Emily Stein
Sandia National Laboratories
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Featured researches published by Emily Stein.
Archive | 2015
Paul Mariner; Glenn E. Hammond; S. David Sevougian; Emily Stein
This report describes specific GDSA activities in fiscal year 2015 (FY2015) toward the development of the enhanced disposal system modeling and analysis capability for geologic disposal of nuclear waste. The GDSA framework employs the PFLOTRAN thermal-hydrologic-chemical multi-physics code (Hammond et al., 2011) and the Dakota uncertainty sampling and propagation code (Adams et al., 2013). Each code is designed for massively-parallel processing in a high-performance computing (HPC) environment. Multi-physics representations in PFLOTRAN are used to simulate various coupled processes including heat flow, fluid flow, waste dissolution, radionuclide release, radionuclide decay and ingrowth, precipitation and dissolution of secondary phases, and radionuclide transport through the engineered barriers and natural geologic barriers to a well location in an overlying or underlying aquifer. Dakota is used to generate sets of representative realizations and to analyze parameter sensitivity.
Archive | 2015
Teklu Hadgu; Emily Stein; Ernest Hardin; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Glenn E. Hammond
Simulations of thermal-hydrology were carried out for the emplacement of spent nuclear fuel canisters and cesium and strontium capsules using the PFLOTRAN simulator. For the cesium and strontium capsules the analysis looked at disposal options such as different disposal configurations and surface aging of waste to reduce thermal effects. The simulations studied temperature and fluid flux in the vicinity of the borehole. Simulation results include temperature and vertical flux profiles around the borehole at selected depths. Of particular importance are peak temperature increases, and fluxes at the top of the disposal zone. Simulations of cesium and strontium capsule disposal predict that surface aging and/or emplacement of the waste at the top of the disposal zone reduces thermal effects and vertical fluid fluxes. Smaller waste canisters emplaced over a longer disposal zone create the smallest thermal effect and vertical fluid fluxes no matter the age of the waste or depth of emplacement.
Archive | 2018
Paul Mariner; Emily Stein; Elena Arkadievna Kalinina; Teklu Hadgu; Carlos F. Jove-Colon; Eduardo Basurto
Archive | 2017
Paul Mariner; Emily Stein; Jennifer M. Frederick; S. David Sevougian; Glenn E. Hammond
Archive | 2016
Emily Stein; S. David Sevougian; Glenn E. Hammond; Jennifer M. Frederick; Paul Mariner
Archive | 2016
Paul Mariner; Emily Stein; Jennifer M. Frederick; S. David Sevougian; Glenn E. Hammond; D. G. Fascitelli
Archive | 2016
Kristopher L. Kuhlman; Patrick V. Brady; Robert J. MacKinnon; Jason E. Heath; Courtney Grant Herrick; Richard P. Jensen; W. Payton Gardner; S. David Sevougian; Charles R. Bryan; Je-Hun Jang; Emily Stein; Stephen J. Bauer; Tom Daley; Barry M. Freifeld; Jens T. Birkholzer; Frank A. Spane
Archive | 2016
Geoffrey A. Freeze; Emily Stein; Laura L. Price; Robert J. MacKinnon; Jack Bruce Tillman
Archive | 2016
David Sassani; Je-Hun Jang; Paul Mariner; Laura L. Price; Robert P. Rechard; Mark J. Rigali; Ralph Rogers; Emily Stein; Walter M. Walkow; Philippe F. Weck
Archive | 2016
S. David Sevougian; Emily Stein; Michael Gross; Glenn E. Hammond; Jennifer M. Frederick; Paul Mariner