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HVOF: Particle, Flame Diagnostics and Coating Characteristics

Smith, Mark F.

Dual focus laser velocimetry (L2F), photographic techniques, and pressure measurements were used to investigate particle and flame characteristics of a high velocity oxygen/fuel (HVOF) flame spray gun known as CDS''. Velocities of alumina, tungsten carbide, and Triballoy particles within the HVOF effluent stream have been measured using L2F techniques. Photographs of the exiting gases were used to determine the local Mach numbers within the gas stream. Measurements of Mach angles in the photographs were used to determine the actual gas velocity in the free jet of the device. Pressure measurements were made on the HVOF device which enabled calculations of the gas content, R, and the specific heat ratio, {kappa}. These calculations combined with estimates of gas temperature are used to calculate gas velocities at Mach 1 (nozzle exit). The HVOF device was used to produce dense WC/12 wt. % Co and Triballoy T-400 coatings. For the two gas flow conditions examined, higher hardness values and densities were observed for coatings deposited at the higher gas flow rates.

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HERMES III Control and Monitor System, technical reference

Mitchell, R.A.

This report describes the major hardware and software components of the HERMES III Control and Monitor System at the Simulation Technology Laboratory (STL) at Sandia National Laboratories. The HERMES III Control and Monitor System is a computer controlled system that controls and monitors the charging, arming, and firing of the HERMES III accelerator. This documentation is intended to be a general introduction to the system for engineers and technicians involved in the maintenance and modification of the system. It may also be useful to persons interested in designing and constructing a similar control system. This report collects many of the documents produced throughout the project and directs the reader toward other documents written for this project.

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Oxygen Deficiency Monitor System

Devlin, G.L.

This report describes the components and installation of the Oxygen Deficiency Monitor System (ODMS) at the Simulation Technology Laboratory (STL) at Sandia National Laboratories. The ODMS presently monitors the oxygen concentration of the ambient air in the lower levels of the laboratory where air circulation may be insufficient to disperse gases that may settle and accumulate creating an oxygen-deficient environment. The intent of this report is to provide a general introduction to the system for personnel involved in the maintenance and modifications of the system and may be useful to people interested in installing a similar system. This will report describe the hardware components, installation considerations, operation, and maintenance of the system. 6 refs., 5 figs.

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Literature Review of Crud Spallation Source With Application to a Nuclear Waste Repository

Adams, Kenneth G.

The literature is reviewed on the amount and the characteristics of particulate material (crud), that is deposited on Light Water Reactor (LWR) fuel rods and assemblies. Currently available data on crud composition, specific activity, spallation mechanisms, potential environmental release, and particle size distributions is considered. In addition, literature that pertains to the possible impact of crud on repository operations is surveyed. This report consists of rather extensive excerpts from the published literature on crud that may have a bearing on repository risk assessment. Commentary on the possible effects of crud on repository operations and the applicability of available crud information to repository risk analyses is included. In addition, estimates are made of the quantity of crud that might be available for release during the different phases of repository operations. Using these estimates, the total effective dose equivalent is determined at several distances from a release point.

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1989 Environmental monitoring report, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico

Hwang, Hue-Su A.

This 1989 report contains monitoring data from routine radiological and nonradiological environmental surveillance activities. Summaries of significant environmental compliance programs in progress such as National Environmental Policy Act documentation, environmental permits, environmental restoration, and various waste management programs for Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque (SNL, Albuquerque) are included. The maximum offsite dose impact was calculated to be 8.8 {times} 10{sup {minus}4} mrem. The total Albuquerque population received a collective dose of 0.097 person-rem during 1989 from SNL, Albuquerque, operations. As in the previous year, SNL, Albuquerque, operations in 1989 had no adverse impact on the general public or on the environment. 46 refs., 20 figs., 31 tabs.

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1989 environmental monitoring report, Tonopah Test Range, Tonopah, Nevada

Hwang, Hue-Su A.

This report summarizes the environmental surveillance activities conducted by Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Reynolds Electrical and Engineering Company (REECo) for the Tonopah Test Range (TTR) operated by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL). Other environmental compliance programs such as National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), environmental permits, environmental restoration, and waste management programs are also included. The maximum offsite dose impact from 1989 operations was 8.7 {times} 10{sup {minus}4} mrem as a result of an unusual occurrence. The population received a collective dose of 1.2 {times} 10{sup {minus}5} person-rem from this incidence, while the same populations received 4.94 person-rem from natural background radiation. The 1989 SNL, TTR operations had no adverse impact on the general public or the environment. 18 refs., 2 figs., 14 tabs.

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Basic data report for drillholes at the H-11 complex (Waste Isolation Pilot Plant-WIPP)

Mercer, J.W.; Snyder, R.P.

Drillholes H-11b1, H-11b2, and H-11b3 were drilled from August to December 1983 for site characterization and hydrologic studies of the Culebra Dolomite Member of the Upper Permian Rustler Formation at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) site in southeastern New Mexico. In October 1984, the three wells were subjected to a series of pumping tests designed to develop the wells, provide information on hydraulic communication between the wells, provide hydraulic properties information, and to obtain water samples for quality of water measurements. Based on these tests, it was determined that this location would provide an excellent pad to conduct a convergent-flow non-sorbing tracer test in the Culebra dolomite. In 1988, a fourth hole (H-11b4) was drilled at this complex to provide a tracer-injection hole for the H-11 convergent-flow tracer test and to provide an additional point at which the hydraulic response of the Culebra H-11 multipad pumping test could be monitored. A suite of geophysical logs was run on the drillholes and was used to identify different lithologies and aided in interpretation of the hydraulic tests. 4 refs., 6 figs., 6 tabs.

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Far-field dispersal modeling for fuel-air-explosive devices

Glass, Micheal W.

A computer model for simulating the explosive dispersal of a fuel agent in the far-field regime is described and is applied to a wide variety of initial conditions to judge their effect upon the resulting fuel/air cloud. This work was directed toward modeling the dispersal process associated with Fuel-Air-Explosives devices. The far-field dispersal regime is taken to be that time after the initial burster charge detonation in which the shock forces no longer dominate the flow field and initial canister and fuel mass breakup has occurred. The model was applied to a low vapor pressure fuel, a high vapor pressure fuel and a solid fuel. A strong dependence of the final cloud characteristics upon the initial droplet size distribution was demonstrated. The predicted fuel-air clouds were highly non-uniform in concentration. 18 refs., 86 figs., 4 tabs.

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Vindicator ETW-250 test report

Greer, G.S.

The Vindicator ETW-250 taut wire system combines a physical taut wire barrier with an intrusion detection sensor network. The sensor wires deter and/or slow physical entry into protected areas. The sensors themselves generate an alarm if the sensor wires are pulled, spread, cut, or climbed on. This physical motion is converted into an electrical waveform that is analyzed by the processor. The processor then determines if this motion is within the pre-programmed parameters. If it is not, an alarm is generated through a relay back to the monitoring station. Small changes, such as those caused by temperature, are rejected. Installation and testing are described.

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Equipment for potential unattended use in treaty verification applications

Drayer, D.D.

Containment and Surveillance (C/S) equipment, which is used in international safeguards applications, is normally expected to operate unattended within a facility in a host country for extended periods of time. To ensure that this equipment consistently provides high-quality data, the equipment used to ensure the data's integrity must be highly reliable and tamper-resistant. Although designed specifically for use by the International Atomic Energy Agency to comply with the Non-Proliferation Treaty, the equipment has potential applications for both bilateral and multilateral verification schemes for other treaties. This report describes C/S equipment that has been developed by Sandia National Laboratories, and discusses its potential applications. This equipment includes surveillance equipment, seals, monitoring equipment, and authentication equipment. 16 refs., 20 figs.

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Initial reference seal system design: Waste Isolation Pilot Plant

Nowak, E.J.

Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) sealing program results are embodied in the initial seal system strategy and reference design. The design provides a common basis for calculations and analyses so that results can be compared directly. The sealing strategy combines both long- and short-term seal components. Crushed salt is the principal long-term barrier to fluid flow. Short-term seal components are used until creep consolidation is sufficient. Concretes developed specifically for WIPP seals and a swelling clay material that exhibits low permeability to WIPP groundwater and brine have been chosen for the short-term components. A body of evidence exists showing the stability of these materials for the length of time they are required to function. Reference designs are described and drawings are shown for each of the principal multi-component seals. Confidence in the sealing strategy and the reference designs resulted from a combination of laboratory tests, numerical modeling, and in situ demonstrations. The sealing strategy, materials, and designs for the WIPP repository are consistent with the concepts and designs proposed previously for other national and international waste management programs. Past accomplishments and planned activities in the sealing program will produce a detailed conceptual design for the seal system and a seal system performance model. 48 refs., 11 figs., 6 tabs.

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Standardized communication symbols to facilitate circuit design

George, M.; Pierson, L.G.

In the course of communication circuit design at Sandia National Laboratories, a set of communication symbols was created to aid, and hopefully standardize, the design process. These symbols, which allow the designer to build a circuit using black boxes, simplify circuit design and documentation. They also provide a standard set to help minimize interpretation problems among circuit designers. The symbols can be used to represent various devices in a circuit, such as modems, computers, terminals, encryption devices, converters, etc. When using these symbols to design communication circuits, the contours of each symbol show which devices interface together. Mismatch device contours indicate the need for another element (such as a null modem) between the two devices. In addition, the propagation of clock, data, and control signals through the circuit can be represented. Clocking modes on synchronous components (modems, multiplexers, etc.) and signal line crossovers can also be determined from the drawings during the design process. 30 figs.

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High-voltage pulse testing of DSSL (detonator strong safety link) actuator drive cables

Neau, E.L.

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Soft x-ray resist characterization: Studies with a laser plasma x-ray source

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Zeigler, John M.

Little work has been performed to characterize the exposure sensitivity, contrast, and tone of candidate resists for photon energies between 100-300 eV, the range in which projection soft x-ray lithography will be developed. We report here the characterization of near-edge x-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) spectra, exposure sensitivity, contrast, and post-exposure processing of selected polysilane resists at photon energies close to the Si L2,3 absorption edge (100 eV). We find absorption resonance features in the NEXAFS spectra which we assign to excitation into Si-Si and Si-C σ∗ orbitals. Using monochromatized XUV exposures on the Si-Si σ∗ resonance at 105 eV, followed by solvent dissolution development, we have measured the exposure sensitivity curves of these resists. We find sensitivities in the range of 600-3000 mJ/cm2 and contrasts in the range from 0.5-1.4, depending on the polysilane side chain. We have also performed exposure sensitivity measurements at 92 eV, below the edge. Sensitivity decreases slightly compared to 105 eV exposures and the saturation depth and contrast both increase, as expected. We find also that exposing resist films to oxygen after XUV exposure, but before development, increases the sensitivity markedly.

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Solderability testing of Kovar with 60Sn40Pb solder and organic fluxes

Vianco, Paul T.

The solderability of 60Sn40Pb solder on Kovar was examined as a function of surface-cleaning procedure, flux, and solder-bath temperature. Organic-acid fluxes were more effective at lowering the contact angle than was a mildly activated, rosin-based (RMA) flux on chemically etched Kovar. The contact angles were as low as 29{degree} {plus minus} 5{degree} as compared to 61{degree} {plus minus} 11{degree}, respectively. Varying the solder temperature through the range of 215{degree}C to 288{degree}C caused an insignificant change in the contact angle for the RMA flux and a decrease of the contact angle for a candidate water-based, organic-acid flux. The dilution strength of the flux and the elapsed cleaning time significantly influenced the solder-flux interfacial tension, {sub {gamma}LF}. T-peel strengths of Kovar-60Sn40Pb-OFHC copper joints had a low correlation with the contact angle derived from the solderability experiments. The results of the solderability tests and the T-peel mechanical tests, and subsequence microanalysis of the as-soldered and T-peel samples revealed that the best results for the RMA flux were achieved by using an electropolishing procedure and a solder temperature of 240{degree}C to 260{degree}C. A relatively low contact angle of 31{degree} {plus minus} 2{degree} was observed, with no evidence of cracking or thick-film intermetallic formation at the Kovar-solder interface. T-peel strengths were nominally 9.4{degree} {plus minus} 0.5 {times} 10{sup 6} dyn/cm. 21 refs., 36 figs., 11 tabs.

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Wind tunnel study of wake downwash behind A 6% scale model B1-B aircraft

Strickland, James H.

Parachute system performance issues such a turnover and wake recontact may be strongly influenced by velocities induced by the wake of the delivering aircraft, especially if the aircraft is maneuvering at the time of parachute deployment. The effect of the aircraft on the parachute system is a function of the aircraft size, weight, and flight path. In order to provide experimental data for validation of a computer code to predict aircraft wake velocities, a test was conducted in the NASA 14 {times} 22 ft wind tunnel using a 5.78% model of the B-1B strategic bomber. The model was strut mounted through the top of its fuselage by a mechanism which was capable of pitching the model at moderate rates. In this series of tests, the aircraft was pitched at 10{degree}/sec from a cruise angle of attack of 5.3{degree} to an angle of attack of 11{degree} in order to simulate a 2.2g pullup. Data were also taken for the subsequent pitch down sequence back to the cruise angle of attack. Instantaneous streamwise and vertical velocities were measured in the wake at a number of points using a hot wire anemometer. These data have been reduced to the form of downwash coefficients which are a function of the aircraft angle of attack time-history. Unsteady effects are accounted for by use of a wake convection lag-time correlation. 12 refs., 59 figs., 4 tabs.

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Elicitation and use of expert judgment in performance assessment for high-level radioactive waste repositories

Bonano, Evaristo J.

This report presents the concept of formalizing the elicitation and use of expert judgment in the performance assessment of high-level radioactive waste (HLW) repositories in deep geologic formations. The report begins with a discussion of characteristics (advantages and disadvantages) of formalizing expert judgment examples of previous uses of expert judgment in radioactive waste programs, criteria that can assist in deciding when to formalize expert judgment, and the relationship of formal use of expert judgment to data collection and modeling. The current state of the art with respect to the elicitation, use, and communication of formal expert judgment is presented. The report concludes with a discussion on potential applications of formal expert judgment in performance assessment of HLW repositories. 93 refs.

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Operations manual for reading VAK-3 ultrasonic seals using a data acquisition box

Walker, J.E.

As part of a Department of Energy/Commission of European Communities (DOE/CEC) cooperative program, Sandia National Laboratories was asked to develop a portable ultrasonic seal pattern reading system. The system consists of a data acquisition box (DAB), a mechanical reading head, and a portable IBM-compatible PC linked to the DAB by a serial RS-232C communication link. This manual focuses on the DAB subsystem. 8 refs., 13 figs., 8 tabs.

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A users' manual for MCPRAM (Monte Carlo PReprocessor for AMEER) and for the fuze options in AMEER (Aero Mechanical Equation Evaluation Routines)

Lafarge, Robert A.

MCPRAM (Monte Carlo PReprocessor for AMEER), a computer program that uses Monte Carlo techniques to create an input file for the AMEER trajectory code, has been developed for the Sandia National Laboratories VAX and Cray computers. Users can select the number of trajectories to compute, which AMEER variables to investigate, and the type of probability distribution for each variable. Any legal AMEER input variable can be investigated anywhere in the input run stream with either a normal, uniform, or Rayleigh distribution. Users also have the option to use covariance matrices for the investigation of certain correlated variables such as booster pre-reentry errors and wind, axial force, and atmospheric models. In conjunction with MCPRAM, AMEER was modified to include the variables introduced by the covariance matrices and to include provisions for six types of fuze models. The new fuze models and the new AMEER variables are described in this report.

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Implementation of initial tests in the Brine Inflow Room (Room Q) of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant

Nowak, E.J.

The purpose of this report is to summarize for the record the objectives, planning, progress, and documentation of excavating Brine Inflow Room Q and implementing an initial set of Room Q tests. The Room Q tests were designed primarily to test the scale-up accuracy of the current brine inflow model by providing data on brine flow from the host rock salt to a large-scale excavation in the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP). Data from these tests will also be used to reduce uncertainties in flow parameters and evaluate proposed mechanistic models. Room Q was excavated with a tunnel boring machine. The initial tests were implemented to measure brine flow parameters and room closure. Pore pressure, permeability, and brine inflow were measured with 15 tools emplaced in boreholes above, below, and on the north side of the room at a station 75 feet into the host rock from the entrance to the room. These measurements were made before, during, and after Room Q was bored to obtain data on the responses in the host rock to the boring process. Closure measurements were started almost immediately after excavation progressed past each measurement station. The designs, timing, sequence, procedures, and as-built records for these tests were documented in Sandia National Laboratories WIPP Quality Assurance files and Westinghouse WIPP Engineering records. 21 refs., 5 figs., 5 tabs.

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A comparison of CTH predictions with experimental armor/anti-armor data for long rod penetrators in two and three dimensions

Hertel, Eugene S.

CTH is a software system under development at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) to model multidimensional, multi-material, large deformation, strong shock wave physics. One-dimensional rectilinear, cylindrical, and spherical meshes; two-dimensional rectangular, and cylindrical meshes; and three-dimensional rectangular meshes are currently available. A two-step Eulerian solution scheme is used with these meshes. The first step is a Lagrangian step in which the cells distort to follow the material motion. The second step is a remesh step where the distorted cells are mapped back to the original Eulerian mesh. CTH has several thermodynamic models that are used for simulating strong shock, large deformation events. Both tabular and analytic equations of state are available. CTH can model material strength, high explosive detonation, fracture, and motion of fragments smaller than a computational cell. The material strength model is elastic perfectly plastic with thermal softening. A programmed burn model is available for computing the thermodynamic properties of explosive detonation. The Jones-Wilkins-Lee equation of state is available for modelling high explosive reaction products. Fracture can be initiated based on pressure or principle stress. A special model is available for moving fragments smaller than a computational cell with the correct statistical velocity. 7 refs.

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Sandia's CONCEPT-90 photovoltaic concentrator module

Conference Record of the IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference

Chiang, C.J.

A description is given of Sandia's CONCEPT-90 module, which represents a novel type of point-focus photovoltaic concentrator module designed for improved safety, reliability, and performance, and for ease of component fabrication and module assembly. These improvements will combine to decrease the cost of electricity produced by this type of concentrator module. Unique features of the CONCEPT-90 module include encapsulated cell assemblies, simple flat components, and integral use of plastics. The first prototype of this module has been made using back-contact silicon concentrator cells and refractive secondary optical elements. The first prototype module is described, and results from outdoor tests are presented.

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Results 95926–95950 of 96,771
Results 95926–95950 of 96,771