16 results on '"T.W. Wood '
Search Results
2. Genome-wide association identifies nine common variants associated with fasting proinsulin levels and provides new insights into the pathophysiology of type 2 diabetes
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Strawbridge, R.J. Dupuis, J. Prokopenko, I. Barker, A. Ahlqvist, E. Rybin, D. Petrie, J.R. Travers, M.E. Bouatia-Naji, N. Dimas, A.S. Nica, A.C. Wheeler, E. Chen, H. Voight, B.F. Taneera, J. Kanoni, S. Peden, J.F. Turrini, F. Gustafsson, S. Zabena, C. Almgren, P. Barker, D.J.P. Barnes, D. Dennison, E.M. Eriksson, J.G. Eriksson, P. Eury, E. Folkersen, L. Fox, C.S. Frayling, T.M. Goel, A. Gu, H.F. Horikoshi, M. Isomaa, B. Jackson, A.U. Jameson, K.A. Kajantie, E. Kerr-Conte, J. Kuulasmaa, T. Kuusisto, J. Loos, R.J.F. Luan, J. Makrilakis, K. Manning, A.K. Martínez-Larrad, M.T. Narisu, N. Mannila, M.N. Öhrvik, J. Osmond, C. Pascoe, L. Payne, F. Sayer, A.A. Sennblad, B. Silveira, A. Stančcáková, A. Stirrups, K. Swift, A.J. Syvänen, A.-C. Tuomi, T. Van't Hooft, F.M. Walker, M. Weedon, M.N. Xie, W. Zethelius, B. Scott, L.J. Steinthorsdottir, V. Morris, A.P. Dina, C. Welch, R.P. Zeggini, E. Huth, C. Aulchenko, Y.S. Thorleifsson, G. Mcculloch, L.J. Ferreira, T. Grallert, H. Amin, N. Wu, G. Willer, C.J. Raychaudhuri, S. McCarroll, S.A. Hofmann, O.M. Qi, L. Segre, A.V. Van Hoek, M. Navarro, P. Ardlie, K. Balkau, B. Benediktsson, R. Bennett, A.J. Blagieva, R. Boerwinkle, E. Bonnycastle, L.L. Bostrom, K.B. Bravenboer, B. Bumpstead, S. Burtt, N.P. Charpentier, G. Chines, P.S. Cornelis, M. Couper, D.J. Crawford, G. Doney, A.S.F. Elliott, K.S. Elliott, A.L. Erdos, M.R. Franklin, C.S. Ganser, M. Gieger, C. Grarup, N. Green, T. Griffin, S. Groves, C.J. Guiducci, C. Hadjadj, S. Hassanali, N. Herder, C. Johnson, P.R.V. Jorgensen, T. Kao, W.H.L. Klopp, N. Kong, A. Kraft, P. Lauritzen, T. Li, M. Lieverse, A. Lindgren, C.M. Lyssenko, V. Marre, M. Meitinger, T. Midthjell, K. Morken, M.A. Nilsson, P. Owen, K.R. Perry, J.R.B. Petersen, A.-K. Platou, C. Proenca, C. Rathmann, W. Rayner, N.W. Robertson, N.R. Rocheleau, G. Roden, M. Sampson, M.J. Saxena, R. Shields, B.M. Shrader, P. Sigurdsson, G. Sparso, T. Strassburger, K. Stringham, H.M. Sun, Q. Thorand, B. Tichet, J. Van Dam, R.M. Van Haeften, T.W. Van Herpt, T. Van Vliet-Ostaptchouk, J.V. Walters, G.B. Wijmenga, C. Witteman, J.C.M. Bergman, R.N. Cauchi, S. Collins, F.S. Gloyn, A.L. Gyllensten, U. Hansen, T. Hide, W.A. Hitman, G.A. Hofman, A. Hunter, D.J. Hveem, K. Laakso, M. Mohlke, K.L. Morris, A.D. Palmer, C.N.A. Pramstaller, P.P. Rudan, I. Sijbrands, E. Stein, L.D. Tuomilehto, J. Uitterlinden, A.G. Wareham, N.J. Watanabe, R.M. Abecasis, G.R. Boehm, B.O. Campbell, H. Daly, M.J. Hattersley, A.T. Hu, F.B. Meigs, J.B. Pankow, J.S. Pedersen, O. Wichmann, H.-E. Barroso, I. Groop, L. Sladek, R. Thorsteinsdottir, U. Wilson, J.F. Illig, T. Froguel, P. Van Duijn, C.M. Stefansson, K. Altshuler, D. Boehnke, M. McCarthy, M.I. Speliotes, E.K. Berndt, S.I. Monda, K.L. Allen, H.L. Magi, R. Randall, J.C. Vedantam, S. Winkler, T.W. Workalemahu, T. Heid, I.M. Wood, A.R. Weyant, R.J. Estrada, K. Liang, L. Nemesh, J. Park, J.-H. Kilpelainen, T.O. Yang, J. Esko, T. Feitosa, M.F. Kutalik, Z. Mangino, M. Scherag, A. Smith, A.V. Zhao, J.H. Aben, K.K. Absher, D.M. Dixon, A.L. Fisher, E. Glazer, N.L. Goddard, M.E. Heard-Costa, N.L. Hoesel, V. Hottenga, J.-J. Johansson, A. Johnson, T. Ketkar, S. Lamina, C. Li, S. Moffatt, M.F. Myers, R.H. Peters, M.J. Preuss, M. Ripatti, S. Rivadeneira, F. Sandholt, C. Timpson, N.J. Tyrer, J.P. Van Wingerden, S. White, C.C. Wiklund, F. Barlassina, C. Chasman, D.I. Cooper, M.N. Jansson, J.-O. Lawrence, R.W. Pellikka, N. Shi, J. Thiering, E. Alavere, H. Alibrandi, M.T.S. Arnold, A.M. Aspelund, T. Atwood, L.D. Balmforth, A.J. Ben-Shlomo, Y. Bergmann, S. Biebermann, H. Blakemore, A.I.F. Boes, T. Bornstein, S.R. Brown, M.J. Buchanan, T.A. Busonero, F. Cappuccio, F.P. Cavalcanti-Proenca, C. Chen, Y.-D.I. Chen, C.-M. Clarke, R. Coin, L. Connell, J. Day, I.N.M. Den Heijer, M. Duan, J. Ebrahim, S. Elliott, P. Elosua, R. Eiriksdottir, G. Facheris, M.F. Felix, S.B. Fischer-Posovszky, P. Folsom, A.R. Friedrich, N. Freimer, N.B. Fu, M. Gaget, S. Gejman, P.V. Geus, E.J.C. Gjesing, A.P. Goyette, P. Grasler, J. Greenawalt, D.M. Gudnason, V. Hartikainen, A.-L. Hall, A.S. Havulinna, A.S. Hayward, C. Heath, A.C. Hengstenberg, C. Hicks, A.A. Hinney, A. Homuth, G. Hui, J. Igl, W. Iribarren, C. Jacobs, K.B. Jarick, I. Jewell, E. John, U. Jousilahti, P. Jula, A. Kaakinen, M. Kaplan, L.M. Kathiresan, S. Kettunen, J. Kinnunen, L. Knowles, J.W. Kolcic, I. König, I.R. Koskinen, S. Kovacs, P. Kvaloy, K. Laitinen, J. Lantieri, O. Lanzani, C. Launer, L.J. Lecoeur, C. Lehtimaki, T. Lettre, G. Liu, J. Lokki, M.-L. Lorentzon, M. Luben, R.N. Ludwig, B. Manunta, P. Marek, D. Martin, N.G. McArdle, W.L. McCarthy, A. McKnight, B. Melander, O. Meyre, D. Montgomery, G.W. Mulic, R. Ngwa, J.S. Nelis, M. Neville, M.J. Nyholt, D.R. O'Donnell, C.J. O'Rahilly, S. Ong, K.K. Oostra, B. Pare, G. Parker, A.N. Perola, M. Pichler, I. Pietilainen, K.H. Platou, C.G.P. Polasek, O. Pouta, A. Rafelt, S. Raitakari, O. Rayner, N.W. Ridderstrale, M. Rief, W. Ruokonen, A. Rzehak, P. Salomaa, V. Sanders, A.R. Sandhu, M.S. Sanna, S. Saramies, J. Savolainen, M.J. Scherag, S. Schipf, S. Schreiber, S. Schunkert, H. Silander, K. Sinisalo, J. Siscovick, D.S. Smit, J.H. Soranzo, N. Sovio, U. Stephens, J. Surakka, I. Tammesoo, M.-L. Tardif, J.-C. Teder-Laving, M. Teslovich, T.M. Thompson, J.R. Thomson, B. Tonjes, A. Van Meurs, J.B.J. Van Ommen, G.-J. Vatin, V. Viikari, J. Visvikis-Siest, S. Vitart, V. Vogel, C.I.G. Waite, L.L. Wallaschofski, H. Widen, E. Wiegand, S. Wild, S.H. Willemsen, G. Witte, D.R. Xu, J. Zhang, Q. Zgaga, L. Ziegler, A. Zitting, P. Beilby, J.P. Farooqi, I.S. Hebebrand, J. Huikuri, H.V. James, A.L. Kahonen, M. Levinson, D.F. Macciardi, F. Nieminen, M.S. Ohlsson, C. Palmer, L.J. Ridker, P.M. Stumvoll, M. Beckmann, J.S. Boeing, H. Boomsma, D.I. Caulfield, M.J. Chanock, S.J. Cupples, L.A. Smith, G.D. Erdmann, J. Gronberg, H. Hall, P. Harris, T.B. Hayes, R.B. Heinrich, J. Jarvelin, M.-R. Kaprio, J. Karpe, F. Khaw, K.-T. Kiemeney, L.A. Krude, H. Lawlor, D.A. Metspalu, A. Munroe, P.B. Ouwehand, W.H. Penninx, B.W. Peters, A. Quertermous, T. Reinehr, T. Rissanen, A. Samani, N.J. Schwarz, P.E.H. Shuldiner, A.R. Spector, T.D. Uda, M. Valle, T.T. Wabitsch, M. Waeber, G. Watkins, H. Wright, A.F. Zillikens, M.C. Chatterjee, N. Purcell, S. Schadt, E.E. Visscher, P.M. Assimes, T.L. Borecki, I.B. Deloukas, P. Haritunians, T. Kaplan, R.C. O'Connell, J.R. Peltonen, L. Schlessinger, D. Strachan, D.P. North, K.E. Hirschhorn, J.N. Ingelsson, E. Parts, L. Glass, D. Nisbet, J. Barrett, A. Sekowska, M. Potter, S. Grundberg, E. Small, K. Hedman, A.K. Bataille, V. Bell, J.T. Surdulescu, G. Ingle, C. Nestle, F.O. Di Meglio, P. Min, J.L. Wilk, A. Hammond, C.J. Yang, T.-P. Montgomery, S.B. Zondervan, K.T. Durbin, R. Ahmadi, K. Dermitzakis, E.T. Reilly, M.P. Holm, H. Stewart, A.F.R. Barbalic, M. Aherrahrou, Z. Allayee, H. Anand, S.S. Andersen, K. Anderson, J.L. Ardissino, D. Ball, S.G. Barnes, T.A. Becker, D.M. Becker, L.C. Berger, K. Bis, J.C. Boekholdt, S.M. Braund, P.S. Burnett, M.S. Buysschaert, I. Carlquist, J.F. Chen, L. Codd, V. Davies, R.W. Cichon, S. Dedoussis, G.V. Demissie, S. Dehghan, A. Devaney, J.M. Diemert, P. Do, R. Doering, A. Eifert, S. El Mokhtari, N.E. Ellis, S.G. Engert, J.C. Epstein, S.E. De Faire, U. Fischer, M. Freyer, J. Gigante, B. Girelli, D. Gretarsdottir, S. Gulcher, J.R. Halperin, E. Hammond, N. Hazen, S.L. Horne, B.D. Jones, G.T. Jukema, J.W. Kaiser, M.A. Kastelein, J.J.P. Kolovou, G. Laaksonen, R. Lambrechts, D. Leander, K. Li, M. Lieb, W. Loley, C. Lotery, A.J. Mannucci, P.M. Maouche, S. Martinelli, N. McKeown, P.P. Meisinger, C. Merlini, P.A. Mooser, V. Morgan, T. Mühleisen, T.W. Muhlestein, J.B. Münzel, T. Musunuru, K. Nahrstaedt, J. Nelson, C.P. Nöthen, M.M. Olivieri, O. Patel, R.S. Patterson, C.C. Peyvandi, F. Qu, L. Quyyumi, A.A. Rader, D.J. Rallidis, L.S. Rice, C. Rosendaal, F.R. Rubin, D. Sampietro, M.L. Sandhu, M.S. Schadt, E. Schäfer, A. Schillert, A. Schrezenmeir, J. Schwartz, S.M. Sivananthan, M. Sivapalaratnam, S. Smith, T.B. Snoep, J.D. Spertus, J.A. Stark, K. Stoll, M. Wilson Tang, W.H. Tennstedt, S. Thorgeirsson, G. Tomaszewski, M. Van Rij, A.M. Wells, G.A. Wild, P.S. Willenborg, C. Wright, B.J. Ye, S. Zeller, T. Cambien, F. Goodall, A.H. Marz, W. Blankenberg, S. Roberts, R. McPherson, R. Hopewell, J.C. Parish, S. Offer, A. Bowman, L. Sleight, P. Armitage, J. Peto, R. Collins, R. Chambers, J.C. Ahmed, N. Donnelly, P. Kooner, A.S. Scott, J. Sehmi, J. Zhang, W. Kooner, J. Sabater-Lleal, M. Mälarstig, A. Hellénius, M.-L. Olsson, G. Rust, S. Assmann, G. Seedorf, U. Barlera, S. Tognoni, G. Franzosi, M.G. Linksted, P. Ongen, H. Kyriakou, T. Green, F. Farrall, M. Saleheen, D. Rasheed, A. Zaidi, M. Shah, N. Samuel, M. Mallick, N. Azhar, M. Zaman, K. Samad, A. Ishaq, M. Gardezi, A. Memon, F.-U.-R. Frossard, P. Danesh, J. Östenson, C.-G. Lind, L. Cooper, C.C. Serrano-Ríos, M. Ferrannini, E. Forsen, T.J. Pattou, F. Langenberg, C. Hamsten, A. Florez, J.C.
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endocrine system ,endocrine system diseases ,nutritional and metabolic diseases - Abstract
OBJECTIVE - Proinsulin is a precursor of mature insulin and C-peptide. Higher circulating proinsulin levels are associated with impaired b-cell function, raised glucose levels, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes (T2D). Studies of the insulin processing pathway could provide new insights about T2D pathophysiology. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS - We have conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association tests of ;2.5 million genotyped or imputed single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and fasting proinsulin levels in 10,701 nondiabetic adults of European ancestry, with follow-up of 23 loci in up to 16,378 individuals, using additive genetic models adjusted for age, sex, fasting insulin, and study-specific covariates. RESULTS - Nine SNPs at eight loci were associated with proinsulin levels (P < 5 × 10-8). Two loci (LARP6 and SGSM2) have not been previously related to metabolic traits, one (MADD) has been associated with fasting glucose, one (PCSK1) has been implicated in obesity, and four (TCF7L2, SLC30A8, VPS13C/ C2CD4A/B, and ARAP1, formerly CENTD2) increase T2D risk. The proinsulin-raising allele of ARAP1 was associated with a lower fasting glucose (P = 1.7 3 10-4), improved b-cell function (P = 1.1 × 10-5), and lower risk of T2D (odds ratio 0.88; P = 7.8 × 10-6). Notably, PCSK1 encodes the protein prohormone convertase 1/3, the first enzyme in the insulin processing pathway. A genotype score composed of the nine proinsulin-raising alleles was not associated with coronary disease in two large case-control datasets. CONCLUSIONS - We have identified nine genetic variants associated with fasting proinsulin. Our findings illuminate the biology underlying glucose homeostasis and T2D development in humans and argue against a direct role of proinsulin in coronary artery disease pathogenesis. © 2011 by the American Diabetes Association.
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- 2011
3. Organic layer sampling for SST 241-C-103 background, and Data Quality Objectives, and analytical plan
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J.A. Campbell, C.E. Willingham, and T.W. Wood
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Engineering ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Data quality ,Underground storage ,Organic layer ,Sampling (statistics) ,Radioactive waste ,Layer (object-oriented design) ,business ,Flammability ,High-level waste - Abstract
A layer of organic material floating on the surface of the high level radioactive waste in single-shell tank 241-C-103 has been declared an Unreviewed Safety Question (USQ). This designation is motivated by concern that a ``pool fire`` in this layer could release radioactive material from the tank. This layer is believed to consist largely of Tri-Butyl Phosphate (TBP) and Normal Paraffin Hydrocarbon (NPH), but its composition is not known definitively. Resolution of this USQ hinges on a more complete and detailed understanding of the flammability potential of this layer and vapors that could evolve from it, and to a lesser extent on the propagation and energetics of such a pool ire if initiated, and the source-term associated with a release event following a pool fire. This increased understanding of the risk posed by this layer in turn requires better information on its composition. This report documents a Data Quality Objectives (DQO) study conducted to define this information in detail.
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- 1993
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4. Program information architecture/document hierarchy. [Information Management Systems, it's components and rationale]
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T.W. Woods
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Information management ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Program management ,Information architecture ,Data management ,Document management system ,computer.software_genre ,Management information systems ,Engineering management ,Information technology management ,Information system ,Systems engineering ,business ,computer - Abstract
The Nuclear Waste Management System (NWMS) Management Systems Improvement Strategy (MSIS) (DOE 1990) requires that the information within the computer program and information management system be ordered into a precedence hierarchy for consistency. Therefore, the US Department of Energy (DOE). Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management (OCRWM) requested Westinghouse Hanford Company to develop a plan for NWMS program information which the MSIS calls a document hierarchy. This report provides the results of that effort and describes the management system as a program information architecture.'' 3 refs., 3 figs.
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- 1991
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5. Functional process descriptions for the program to develop the Nuclear Waste Management System
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T.W. Woods
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Engineering ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Physical system ,Radioactive waste ,Plan (drawing) ,Engineering management ,Identification (information) ,Program analysis ,Management system ,Systems engineering ,business ,Function (engineering) ,media_common - Abstract
The Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management (OCRWM) is executing a plan for improvement of the systems implemented to carry out its responsibilities under the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 (NWPA). As part of the plan, OCRWM is performing a systems engineering analysis of both the physical system, i.e., the Nuclear Waste Management System (NWMS), and the programmatic functions that must be accomplished to bring the physical system into being. The purpose of the program analysis is to provide a systematic identification and definition of all program functions, functional process flows, and function products necessary and sufficient to provide the physical system. The analysis resulting from this approach provides a basis for development of a comprehensive and integrated set of policies, standard practices, and procedures for the effective and efficient execution of the program. Thus, this analysis will form a basis for revising current OCRWM policies and procedures, or developing new ones is necessary. The primary purposes of this report are as follows: (1) summarizes the major functional processes and process flows that have been developed as a part of the program analysis, and (2) provide an introduction and assistance in understanding the detailed analysis information contained in themore » three volume report titled The Analysis of the Program to Develop the Nuclear Waste Management System (Woods 1991a).« less
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- 1991
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6. MRS (monitored retrievable storage) systems study Task G report: The role and functions of surface storage of radioactive material in the federal waste management system
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C.A. MacKay, T.W. Wood, M.K. Altenhofen, S.M. Short, and M.G. Woodruff
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Engineering ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Management system ,Radioactive waste ,Schedule (project management) ,Decay heat ,business ,Energy source ,Spent nuclear fuel ,Waste management system ,Task (project management) - Abstract
This is one of nine studies undertaken by contractors to the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management (OCRWM), to provide a technical basis for re-evaluating the role of a monitored retrievable storage (MRS) facility. The study investigates the functions that could be performed by surface storage of radioactive material within the federal radioactive waste management system, including enabling acceptance of spent fuel from utility owners, scheduling of waste-preparation processes within the system, enhancement of system operating reliability, and conditioning the thermal (decay heat) characteristics of spent fuel emplaced in a repository. The analysis focuses particularly on the effects of storage capacity and DOE acceptance schedule on power reactors. Figures of merit developed include the storage capacity (in metric tons of uranium (MTU)) required to be added beyond currently estimated maximum spent fuel storage capacities and its associated cost, and the number of years that spent fuel pools would remain open after last discharge (in pool-years) and the cost of this period of operation. 27 refs., 36 figs., 18 tabs.
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- 1989
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7. The relative significance of spinal cord norepinephrine and 5-hydroxytryptamine in electrically-induced seizure in the rat
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M.E. Mims, T.W. Woods, P.F. Geiger, Ray Tb, and P.C. Jobe
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Serotonin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,5,7-Dihydroxytryptamine ,Relative significance ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Norepinephrine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hydroxydopamines ,Seizures ,Internal medicine ,Desipramine ,Fenclonine ,Medicine ,Animals ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Spinal cord ,Electric Stimulation ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Anticonvulsant ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Spinal Cord ,Anesthesia ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The effects of various drug treatments on spinal cord norepinephrine (NE) and 5-hydroxy-tryptamine (5-HT) were compared to the effects of these same treatments on electrically-induced spinal cord seizure. Depletion of NE stores by 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OH-DA) facilitates spinal cord seizures. Desipramine-induced protection of noradrenergic neurones against the depleting effect of 6-OH-DA affords complete protection against seizure facilitation and unmasks an anticonvulsant effect of 6-OH-DA. Depletion of spinal cord 5-HT stores by p-chlorophenylalanine (PCPA) and 5,7-dihydroxy-tryptamine (5,7-DHT) does not enhance spinal cord seizures. Thus, it appears that spinal cord norad-renergic but not 5-hydroxytryptaminergic neurones act as attenuators of seizure activity.
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- 1978
8. Spent fuel acceptance scenarios devoted to shutdown reactors: A preliminary analysis
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S.M. Short, D.G. Dippold, Pacific Northwest Lab., Richland, Wa, A.M. Plummer, and T.W. Wood
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Economic efficiency ,Engineering ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Shutdown ,Radioactive waste ,ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMS ,Environmental economics ,Nuclear power ,Spent nuclear fuel ,Management system ,business ,Energy source ,Waste disposal - Abstract
Spent fuel acceptance schedules and the allocation of federal acceptance capacity among commercial nuclear power reactors have important operational and cost consequences for reactor operators. Alternative allocation schemes were investigated to some extent in DOE's MRS Systems Study. The current study supplements these analyses for a class of acceptance schemes in which the acceptance capacity of the federal radioactive waste management system is allocated principally to shutdown commercial power reactors, and extends the scope of analysis to include considerations of at-reactor cask loading rates. The operational consequences of these schemes for power reactors, as measured in terms of quantity of spent fuel storage requirement above storage pool capacities and number of years of pool operations after last discharge, are estimated, as are the associated utility costs. This study does not attempt to examine the inter-utility equity considerations involved in departures from the current oldest-fuel-first (OFF) allocation rule as specified in the Standard Contract for Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and/or High-Level Radioactive Waste.'' In the sense that the alternative allocations are more economically efficient than OFF, however, they approximate the allocations that could result from free exchange of acceptance rights among utilities. Such a process would result in the preservationmore » of inter-utility equity. 13 refs., 9 figs., 9 tabs.« less
- Published
- 1989
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9. Wood's garden seed special
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T.W. Wood Sons.
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- 1929
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10. 1929 Wood's tested seeds : golden anniversary, 50 years of service
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T.W. Wood Sons.
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Service (business) ,Business ,Management - Published
- 1929
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11. Wood's seeds, 1930
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T.W. Wood Sons.
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- 1930
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12. Plant Wood's seeds for a Victory garden : varieties for the home garden
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T.W. Wood Sons.
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Victory ,Art ,Forest gardening ,Ancient history ,media_common - Published
- 1919
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13. Wood's tested seeds for fall planting, 1930
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T.W. Wood Sons.
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Horticulture ,Sowing - Published
- 1930
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14. Wood's seeds, 1931
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T.W. Wood Sons.
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- 1931
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15. Wood's Virginia grown pedigreed seed corns ; Wood's Virginia-grown ensilage corns [bulletin and price list]
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T.W. Wood Sons.
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- 1931
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16. Discussion on 'Improvements in the production of steel' at the Birmingham Section of the Institution
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E.P. Edwards, H.F. Spinks, N.I. Bond Williams, null Jones, L.W. Waddell, J.C. Edwards, A. McNab, E.T. Cook, T.W. Wood, null White, and L.P. Wiley
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- 1937
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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