Proceedings of fifth annual North American waste-to-energy conference (open access)

Proceedings of fifth annual North American waste-to-energy conference

The 73 papers are grouped under the following headings: evolution of WTE utilization (global look); utility restructuring panel; recycling issues; retrofits & emissions characteristics; implementation issues; assessment of emission and ash management regulations (global report); emerging issues & technologies; risk communications; emissions measurement & monitoring; ash utilization; fluidized bed combustion; emissions control; regulatory issues; research & emerging technologies; retrofits & advanced technologies; health & safety. Selected papers are indexed separately for inclusion in the Energy Science and Technology Database.
Date: August 1997
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy supply and demand in Texas for the period 1950--1973. Project S/D-1, final report (open access)

Energy supply and demand in Texas for the period 1950--1973. Project S/D-1, final report

The energy production and consumption data show a pattern of increased reliance on crude oil and natural gas as primary energy sources. Early production of coal diminished as natural gas became readily available. Hydropower has been developed at several multipurpose dam sites, but is less than one percent of the total Texas electric power capacity. Power plants have been fired primarily with natural gas, but recent developments have caused the substitution of fuel oil, and plans for new capacity include both nuclear and coal fired units. The trends in consumption of energy show several important factors in the economics of energy. Residential use of electricity has grown rapidly and was accompanied by large increases in per capita home heating and air conditioning and electrical appliances, and by a declining real price of electricity. Texas consumers also greatly increased their per capita use of gasoline during the 1950-1973 period with increases in the per capita ownership of automobiles and near constant real prices for gasoline. Both trends (electricity and gasoline use per capita) grew at a faster rate in Texas than for the U.S. The concentration of petroleum refining and chemical manufacturing industries in Texas has made these industries and the …
Date: August 1, 1974
Creator: Grubb, H. H. & Holloway, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy study of rail passenger transportation. Volume 2. Description of operating systems. Final report (open access)

Energy study of rail passenger transportation. Volume 2. Description of operating systems. Final report

The rail passenger systems of the US are described in terms of selected physical, operating, and economic characteristics, and relates services rendered to energy usage and costs. Rail passenger transportation exists in 4 distinct forms: intercity railroads, suburban railroads, heavy-rail transit, and light-rail transit. Each form varies in technical equipment, design of facilities, operating practices, size of systems. Specific data for the national rail passenger network and the Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco regions and the Washington Metropolitan area transit authority are presented.
Date: August 1, 1979
Creator: Henderson, C.; Ellis, H. T. & Wilhelm, J. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy situation in the Mid-Atlantic region (open access)

Energy situation in the Mid-Atlantic region

This report presents a review of the energy situation in the Mid-Atlantic Region. It describes the patterns of energy production, supply and demand by state and compares these to national and regional averages. It presents a picture of existing energy and environmental interactions and a view of potential energy and environmental conflicts. A review of the major issues by energy sector is included as is a description of the existing energy actors and major energy programs for Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Delaware, Maryland, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, and Washington, DC.
Date: August 1, 1977
Creator: Munson, J S & Brainard, J P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Survey and screening of intermediate-size photovoltaic total energy and electric applications (open access)

Survey and screening of intermediate-size photovoltaic total energy and electric applications

One of the principal objectives of this photovoltaic mission analysis effort has been to identify and evaluate applications for photovoltaic solar energy conversion that could lead to significant contributions to the national energy supply and that would provide attractive opportunities for application experiments aimed at stimulating the adoption of photovoltaic technology. The scope of the study has included applications both for electric-only photovoltaic (PV) systems and for photovoltaic total energy systems (PTES), i.e., systems that provide both photovoltaic electricity and solar thermal energy to meet all or part of the energy demand at a single load point or a group of related load points. In either case, both flat-plate and concentrating systems have been considered and it has been assumed that the thermal energy is collected in and transported by the fluid used in an active cooling system for the photovoltaic cells. Because the efficiency of photovoltaic devices decreases rapidly with increasing temperature and because the operational lifetime of such devices is reduced by prolonged operation at elevated temperatures, a practical upper limit of about 200/sup 0/C (400/sup 0/F) was assumed for the temperature at which arrays can be allowed to be operated. This limitation, in turn, places an upper …
Date: August 1, 1978
Creator: Rattin, E. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the Symposium on Thermonuclear Fusion Reactor Design, June 2- 5, 1970. (open access)

Proceedings of the Symposium on Thermonuclear Fusion Reactor Design, June 2- 5, 1970.

None
Date: August 1, 1970
Creator: Kristiansen, M. & Hagler, M. O.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Emergency preparedness source term development for the Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards-Licensed Facilities (open access)

Emergency preparedness source term development for the Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards-Licensed Facilities

In order to establish requirements for emergency preparedness plans at facilities licensed by the Office of Nuclear Materials Safety and Safeguards, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) needs to develop source terms (the amount of material made airborne) in accidents. These source terms are used to estimate the potential public doses from the events, which, in turn, will be used to judge whether emergency preparedness plans are needed for a particular type of facility. Pacific Northwest Laboratory is providing the NRC with source terms by developing several accident scenarios for eleven types of fuel cycle and by-product operations. Several scenarios are developed for each operation, leading to the identification of the maximum release considered for emergency preparedness planning (MREPP) scenario. The MREPP scenarios postulated were of three types: fire, tornado, and criticality. Fire was significant at oxide fuel fabrication, UF/sub 6/ production, radiopharmaceutical manufacturing, radiopharmacy, sealed source manufacturing, waste warehousing, and university research and development facilities. Tornadoes were MREPP events for uranium mills and plutonium contaminated facilities, and criticalities were significant at nonoxide fuel fabrication and nuclear research and development facilities. Techniques for adjusting the MREPP release to different facilities are also described.
Date: August 1, 1984
Creator: Sutter, S. L.; Mishima, J.; Ballinger, M. Y. & Lindsey, C. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Combustion Byproducts Recycling Consortium (open access)

Combustion Byproducts Recycling Consortium

The overall objective of this research effort was to provide a potentially commercial thermal treatment of fly ash to decrease the interaction between fly ash and the surfactants used to entrain air in concrete when fly ash replaces a portion of the Portland cement in oncrete. The thermal treatment resulting from this research effort, and described in this report, fulfill the above objective. This report describes the thermal treatment developed and applies the treatment to six different fly ashes subsequently used to prepare concrete test cylinders hat show little or no difference in compressibility when compared to concrete test cylinders prepared using untreated fly ash.
Date: August 31, 2008
Creator: Ziemkiewicz, Paul; Vandivort, Tamara; Pflughoeft-Hassett, Debra; Chugh, Y. Paul & Hower, James
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Materials used in new generation vehicles: supplies, shifts, and supporting infrastructure (open access)

Materials used in new generation vehicles: supplies, shifts, and supporting infrastructure

The Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles (PNGV) program intends to develop new designs for automobiles that will reduce fuel consumption by two thirds but otherwise have price, comfort, safety, and other measures of performance similar to the typical automobile now on the market. PNGV vehicle designs are expected to substitute lightweight materials, such as aluminum, magnesium, carbon-reinforced polymer composites, glass-reinforced polymer composites, and ultra- light steel, for heavier materials such as steel and iron in automobile components. The target mass of a PNGV vehicle is 1,960 pounds, as compared to the average current vehicle that weights 3,240 pounds. Other changes could include the use of different ferrous alloys, engineering changes, or incorporation of advanced ceramic components. Widespread adoption of these vehicle designs would affect materials markets and require concurrent development and adoption of supporting technologies to supply the materials and to use and maintain them in automobiles. This report identifies what would be required to bring about these changes and developments in materials substitution; identifies reasons that might make these substitutions difficult to accomplish within the overall objectives and timetable of the PNGV program; and identifies any issues arising from the substitution that could prompt consideration of policies …
Date: August 1, 1997
Creator: Das, S.; Curlee, T.R. & Schexnayder, S.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transportation energy strategy: Project {number_sign}5 of the Hawaii Energy Strategy Development Program (open access)

Transportation energy strategy: Project {number_sign}5 of the Hawaii Energy Strategy Development Program

This study was prepared for the State Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism (DBEDT) as part of the Hawaii Energy Strategy program. Authority and responsibility for energy planning activities, such as the Hawaii Energy Strategy, rests with the State Energy Resources Coordinator, who is the Director of DBEDT. Hawaii Energy Strategy Study No. 5, Transportation Energy Strategy Development, was prepared to: collect and synthesize information on the present and future use of energy in Hawaii`s transportation sector, examine the potential of energy conservation to affect future energy demand; analyze the possibility of satisfying a portion of the state`s future transportation energy demand through alternative fuels; and recommend a program targeting energy use in the state`s transportation sector to help achieve state goals. The analyses and conclusions of this report should be assessed in relation to the other Hawaii Energy Strategy Studies in developing a comprehensive state energy program. 56 figs., 87 tabs.
Date: August 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monthly energy review, August 1994 (open access)

Monthly energy review, August 1994

Energy production during May 1994 totaled 5.6 quadrillion Btu, a 2.4-percent increase from the level of production during May 1993. Coal production increased 13.3 percent, natural gas production rose 1.7 percent, and petroleum production decreased 2.5 percent. All other forms of energy production combined were down 8.3 percent from the level of production during May 1993. Energy consumption during May 1994 totaled 6.6 quadrillion Btu, 3.6 percent above the level of consumption during May 1993. Natural gas consumption increased 8.7 percent, coal consumption rose 4.6 percent, and petroleum consumption was up 3.6 percent. Consumption of all other forms of energy combined decreased 5.8 percent from the level 1 year earlier. Net imports of energy during May 1994 totaled 1.5 quadrillion Btu, 14.3 percent above the level of net imports 1 year earlier. Net imports of petroleum increased 8.4 percent, and net imports of natural gas were up 23.2 percent. Net exports of coal fell 16.8 percent from the level in May 1993.
Date: August 29, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis and forecast of electrical distribution system materials. Final report: Volume 2. Task reports (open access)

Analysis and forecast of electrical distribution system materials. Final report: Volume 2. Task reports

This report documents the methodology and the results of a one-year study on the availability of input materials for electrical distribution equipment.
Date: August 23, 1976
Creator: Love, C. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactivity in consumer products (open access)

Radioactivity in consumer products

Papers presented at the conference dealt with regulations and standards; general and biological risks; radioluminous materials; mining, agricultural, and construction materials containing radioactivity; and various products containing radioactive sources.
Date: August 1, 1978
Creator: Moghissi, Alan A.; Paras, Peter; Carter, Melvin W. & Barker, Robert F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of federal incentives used to stimulate energy consumption (open access)

Analysis of federal incentives used to stimulate energy consumption

The purpose of the analysis is to identify and quantify Federal incentives that have increased the consumption of coal, oil, natural gas, and electricity. The introductory chapter is intended as a device for presenting the policy questions about the incentives that can be used to stimulate desired levels of energy development. In the theoretical chapter federal incentives were identified for the consumption of energy as Federal government actions whose major intent or result is to stimulate energy consumption. The stimulus comes through changing values of variables included in energy demand functions, thereby inducing energy consumers to move along the function in the direction of greater quantity of energy demanded, or through inducing a shift of the function to a position where more energy will be demanded at a given price. The demand variables fall into one of six categories: price of the energy form, price of complements, price of substitutes, preferences, income, and technology. The government can provide such incentives using six different policy instruments: taxation, disbursements, requirements, nontraditional services, traditional services, and market activity. The four major energy forms were examined. Six energy-consuming sectors were examined: residential, commercial, industrial, agricultural, transportation, and public. Two types of analyses of incentive …
Date: August 1, 1981
Creator: Cole, R.J.; Cone, B.W.; Emery, J.C.; Huelshoff, M.; Lenerz, D.E.; Marcus, A. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transportation Energy Databook: Edition 17 (open access)

Transportation Energy Databook: Edition 17

The Transportation Energy Data Book: Edition 17 is a statistical compendium prepared and published by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) under contract with the Office of Transportation Technologies in the Department of Energy (DOE). Designed for use as a desk-top reference, the data book represents an assembly and display of statistics and information that characterize transportation activity, and presents data on other factors that influence transportation energy use. The purpose of this document is to present relevant statistical data in the form of tables and graphs. Each of the major transportation modes is treated in separate chapters or sections. Chapter 1 compares U.S. transportation data with data from other countries. Aggregate energy use and energy supply data for all modes are presented in Chapter 2. The highway mode, which accounts for over three-fourths of total transportation energy consumption is dealt with in Chapter 3. Topics in this chapter include automobiles, trucks, buses, fleet vehicles, federal standards, fuel economies, and high- occupancy vehicle lane data. Household travel behavior characteristics are displayed in Chapter 4. Chapter 5 contains information on alternative fuels and alternative fuel vehicles. Chapter 6 covers the major nonhighway modes: air, water, and rail. The last chapter, Chapter 7, …
Date: August 1, 1997
Creator: Davis, S.C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Sciences Division. Annual progress report for period ending September 30, 1975 (open access)

Environmental Sciences Division. Annual progress report for period ending September 30, 1975

The energy crisis and creation of ERDA were dominant factors affecting the activities of the Environmental Sciences Division during the past year. Efforts primarily centered on coal conversion effluents, aquatic effects from power plants, terrestrial modeling of both radioactive and nonradioactive waste transport, mineral cycling, forest management, and information handling codes and techniques. A bibliography of publications, presentation, these, and other professional activities is included. (PCS)
Date: August 1, 1976
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measuring the Economic Impacts of Federal Investments in Research (open access)

Measuring the Economic Impacts of Federal Investments in Research

Measuring the Economic Impacts of Federal Investments in Research evaluates approaches to measuring the returns on federal research investments. This report identifies new methodologies and metrics that can be developed and used for assessing returns on research across a wide range of fields (biomedical, information technology, energy, agriculture, environment, and other biological and physical sciences, etc.), while using one or more background papers that review current methodologies as a starting point for the discussion. It focuses on tools that are able to exploit available data in the relatively near term rather than on methodologies that may require substantial new data collection. Over the last several years, there has been a growing interest in policy circles in identifying the payoffs from federal agency research investments, especially in terms of economic growth, competitiveness, and jobs. The extraordinary increase in research expenditures under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 and the President’s commitment to science and technology (S&T) funding increases going forward have heightened the need for measuring the impacts of research investments. Without a credible analysis of their outcomes, the recent and proposed increases in S&T funding may not be sustained, especially given competing claims for federal funding and …
Date: August 31, 2011
Creator: Olson, S & Merrill, S
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Factors Relevant to Utility Integration of Intermittent Renewable Technologies (open access)

Factors Relevant to Utility Integration of Intermittent Renewable Technologies

This study assesses factors that utilities must address when they integrate intermittent renewable technologies into their power-supply systems; it also reviews the literature in this area and has a bibliography containing more than 350 listings. Three topics are covered: (1) interface (hardware and design-related interconnection), (2) operability/stability, and (3) planning. This study finds that several commonly held perceptions regarding integration of intermittent renewable energy technologies are not valid. Among fmdings of the study are the following: (1) hardware and system design advances have eliminated most concerns about interface, (2) cost penalties have not occurred at low to moderate penetration levels (and high levels am feasible); and (3) intermittent renewable energy technologies can have capacity values. Obstacles still interfering with intermittent renewable technologies are also indentified.
Date: August 24, 1993
Creator: Wan, Y. & Parsons, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Program report for FY 1984 and 1985 Atmospheric and Geophysical Sciences Division of the Physics Department (open access)

Program report for FY 1984 and 1985 Atmospheric and Geophysical Sciences Division of the Physics Department

This annual report for the Atmospheric and Geophysical Sciences Division (G-Division) summarizes the activities and highlights of the past three years, with emphasis on significant research findings in two major program areas: the Atmospheric Release Advisory Capability (ARAC), with its recent involvement in assessing the effects of the Chernobyl reactor accident, and new findings on the environmental consequences of nuclear war. The technical highlights of the many other research projects are also briefly reported, along with the Division's organization, budget, and publications.
Date: August 1, 1986
Creator: Knox, J. B.; MacCracken, M. C.; Dickerson, M. H.; Gresho, P. M. & Luther, F. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spatial analysis method of assessing water supply and demand applied to energy development in the Ohio River Basin (open access)

Spatial analysis method of assessing water supply and demand applied to energy development in the Ohio River Basin

The focus of the study is on water availability for energy development in the Ohio River Basin; however, the techniques developed are applicable to water supply investigations for other regions and uses. The study assesses the spatial association between water supply and demand for future energy development in the Basin. The problem is the development of a method that accurately portrays the actual spatial coincidence of water availability and use within a basin. The issues addressed involve questions of scale and methods used to create a model distribution of streamflow and to compare it with projected patterns of water requirements for energy production. The analysis procedure involves the compilation of streamflow data and calculation of 7-day/10-year low-flow estimates within the Basin. Low-flow probabilities are based on historical flows at gaging stations and are adjusted for the effects of reservoir augmentation. Once streamflow estimates have been determined at gaging stations, interpolation of these values is made between known data points to enable direct comparison with projected energy water-use data. Finally, a method is devised to compare the patterns of projected water requirements with the model distribution of streamflow, in sequential downstream order.
Date: August 1, 1979
Creator: Shepherd, A.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Controlling the atom. The beginnings of nuclear regulation 1946--1962 (open access)

Controlling the atom. The beginnings of nuclear regulation 1946--1962

This book traces the early history of nuclear power regulation in the US. It focuses on the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), the federal agency that until 1975 was primarily responsible for planning and carrying out programs to protect public health and safety from the hazards of the civilian use of nuclear energy. It also describes the role of other groups that figured significantly in the development of regulatory policies, including the congressional Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, federal agencies other than the AEC, state governments, the nuclear industry, and scientific organizations. And it considers changes in public perceptions of and attitudes toward atomic energy and the dangers of radiation exposure. The context in which regulatory programs evolved is a rich and complex mixture of political, legislative, legal, technological, scientific, and administrative history. The basic purpose of this book is to provide the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), which inherited responsibility for nuclear safety after Congress disbanded the AEC, and the general public with information on the historical antecedents and background of regulatory issues.
Date: August 1, 1997
Creator: Mazuzan, G. T. & Walker, J. S.
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemistry Division: Annual progress report for period ending March 31, 1987 (open access)

Chemistry Division: Annual progress report for period ending March 31, 1987

This report is divided into the following sections: coal chemistry; aqueous chemistry at high temperatures and pressures; geochemistry of crustal processes to high temperatures and pressures; chemistry of advanced inorganic materials; structure and dynamics of advanced polymeric materials; chemistry of transuranium elements and compounds; separations chemistry; reactions and catalysis in molten salts; surface science related to heterogeneous catalysis; electron spectroscopy; chemistry related to nuclear waste disposal; computational modeling of security document printing; and special topics. (DLC)
Date: August 1, 1987
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quarterly coal report, January--March 1994 (open access)

Quarterly coal report, January--March 1994

The Quarterly Coal Report (QCR) provides comprehensive information about US coal production, distribution, exports, imports, receipts, prices, consumption, and stocks to a wide audience, including Congress, Federal and State agencies, the coal industry, and the general public. Coke production, consumption, distribution, imports, and exports data are also provided. The data presented in the QCR are collected and published by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) to fulfill data collection and dissemination responsibilities as specified in the Federal Energy Administration Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-275), as amended. This report presents detailed quarterly data for January through March 1994 and aggregated quarterly historical data for 1986 through the fourth quarter of 1993. Appendix A displays, from 1986 on, detailed quarterly historical coal imports data, as specified in Section 202 of the Energy Policy and Conservation Amendments Act of 1985 (Public Law 99-58). Appendix B gives selected quarterly tables converted to metric tons.
Date: August 24, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of industrial minerals and rocks in the controlled area (open access)

Assessment of industrial minerals and rocks in the controlled area

Yucca Mountain in Nye County, Nevada, is a potential site for a permanent repository for high-level nuclear waste in Miocene ash flow tuff. The Yucca Mountain controlled area occupies approximately 98 km{sup 2} that includes the potential repository site. The Yucca Mountain controlled area is located within the southwestern Nevada volcanic field, a large area of Miocene volcanism that includes at least four major calderas or cauldrons. It is sited on a remnant of a Neogene volcanic plateau that was centered around the Timber Mountain caldera complex. The Yucca Mountain region contains many occurrences of valuable or potentially valuable industrial minerals, including deposits with past or current production of construction aggregate, borate minerals, clay, building stone, fluorspar, silicate, and zeolites. The existence of these deposits in the region and the occurrence of certain mineral materials at Yucca Mountain, indicate that the controlled area may have potential for industrial mineral and rock deposits. Consideration of the industrial mineral potential within the Yucca Mountain controlled area is mainly based on petrographic and lithologic studies of samples from drill holes in Yucca Mountain. Clay minerals, zeolites, fluorite, and barite, as minerals that are produced economically in Nevada, have been identified in samples from …
Date: August 1, 1996
Creator: Castor, S. B. & Lock, D. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library