Resource Type

Measuring Energy-Saving Retrofits: Experiences from the Texas Loanstar Program (open access)

Measuring Energy-Saving Retrofits: Experiences from the Texas Loanstar Program

In 1988 the Governor`s Energy Management Center of Texas received approval from the US Department of Energy to establish a $98.6 million state-wide retrofit demonstration revolving loan program to fund energy-conserving retrofits in state, public school, and local government buildings. As part of this program, a first-of-its-kind, statewide Monitoring and Analysis Program (MAP) was established to verify energy and dollar savings of the retrofits, reduce energy costs by identifying operational and maintenance improvements, improve retrofit selection in future rounds of the LoanSTAR program, and initiate a data base of energy use in institutional and commercial buildings located in Texas. This report discusses the LoanSTAR MAP with an emphasis on the process of acquiring and analyzing data to measure savings from energy conservation retrofits when budgets are a constraint. This report includes a discussion of the program structure, basic measurement techniques, data archiving and handling, data reporting and analysis, and includes selected examples from LoanSTAR agencies. A summary of the program results for the first two years of monitoring is also included.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Haberl, J. S.; Reddy, T. A.; Claridge, D. E.; Turner, W. D.; O`Neal, D. L. & Heffington, W. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spectral analysis of the turbulent mixing of two fluids (open access)

Spectral analysis of the turbulent mixing of two fluids

The authors describe a spectral approach to the investigation of fluid instability, generalized turbulence, and the interpenetration of fluids across an interface. The technique also applies to a single fluid with large variations in density. Departures of fluctuating velocity components from the local mean are far subsonic, but the mean Mach number can be large. Validity of the description is demonstrated by comparisons with experiments on turbulent mixing due to the late stages of Rayleigh-Taylor instability, when the dynamics become approximately self-similar in response to a constant body force. Generic forms for anisotropic spectral structure are described and used as a basis for deriving spectrally integrated moment equations that can be incorporated into computer codes for scientific and engineering analyses.
Date: February 1996
Creator: Steinkamp, M. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Delta: An object-oriented finite element code architecture for massively parallel computers (open access)

Delta: An object-oriented finite element code architecture for massively parallel computers

Delta is an object-oriented code architecture based on the finite element method which enables simulation of a wide range of engineering mechanics problems in a parallel processing environment. Written in C{sup ++}, Delta is a natural framework for algorithm development and for research involving coupling of mechanics from different Engineering Science disciplines. To enhance flexibility and encourage code reuse, the architecture provides a clean separation of the major aspects of finite element programming. Spatial discretization, temporal discretization, and the solution of linear and nonlinear systems of equations are each implemented separately, independent from the governing field equations. Other attractive features of the Delta architecture include support for constitutive models with internal variables, reusable ``matrix-free`` equation solvers, and support for region-to-region variations in the governing equations and the active degrees of freedom. A demonstration code built from the Delta architecture has been used in two-dimensional and three-dimensional simulations involving dynamic and quasi-static solid mechanics, transient and steady heat transport, and flow in porous media.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Weatherby, J.R.; Schutt, J.A.; Peery, J.S. & Hogan, R.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annual report for RCRA groundwater monitoring projects at Hanford Site facilities for 1995 (open access)

Annual report for RCRA groundwater monitoring projects at Hanford Site facilities for 1995

This report presents the annual hydrogeologic evaluation of 19 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 facilities and 1 nonhazardous waste facility at the US Department of Energy`s Hanford Site. Although most of the facilities no longer receive dangerous waste, a few facilities continue to receive dangerous waste constituents for treatment, storage, or disposal. The 19 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act facilities comprise 29 waste management units. Nine of the units are monitored under groundwater quality assessment status because of elevated levels of contamination indicator parameters. The impact of those units on groundwater quality, if any, is being investigated. If dangerous waste or waste constituents have entered groundwater, their concentration profiles, rate, and extent of migration are evaluated. Groundwater is monitored at the other 20 units to detect leakage, should it occur. This report provides an interpretation of groundwater data collected at the waste management units between October 1994 and September 1995. Groundwater quality is described for the entire Hanford Site. Widespread contaminants include nitrate, chromium, carbon tetrachloride, tritium, and other radionuclides.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Hartman, M.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aging management guideline for commercial nuclear power plants - tanks and pools (open access)

Aging management guideline for commercial nuclear power plants - tanks and pools

Continued operation of nuclear power plants for periods that extend beyond their original 40-year license period is a desirable option for many U.S. utilities. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) approval of operating license renewals is necessary before continued operation becomes a reality. Effective aging management for plant components is important to reliability and safety, regardless of current plant age or extended life expectations. However, the NRC requires that aging evaluations be performed and the effectiveness of aging management programs be demonstrated for components considered within the scope of license renewal before granting approval for operation beyond 40 years. Both the NRC and the utility want assurance that plant components will be highly reliable during both the current license term and throughout the extended operating period. In addition, effective aging management must be demonstrated to support Maintenance Rule (10 CFR 50.65) activities.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Blocker, E.; Smith, S.; Philpot, L. & Conley, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Performance Parallel Processing Project: Industrial computing initiative. Progress reports for fiscal year 1995 (open access)

High Performance Parallel Processing Project: Industrial computing initiative. Progress reports for fiscal year 1995

This project is a package of 11 individual CRADA`s plus hardware. This innovative project established a three-year multi-party collaboration that is significantly accelerating the availability of commercial massively parallel processing computing software technology to U.S. government, academic, and industrial end-users. This report contains individual presentations from nine principal investigators along with overall program information.
Date: February 9, 1996
Creator: Koniges, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Automatic variance reduction for Monte Carlo simulations via the local importance function transform (open access)

Automatic variance reduction for Monte Carlo simulations via the local importance function transform

The author derives a transformed transport problem that can be solved theoretically by analog Monte Carlo with zero variance. However, the Monte Carlo simulation of this transformed problem cannot be implemented in practice, so he develops a method for approximating it. The approximation to the zero variance method consists of replacing the continuous adjoint transport solution in the transformed transport problem by a piecewise continuous approximation containing local biasing parameters obtained from a deterministic calculation. He uses the transport and collision processes of the transformed problem to bias distance-to-collision and selection of post-collision energy groups and trajectories in a traditional Monte Carlo simulation of ``real`` particles. He refers to the resulting variance reduction method as the Local Importance Function Transform (LIFI) method. He demonstrates the efficiency of the LIFT method for several 3-D, linearly anisotropic scattering, one-group, and multigroup problems. In these problems the LIFT method is shown to be more efficient than the AVATAR scheme, which is one of the best variance reduction techniques currently available in a state-of-the-art Monte Carlo code. For most of the problems considered, the LIFT method produces higher figures of merit than AVATAR, even when the LIFT method is used as a ``black box``. …
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Turner, S.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ethnic and gender differences in boredom proneness (open access)

Ethnic and gender differences in boredom proneness

Although boredom may exhibit many shared elements, culturally specific attitudes have also been found to exist. The present paper investigated boredom proneness among African-American college students. Data from 120 participants on the Boredom Proneness (BP) Scale was analyzed and compared to cross-cultural participants. African-American females scored significantly higher than African-American males. Scores were presented from two other studies to show a comparative look at boredom proneness in five other ethnic groups. African-American females are the only female ethnic group to score higher on the BP Scale than their male counterparts. Additionally, overall African-Americans, were found to have higher BP scores than their Western counterparts.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Gibson, G.S. & Morales,
System: The UNT Digital Library
Revitalizing a mature oil play: Strategies for finding and producing unrecovered oil in frio fluvial-deltaic sandstone reservoirs at South Texas. Annual report, October 1994--October 1995 (open access)

Revitalizing a mature oil play: Strategies for finding and producing unrecovered oil in frio fluvial-deltaic sandstone reservoirs at South Texas. Annual report, October 1994--October 1995

The Frio Fluvial-Deltaic Sandstone oil play of South Texas has produced nearly 1 billion barrels of oil, yet it still contains about 1.6 billion barrels of unrecovered mobile oil and nearly the same amount of residual oil resources. Interwell-scale geologic facise models of Frio Fluvial-deltaic reservoirs are being combined with engineering assessments and geophysical evaluations in order to determine the controls that these characteristics exert on the location and volume or unrecovered mobile and residual oil. Progress in the third year centered on technology transfer. An overview of project tasks is presented.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Holtz, M.; Knox, P. & McRae, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
B Plant process piping replacement feasibility study (open access)

B Plant process piping replacement feasibility study

Reports on the feasibility of replacing existing embedded process piping with new more corrosion resistant piping between cells and between cells and a hot pipe trench of a Hanford Site style canyon facility. Provides concepts for replacement piping installation, and use of robotics to replace the use of the canyon crane as the primary means of performing/supporting facility modifications (eg, cell lining, pipe replacement, equipment reinstallation) and operational maintenenace.
Date: February 7, 1996
Creator: Howden, G.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technology development for iron Fischer-Tropsch catalysts. Final technical report, December 18, 1990--December 17, 1993 (open access)

Technology development for iron Fischer-Tropsch catalysts. Final technical report, December 18, 1990--December 17, 1993

This report contains the results of a three year study on the preparation of high surface area iron catalysts using a continuous precipitation technique, of a detailed program designed to define the impact of three pretreatment procedures (CO only, syngas only, or hydrogen followed by syngas) on the physical and chemical changes that the catalyst undergoes during activation, and the impact of catalyst composition and pretreatment on the ultimate activity and selectivity of the catalyst during the synthesis. Overall the results of this three year study attained, or came very close to attaining, the activity, aging and selectivity targets in the Statement of Work. This report also contains a critical review of the literature on the preparation of iron catalysts and their pretreatment for use in Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. Also included is a brief review of the action of promoters in Fischer-Tropsch iron catalysts, the models for chemisorption of CO and H{sub 2}, emphasizing that which is appropriate for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis, and an over-view of the results of testing of iron catalysts for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis activity and product selectivity.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Davis, B. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technology development for iron Fischer-Tropsch catalysts. Final technical report, December 18, 1990--December 17, 1993 (open access)

Technology development for iron Fischer-Tropsch catalysts. Final technical report, December 18, 1990--December 17, 1993

This report contains the results of a three year study on the preparation of high surface area iron catalysts using a continuous precipitation technique, of a detailed program designed to define the impact of three pretreatment procedures (CO only, syngas only, or hydrogen followed by syngas) on the physical and chemical changes that the catalyst undergoes during activation, and the impact of catalyst composition and pretreatment on the ultimate activity and selectivity of the catalyst during the synthesis. Overall the results of this three year study attained, or came very close to attaining, the activity, aging and selectivity targets in the Statement of Work. This report also contains a critical review of the literature on the preparation of iron catalysts and their pretreatment for use in Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. Also included is a brief review of the action of promoters in Fischer-Tropsch iron catalysts, the models for chemisorption of CO and H{sub 2}, emphasizing that which is appropriate for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis, and an over-view of the results of testing of iron catalysts for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis activity and product selectivity.
Date: February 1, 1996
Creator: Davis, B. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library