GMR effect is consistent with the differential switching of the two NiFeCo layers due to an enhanced coercivity of the NiFeCo(1) layer grown on the Cr seed layer. A change in growth texture of the NiFeCo(1) layer from fcc (111) to bcc (110) crystallographic orientation leads to an increase in magnetic anisotropy and an enhancement in coercivity. The GMR value increases to 8.7% when a thin CoFe interfacial enhancing layer is incorporated. Further enhancement in GMR values up to 14% is seen in the sandwich films by nano-oxide layer formation. The specular reflection at oxide/magnetic layer interface further extends the mean free path of spin-polarized electrons.
Date: February 17, 2000
Creator: Mao, M; Cerjan, C; Law, B; Grabner, F; Miloslavsky, L & Chien, C
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monolithic integration of GaAs SAW chemical microsensor arrays and detection electronics (open access)

Monolithic integration of GaAs SAW chemical microsensor arrays and detection electronics

The authors describe the integration of an array of surface acoustic wave delay line chemical sensors with the associated RF microelectronics such that the resulting device operates in a DC in/DC out mode. The microelectronics design for on-chip RF generation and detection is presented. Both hybrid and monolithic approaches are discussed. This approach improves system performance, simplifies packaging and assembly, and significantly reduces overall system size. The array design can be readily scaled to include a large number of sensors.
Date: April 17, 2000
Creator: Casalnuovo, Stephen A.; Hietala, Vincent M.; Heller, Edwin J.; Ason, Gregory Charles & Baca, Albert G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
APMS SVD methodology and implementation (open access)

APMS SVD methodology and implementation

One of the main tasks within the Aviation Performance Measurement System (APMS) program uses statistical methodologies to find atypical flights. With thousands of flights a day and hundreds of parameters being recorded every second for each flight, the amount of data escalates and the ability to find atypical flights becomes more difficult. The purpose of this paper is to explain the method known as single value decomposition (SVD) employed to search for the atypical flights and display useful graphics that facilitate understanding the causes of atypicality for these flights. Other methods could also perform this search and some are planned for future implementation.
Date: April 17, 2000
Creator: Amidan, B. G. & Ferryman, T. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Polychromator: A programmable MEMS diffraction grating for synthetic spectra (open access)

The Polychromator: A programmable MEMS diffraction grating for synthetic spectra

The authors report here the design, fabrication and demonstration of an electrostatically actuated MEMS diffractive optical device, the Polychromator grating. The Polychromator grating enables a new type of correlation spectrometer for remote detection of a wide range of chemical species, offering electronic programmability, high specificity and sensitivity, fast response and ruggedness. Significant results include: (1) The first demonstrations of user-defined synthetic spectra in the 3-5 {micro}m wavelength regime based upon controlled deflection of individual grating elements in the Polychromator grating; (2) The first demonstration of gas detection by correlation spectroscopy using synthetic spectra generated by the Polychromator grating.
Date: April 17, 2000
Creator: Hocker, G. B.; Youngner, D.; Butler, Michael A.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Plowman, Thomas E.; Deutsch, E. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High performance zero-bleed CLSM/grout mixes for high-level waste tank closures strategic research and development - FY98 (open access)

High performance zero-bleed CLSM/grout mixes for high-level waste tank closures strategic research and development - FY98

The overall objective of this program, SRD-98-08, is to design and test suitable materials, which can be used to close high-level waste tanks at the Savannah River Site. Fill materials can be designed to perform several functions. They can be designed to chemically stabilize and/or physically encapsulate incidental waste so that the potential for transport of contaminants into the environment is reduced. Also they are needed to physically stabilize the void volume in the tanks to prevent/minimize future subsidence and inadvertent intrusion.
Date: February 17, 2000
Creator: Langton, C.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aequorin as a bioluminescent indicator for use in the determination of biomolecules in single cells. Final technical report (open access)

Aequorin as a bioluminescent indicator for use in the determination of biomolecules in single cells. Final technical report

During this funding period, the laboratories of Drs. Anderson and Daunert have performed a considerable amount of work toward addressing the issues associated with small volume analysis necessary for single cell studies. In that respect, their research has been focused on (1) developing new assays that can be miniaturized and are suitable for small volume and single cell analysis; (2) fabricating pL-vials that simulate the volume of single cells and setting up instrumentation capable of low-volume detection; (3) developing reproducible and reliable microinjection techniques; (4) developing methods of analysis for biomolecules in the pL-vials and employing these assays in the detection of biomolecules in single cells. The accomplishments attained in all these areas are described below. A total of 24 publications and 35 presentations have resulted from this work.
Date: February 17, 2000
Creator: Daunert, Sylvia
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molecular modeling of the structure and dynamics of the interlayer and surface species of mixed-metal layered hydroxides: Chloride and water in hydrocalumite (Friedel's salt) (open access)

Molecular modeling of the structure and dynamics of the interlayer and surface species of mixed-metal layered hydroxides: Chloride and water in hydrocalumite (Friedel's salt)

The dynamical behavior of Cl{sup {minus}} and H{sub 2}O molecules in the interlayer and on the (001) surface of the Ca-aluminate hydrate hydrocalumite (Friedel's salt) over a range of temperatures from {minus}100 to 300 C is studied using the technique of isothermal-isobaric molecular dynamics computer simulations. This phase is currently the best available model compound for other, typically more disordered, mixed-metal layered hydroxides. The computed crystallographic parameters and density are in good agreement with available X-ray diffraction data and the force field developed for these simulations preserves the structure and density to within less than 2% of their measured values. In contrast to the highly ordered arrangement of the interlayer water molecules interpreted from the X-ray data, the simulations reveal significant dynamic disorder in water orientations. At all simulated temperatures, the interlayer water molecules undergo rapid librations (hindered hopping rotations) around an axis essentially perpendicular to the layers. This results in breaking and reformation of hydrogen bonds with the neighboring Cl{sup {minus}} anions and in a time-averaged nearly uniaxial symmetry at Cl{sup {minus}}, in good agreement with recent {sup 35}Cl NMR measurements. Power spectra of translational, vibrational, and vibrational motions of interlayer and surface Cl{sup {minus}} and H{sub 2}O were …
Date: January 17, 2000
Creator: Kalinichev, Andrey G.; Kirkpatrick, R. James & Cygan, Randall T
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catalytic photooxidation of pentachlorophenol using semiconductor nanoclusters (open access)

Catalytic photooxidation of pentachlorophenol using semiconductor nanoclusters

Pentachlorophenol (PCP) is a toxic chlorinated aromatic molecule widely used as fungicide, a bactericide and a wood preservation, and thus ubiquitous in the environment. The authors report photo-oxidation of PCP using a variety of nanosize semiconductor metal oxides and sulfides in both aqueous and polar organic solvents and compare the photo-oxidation kinetics of these nanoclusters to widely studied bulk powders like Degussa P-25 TiO{sub 2} and CdS. They study both the light intensity dependence of PCP photooxidation for nanosize SnO{sub 2} and the size dependence of PCP photooxidation for both nanosize SnO{sub 2} and MoS{sub 2}. They find an extremely strong size dependence for the latter which they attribute to its size-dependent band gap and the associated change in redox potentials due to quantum confinement of the hole-electron pair. The authors show that nanosize MoS{sub 2} with a diameter of d=3.0 nm and an absorbance edge of {approximately}450 nm is a very effective photooxidation catalyst for complete PCP mineralization, even when using only visible light irradiation.
Date: April 17, 2000
Creator: WILCOXON,JESS P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library