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SMITH, D.F.
TRW (US). Funding organisation: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (United States)1999
TRW (US). Funding organisation: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (United States)1999
AbstractAbstract
[en] This report provides the results of a review conducted on existing operating specifications and safety requirements and provides a summary of applicable design constraints on the Single-Shell Tank (SST) System. The SST System is required to transition from the current waste storage mission to support the Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) waste retrieval mission described in the Tank Waste Remediation System Mission Analysis Report (Acree 1998). The SST System is also required to support the Project Hanford Management Contract (PHMC) portions of the Waste Feed Delivery (WFD) mission. In Phase 1 the SST System will be required to retrieve waste from selected SSTs (tanks 241-C-102 and 241-C-104) for transfer to the Double-Shell Tank (DST) System (tanks 241-AZ-101,241-AY-102). The SST System will include all the systems, structures and components required to safely store, retrieve, and transfer waste in support of the TWRS mission. Operational Specification Documents (OSDs) govern operation of the existing SST System components. However, the system will be highly modified to support the TWRS mission. Therefore OSD requirements may not apply to the new system's design. This document describes the review of existing SST OSDs and provides the rationale for selecting or rejecting requirements as constraints on the SST System design. The selected requirements (or design constraints) will be included in System Specification for the Single-Shell Tank System, HNF-3912(Conrads 1999)
Primary Subject
Source
7 Oct 1999; 40 p; AC06-96RL13200; Also available from OSTI as DE00798107; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/798107-lFamei/webviewable/
Record Type
Report
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
AbstractAbstract
[en] Observations of the temporal evolution of loop BC in soft x rays in the November 5, 1980 flare are reviewed. Calculations are performed to model this evolution. The most consistent interpretation involving a minimum account of energy is the following. Thermal heating near B gives rise to a conduction front which moves out along the loop uninhibited for about 27 s. Beam heating near C gives rise to a second conduction front which moves in the opposite direction and prevents any energy reaching C by thermal conduction from B. Thus both thermal waves and beam heating are required to explain the observed evolution
Primary Subject
Source
Dennis, B.R.; Orwig, L.E.; Kiplinger, A.L.; National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, MD (USA). Goddard Space Flight Center; vp; 1986; vp; SMM topical workshop on rapid fluctuations in solar flares; Lanham, MD (USA); 30 Sep - 4 Oct 1985; Available from NTIS, PC A21/MF A01
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Conference; Numerical Data
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
Primary Subject
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Advan. Astron. Astrophys; v. 7 p. 147-226
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
SMITH, D.F.
TRW (US). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Environmental Management (EM) (United States)2001
TRW (US). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Environmental Management (EM) (United States)2001
AbstractAbstract
[en] This document describes the performance requirements for the Double-Shell Tank (DST) System. These requirements reflect the projected waste transfers from several case scenarios. These requirements, in turn, will be incorporated into a specification for the DST System
Primary Subject
Source
6 Mar 2001; 219 p; ECN-665413; AC06-96RL13200; Available from PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/806781-1uOrdG/native/
Record Type
Report
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
Primary Subject
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Astrophysical Journal; v. 174(3); p. 643-658
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
SMITH, D.F.
CH2M Hill Hanford Group, Richland, WA (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Environmental Management (EM) (United States)2002
CH2M Hill Hanford Group, Richland, WA (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Environmental Management (EM) (United States)2002
AbstractAbstract
[en] This report represents an initial effort to identify maintenance equipment needed to support critical components used for delivery of waste feed to the Waste Isolation and Treatment Plant (WTP). Rough estimates of cost benefits for selected maintenance capabilities are provided. A follow-on to this report should include a detailed cost analysis showing cost benefits and tradeoffs in selection and development of specific maintenance capabilities. Critical component failures during delivery of waste feed from the DSTs to the WTP have the potential to idle WTP facilities if the duration of the recovery operations are long enough to allow the WTP to exhaust a planned 60-day lag storage capacity for waste feed. If a critical component within the transfer route fails, current planning does not provide for an alternative HLW feed source. Critical components with relatively high failure frequencies and recovery times are identified, along with a summary of documentation regarding historical maintenance and recovery operations and planning. Components, such as mixer pumps and transfer pumps, are estimated to have relatively long recovery times due, in part, to the current practice of sending spare pumps, when needed, off-site to a remote location, for vendor refurbishment and testing prior to installation in a tank. No capability is provided on-site for pump ''run-in''. As neither the spare pumps in storage, installed pumps, or other critical components are subjected to periodic preventive maintenance, and these critical components are planned to be operated intermittently over a long period of time, component failures are to be expected. Recommendations are made for further analysis to identify specific equipment cost benefits, development costs, and tradeoffs in selection of alternatives. This new equipment will provide capabilities for component storage and maintenance in line with vendor recommendations, reduce the duration of recovery operations, and support personnel training and procedure development
Primary Subject
Source
30 Sep 2002; 28 p; EDT-633805; AC27-99RL14047; Available from PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/808265-IPtjiY/native/
Record Type
Report
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
SMITH, D.F.
TRW (US). Funding organisation: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (United States)2000
TRW (US). Funding organisation: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (United States)2000
AbstractAbstract
[en] This document describes the performance requirements for the Double-Shell Tank (DST) System. These requirements reflect the Case 3, Project Planning Case from the Tank Waste Remediation System Operation and Utilization Plan, Revision 1. These requirements, in turn, will be incorporated into a specification for the DST System
Primary Subject
Source
20 Apr 2000; 121 p; ECN-659060; AC06-96RL13200; Also available from OSTI as DE00803063; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/803063-6gpdGN/webviewable/
Record Type
Report
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
Primary Subject
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Astrophysical Journal; v. 174(1); p. 121-134
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
SMITH, D.F.
TRW (US). Funding organisation: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (United States)1999
TRW (US). Funding organisation: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (United States)1999
AbstractAbstract
[en] This report provides the results of a review conducted on existing operating specifications and safety requirements and provides a summary of applicable design constraints on the Single-Shell Tank (SST) System. The SST System is required to transition from the current waste storage mission to support the Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) waste retrieval mission described in the Tank Waste Remediation System Mission Analysis Report (Acree 1998). The SST System is also required to support the Project Hanford Management Contract (PHMC) portions of the Waste Feed Delivery (WFD) mission. In Phase 1 the SST System will be required to retrieve waste from selected SSTs (tanks 241-C-102 and 241-C-104) for transfer to the Double-Shell Tank (DST) System (tanks 241-AZ-101,241-AY-102). The SST System will include all the systems, structures and components required to safely store, retrieve, and transfer waste in support of the TWRS mission. Operational Specification Documents (OSDs) govern operation of the existing SST System components. However, the system will be highly modified to support the TWRS mission. Therefore OSD requirements may not apply to the new system's design. This document describes the review of existing SST OSDs and provides the rationale for selecting or rejecting requirements as constraints on the SST System design. The selected requirements (or design constraints) will be included in System Specification for the Single-Shell Tank System, HNF-3912(Conrads 1999)
Primary Subject
Source
7 Oct 1999; 40 p; AC06-96RL13200; Available from OSTI as DE00798107; www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/798107-VQqivL/native/; www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/798107-lFamei/webviewable/
Record Type
Report
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
External URLExternal URL
AbstractAbstract
[en] With present observations from the Solar Maximum Mission, we are seeing a very selective sample of spatially large flares in the soft part (10 to 50 keV) of the hard x ray spectrum. The spatial resolution is at best 5600 km with a corresponding time resolution of 4.5 s for adequate count statistics. This resolution gives rise to the following problems: We cannot resolve the minor radii of the loops involved or tell where and how the energy release occurs. The manner in which loops interact and the relationship between the soft and hard or approx 00 keV) parts of hard x rays remains elusive. We cannot see how energy propagates in most cases. Thus it is desirable to determine the minimum increase in spatial and temporal resolution required to solve these problems. Spatially we need to resolve the minor radius of a small loop which is about 800 km or 1 arc s. Upper limits to observed speeds of conduction fronts and shocks are approx km/s with theoretical limits running about a factor of 2 higher. Thus, a compatible minimum time resolution is in the range of 0.2 to 0.4 s. With these spatial and temporal resolutions, sufficient count statistics are required to go up to approx 120 keV with a sufficient number of energy bands to obtain spectra
Primary Subject
Source
Tandberg, E.; Wilson, R.M.; Hudson, R.M.; National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Huntsville, AL (USA). George C. Marshall Space Flight Center; vp; Apr 1986; vp; Workshop on solar flares and coronal physics using Pinhole/Occulter Facility as a research tool; Huntsville, AL (USA); 8-10 May 1985; Available from NTIS, PC A14/MF A01
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Conference; Numerical Data
Report Number
Country of publication
Reference NumberReference Number
INIS VolumeINIS Volume
INIS IssueINIS Issue
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