1,101 research outputs found
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Gas-Cooled Reactor Project Quarterly Progress Report for Period Ending June 30, 1960
Report documenting ongoing research and developments at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Gas-Cooled Reactor Project. Design Investigations: The effects on the power distribuestablished. A mathematical model was developed for studying shifting of the coolant stream as it moves along a rod in order to predict the temperatures of the parallel streams as they progress through the reactor. A fuelelement life code developed for computing the internal temperature structure, the amount of fission gas released, the internal pressure, the cladding strain when the internal pressure exceeds the coolant pressure, and the creep damage was used for comparing top-loading and inventedloading fuel programs for the EGCR. A statistical method was developed for estimating the probability that the hot spot on the EGCR fuel element will exceed a given temperature. A method of cooling the EGCR control rods was developed that will minimize diversion of coolant flow through leakage paths between graphite blocks. A preliminary design of a control rod cooled by this method was developed. Means for reducing the thermal stresses in the top head nozzles of the EGCR pressure vessel were studied. The stresses in the graphite sleeves of the EGCR fuel elements were calculated, and the maximum stress was found to be within the allowable limit. A study was made of the thermal stresses in the EGCR pressure-vessel support skirt, and a satisfactory design was developed. Procedures for removing ruthenium and cerium contamination from steel were outlined and incorporated in procedures for decontaminating the EGCR charge and service machines. Experimental information was obtained on the thermal characteristics of the specified EGCR fuel cluster. The effect of relative orientation of adjacent clusters on the heattransfer distribution in the downstream element was studied by means of mass-removal measurements on naphthalene-coated reds. Velocity distributions in the downstream element of two adjacent EGCR-type clusters were determined with Title I H-bar, Title II cylindrical, and Title II conical spiders at various relative orientations. Also contained in this report was a report of Materials Research and Testing:. (For preceding period see ORNL-2929.) (W.D.M.
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Data mining for ontology development.
A multi-laboratory ontology construction effort during the summer and fall of 2009 prototyped an ontology for counterfeit semiconductor manufacturing. This effort included an ontology development team and an ontology validation methods team. Here the third team of the Ontology Project, the Data Analysis (DA) team reports on their approaches, the tools they used, and results for mining literature for terminology pertinent to counterfeit semiconductor manufacturing. A discussion of the value of ontology-based analysis is presented, with insights drawn from other ontology-based methods regularly used in the analysis of genomic experiments. Finally, suggestions for future work are offered
Fukushima Daiichi accident study : status as of April 2012.
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Oak Ridge National Laboratory Report ORNL-6780
Report documenting research and developments made by the Metals and Ceramic Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. This report provides an overview of activities and accomplishsments of the division from October 1992 through December 1993; the division is organized to provide technical support, mainly in the area of high-temperature materials, for technologies being developed by DOE. Activities span the range from basic research to industrial interactions (cooperative research and technology transfer). Sections 1-5 describe the different functional groups (engineering materials, high-temperature materials, materials science, ceramics, nuclear fuel materials). Sect. 6 provides an alternative view of the division in terms of the major programs, most of which cross group lines. Sect. 7 summarizes external interactions including cooperative R and D programs and technology transfer functions. Finally, Sect. 8 briefly describes the division`s involvement in educational activities. Several organizational changes were effected during this period
Measuring the Goodness-of-Fit of Accident Prediction Models
DTFH61-94-Y-00107In developing accidents-flow-roadway design models, the R-squared goodness-of-fit measure has been used by traffic safety engineers and researchers for many years to (1) determine the quality and usability of a model; (2) select covariates (or explanatory variables) for inclusion in the model; (3) make a decision as to whether it would be worthwhile to collect additional covariates; and (4) compare the relative quality of models from different studies. Through computer simulations, this study demonstrated the pitfalls of using R-squared to make these decisions and comparisons. Other goodness-of-fit criteria such as the Akaike Information Criterion, scaled deviance, and Pearson's X-squared statistics were also introduced and evaluated. Based on limited simulation results, one of the alternative criteria called R-squared-alpha was recommended for evaluating and comparing the quality of accident prediction models when sample size is large. Finally, the interrelated and complementary nature of two approaches that have traditionally been used to develop the relationship between run-off-the-road accident frequency and roadside hazards (i.e., accident-based approach and encroachment-based approach) were studied and demonstrated using data from a Federal Highway Administration and Transportation Research Board roadway cross-section design data base. It was suggested that exploring the complementary nature of these two approaches could be a viable avenue to reduce data collection cost
Tracking the Deployment of the Integrated Metropolitan Intelligent Transportation Systems Infrastructure in the USA: FY2000 Results
DTFH61-00-Y-30014This report describes the results of a major data gathering effort aimed at tracking deployment of nine infrastructure components of the metropolitan ITS infrastructure in 78 of the largest metropolitan areas in the nation. The nine components are: Freeway Management, Incident Management, Arterial Management, Electronic Toll Collection, Electronic Fare Payment, Transit Management, Highway-Rail Intersections, Emergency Management, and Regional Multimodal Traveler Information. Deployment is tracked through the use of indicators tied to the major functions of each component. In addition, integration of components is tracked through examining the transfer of information between components and the use of that information, once transferred. The report summarizes results at a national level and includes information on the number of metropolitan areas deploying selected technologies related to the indicators
Preliminary assessment of the irradiation behaviour of the FeCrMnNi High-Entropy Alloy for nuclear applications
In the search for new nuclear materials with improved radiation tolerance and behavior, the high-entropy
alloys (HEAs) have arisen as new candidates for structural components in nuclear reactors due to their
suspected superior stability under irradiation. The metallurgical definition of HEAs is any alloy with
multiple elements, five or more all in equiatomic compositions. The basic principle is the high mixing
entropy of its solid solution lowers the Gibbs free energy giving a strong enhancement of the
microstructural stability at low and high temperatures.
The objective of this project is to assess the irradiation behaviour of the FeCrMnNi HEA system in order
to investigate whether the high entropy effect is responsible for a microstructure with better radiation
resistance compared to conventional alloys. In this work transmission electron microscopy (TEM) with
in-situ ion irradiation has been used at the MIAMI-1 facility at the University of Huddersfield, UK: a 100
kV ion accelerator coupled with a JEOL JEM-2000FX TEM. This methodology allows the evolution of
the HEA microstructure to be studied on the nanoscale during the ion irradiation
Tracking the Deployment of the Integrated Metropolitan Intelligent Transportation Systems Infrastructure in the USA: FY2004 Results
DTFH61-00-Y-30014This report describes the results of a major data gathering effort carried out in the spring and summer of 2004 aimed at tracking deployment of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) technology in metropolitan areas in the United States. Metropolitan ITS is defined in terms of nine infrastructure components: Freeway Management, Incident Management, Arterial Management, Electronic Toll Collection, Electronic Fare Payment, Transit Management, Highway-Rail Intersections, Emergency Management, and Regional Multimodal Traveler Information. Deployment is tracked through the use of indicators tied to the major functions of each component. In addition, integration of components is tracked, the measure being based on a comparison of the reported extent of the transfer of information between components to the maximum possible. The report summarizes results at a national level and includes information on the number of metropolitan areas deploying selected technologies related to the indicators. Two separate metropolitan surveys are included in this report: a survey of 78 major metropolitan areas, and one of 30 medium-sized metropolitan areas
Preliminary assessment of the irradiation behaviour of the FeCrMnNi High-Entropy Alloy for nuclear applications
In the search for new nuclear materials with improved radiation tolerance and behavior, the high-entropy
alloys (HEAs) have arisen as new candidates for structural components in nuclear reactors due to their
suspected superior stability under irradiation. The metallurgical definition of HEAs is any alloy with
multiple elements, five or more all in equiatomic compositions. The basic principle is the high mixing
entropy of its solid solution lowers the Gibbs free energy giving a strong enhancement of the
microstructural stability at low and high temperatures.
The objective of this project is to assess the irradiation behaviour of the FeCrMnNi HEA system in order
to investigate whether the high entropy effect is responsible for a microstructure with better radiation
resistance compared to conventional alloys. In this work transmission electron microscopy (TEM) with
in-situ ion irradiation has been used at the MIAMI-1 facility at the University of Huddersfield, UK: a 100
kV ion accelerator coupled with a JEOL JEM-2000FX TEM. This methodology allows the evolution of
the HEA microstructure to be studied on the nanoscale during the ion irradiation
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