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District Heating and Cooling Systems for Communities Through Power Plant Retrofit and Distribution Network, City of Piqua, Ohio: Volume 1 [Executive Summary] (open access)

District Heating and Cooling Systems for Communities Through Power Plant Retrofit and Distribution Network, City of Piqua, Ohio: Volume 1 [Executive Summary]

The goal of the Piqua, Ohio District Heating and Cooling Demonstration Project is to demonstrate the feasibility and efficiency of using cogenerated thermal energy from the City's Municipal Power Plant to provide residential, commercial and industrial space heating and cooling and satisfy other community energy needs as appropriate. Progress in four tasks within this project is reported. These tasks include: development of team work plan resource allocation; identification of thermal energy source market; analysis of energy market; and planning of power plant retrofits. (LCL)
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: Piqua (Ohio)
System: The UNT Digital Library
District Heating and Cooling Systems for Communities Through Power Plant Retrofit and Distribution Network, City of Piqua, Ohio: Volume 2 [Full Report] (open access)

District Heating and Cooling Systems for Communities Through Power Plant Retrofit and Distribution Network, City of Piqua, Ohio: Volume 2 [Full Report]

The feasibility analysis and evaluation of the Piqua, Ohio District Heating and Cooling Demonstration program is being conducted by the Piqua Municipal Power Co., the Piqua Law Dept., the Public Works Dept., a firm of economic analysts, and the Georgia Tech Engineering Dept. This volume contains information on the organization and composition of the demonstration team; characterization of the Piqua community; and the technical, environmental, institutional; financial, and economic assessments of the project. (LCL)
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: Piqua (Ohio)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Near Term Hybrid Passenger Vehicle Development Program. Phase I, Final report. Appendix A: mission analysis and performance specification studies. Volume II. Appendices (open access)

Near Term Hybrid Passenger Vehicle Development Program. Phase I, Final report. Appendix A: mission analysis and performance specification studies. Volume II. Appendices

These appendices to the mission analysis report for the Near Term Hybrid Vehicle program contain data on passenger vehicle usage by purpose, trip length, travel speed, vehicle age, vehicle ownership and fuel economy, and US demographics. (LCL)
Date: May 18, 1979
Creator: Traversi, M. & Barbarek, L.A.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High effectiveness recuperators for flue gas applications (open access)

High effectiveness recuperators for flue gas applications

The design, installation, and performance of a flue gas recuperator at a McGowan reverberatory aluminum remelt furnace are described. (TFD)
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: Coombs, M; Jakubowski, S T & Smith, R K
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wave propagation in viscoelastic media (open access)

Wave propagation in viscoelastic media

The mathematical formulations of the wave propagation problem in a linear viscoelastic solid are reviewed from the point of view of constitutive equations and the theory of linear physical systems. Various general results from the theory of propagating singular surfaces and from the mathematical theory of hyperbolic equations are applied to the analysis of the wave propagation process. The impulse responses of three viscoelastic media are analyzed by use of asymptotic methods. The three material models are the standard linear solid, the standard linear solid with a continuous spectrum of relaxation times, and the power law solid. The standard linear solid with a continuous spectrum of relaxation times and the power law solid have a nearly constant quality factor, Q, over the seismic frequency band. The impulse responses of these two viscoelastic solids are compared. The results show significant and discernible features in the wave profile. It is concluded that differentiation of the models can be made by comparing wave shapes and that a complete knowledge of Q over the entire frequency range is required to determine the wave propagation problem when initiated by an impulsive process. 11 figures, 1 table.
Date: July 18, 1979
Creator: Chin, R.C.Y.
System: The UNT Digital Library
General purpose heat source task group. Final report (open access)

General purpose heat source task group. Final report

The results of thermal analyses and impact tests on a modified design of a /sup 238/Pu-fueled general purpose heat source (GPHS) for spacecraft power supplies are presented. This work was performed to establish the safety of a heat source with pyrolytic graphite insulator shells located either inside or outside the graphite impact shell. This safety is dependent on the degree of aerodynamic heating of the heat source during reentry and on the ability of the heat source capsule to withstand impact after reentry. Analysis of wind tunnel and impact test data result in a recommended GPHS design which should meet all temperature and safety requirements. Further wind tunnel tests, drop tests, and impact tests are recommended to verify the safety of this design. (LCL)
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
10-MWe solar-thermal central-receiver pilot plant: collector subsystem foundation construction. Revision No. 1 (open access)

10-MWe solar-thermal central-receiver pilot plant: collector subsystem foundation construction. Revision No. 1

Bid documents are provided for the construction of the collector subsystem foundation of the Barstow Solar Pilot Plant, including invitation to bid, bid form, representations and certifications, construction contract, and labor standards provisions of the Davis-Bacon Act. Instructions to bidders, general provisions and general conditions are included. Technical specifications are provided for the construction. (LEW)
Date: December 18, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of long pulse physics experiments at LLL: Late 1977-Early 1979 (open access)

Analysis of long pulse physics experiments at LLL: Late 1977-Early 1979

In the two years since the last Gordon Conference, we have shifted our interest in laser-plasma interactions to the long pulse (1 ns) regime on the Argus facility. A variable Z disk series (at 3 x 10/sup 14/ W/cm/sup 2/) has been carried out and the Z dependence of line emission, backscatter, /sub h/ (hot electron temperature) and transport inhibition will be described. A variable thickness Au disk series that studied preheat and shocks will be analyzed. A simple theory for why T/sub h/ scales as Z/sup 1/4/ is presented, and a description of an electron transport experiment through layered disk targets is given.
Date: July 18, 1979
Creator: Rosen, M.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste management analysis for the nuclear fuel cycle: actinide recovery from combustible waste, October 1977-March 1978 (open access)

Waste management analysis for the nuclear fuel cycle: actinide recovery from combustible waste, October 1977-March 1978

Evaluation of the Ce(IV)-NHO/sub 3/ system for recovery of actinides from incinerator ash is continuing. High-fired americium-traced plutonium oxide was completely solubilized in this system and recovery of actinides from incinerator ash was greater than or equal to 95%. Recovery of solubilized plutonium was done by solvent extraction using tributyl phosphate. Tervalent actinides will be recovered by a bidentate organophosphorus solvent extractant. The Ce(IV)-HNO/sub 3/ system was compared with the F/sup -/-HNO/sub 3/ system now in common use. Advantages of the former include less equipment corrosion, no volatilization of silica, and better recovery of actinide in the initial contact. However, additional contacts do not significantly improve recovery (because silica is not solubilized), and the system requires a large liquid/solid ratio for efficient actinide recovery.
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: Thompson, G.H.; Smith, C.M.; Childs, E.L. & Kochen, R.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Identification, detection, and validation of vibrating structures: a signal processing approach (open access)

Identification, detection, and validation of vibrating structures: a signal processing approach

This report discusses the application of modern signal processing techniques to characterize parameters governing the vibrational response of a structure. Simulated response data is used to explore the feasibility of applying these techniques to various structural problems. On-line estimator/indentifiers are used to estimate structural parameters, validate designed structures, and detect structural failure when used with a detector.
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: Candy, J.V. & Lager, D.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hawaii ethanol from molasses project. Report on plant inspections (open access)

Hawaii ethanol from molasses project. Report on plant inspections

Personal inspections were made of several ethanol plants in Europe and the US in order to determine the best commercial processes presently in operation, prepare a conceptual design of a large plant incorporating these processes, describe the processes, and list best estimates of yields, energy requirements, capital costs and operating costs. Information was obtained from fermentation plant manufacturers and alcohol producers concerning their company-sponsored process improvement and new process developments. A summary of the highlights of these observations are included in this report. The inspectors: observed commercial incineration of waste sulfite liquors; observed the pilot plant (not in operation) to incinerate various waste liquors resulting from fermentation of different feedstocks; observed commercial continuous and batch fermentation of beet molasses for the production of ethanol and stillage evaporation to 70% dissolved solids for animal feed; observed pilot plant operation of a new process (Carver-Greenfield process) for handling stillage; observed anhydrous ethanol production from fermentation of sulfite waste liquor using ethyl ether as the dehydrating agent; and observed the safety precautions taken when using this hazardous material.
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: Gibson, W. O.; Mashima, K. I.; Roberts, R. R. & Chen, C. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical review of the Sandia Laboratories' Particle Beam Fusion Program (open access)

Technical review of the Sandia Laboratories' Particle Beam Fusion Program

This report considers the technical aspects of Sandia Laboratories' Particle Beam Fusion Program and examines the program's initial goals, the progress made to date towards reaching those goals, and the future plans or methods of reaching those original or modified goals. A summary of Sandia Laboratories' effort, which seeks to demonstrate that high voltage pulsed power generated high-current electron or light ion beams can be used to ignite a deuterium or tritium pellet, is provided. A brief review and assessment of the Sandia Pulse Power Program is given. Several critical issues and summaries of the committee members' opinions are discussed.
Date: May 18, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of Time Domain PARET to the measured responses of a building (open access)

Application of Time Domain PARET to the measured responses of a building

The application of the Time Domain PARET (TDP) algorithm to data obtained from the measured responses of a three story reinforced concrete building approximately 465 feet long by 220 feet wide by 40 feet high, with 12 to 18 inch thick walls, is described. The measurements were taken by Agbabian Associates, El Segundo, California. The structure was excited by a device developed at Agbabian that uses a mass sliding down a rod to cut metal disks attached to the rod. The result is a series of impulse forces driving the building at the attachment point of the rod. The responses measured were the accelerations at two locations on the structure. A constraint imposed was that the equipment in the building must remain operating during the time the measurements were made.
Date: September 18, 1979
Creator: Lager, D.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Methods of economic analysis applied to fusion research. Third annual report (open access)

Methods of economic analysis applied to fusion research. Third annual report

The current study reported here has involved three separate tasks. The first re-evaluates previous benefit estimates derived, using more realistic rates of discount and other parameter changes. The second task investigates other possible commercial uses of technologies which must be developed in providing commercial fusion power. Several such applications have been identified and potential market sizes estimated. The third task develops a methodology for evaluating the impact of additional projects in support technology RD and D on the value of the overall fusion program. This effort has shown that it is possible to economically prioritize RD and D on those functions which will be required in commercial fusion and to provide economic rationales for program changes. The results of this task indicate substantial benefit from increased pursuit of RD and D in several support technology areas. (MOW)
Date: December 18, 1979
Creator: Hazelrigg, G. A., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
General chemistry division. Quarterly report, January-April 1979. [Tricresyl borate] (open access)

General chemistry division. Quarterly report, January-April 1979. [Tricresyl borate]

The following were studied: scavenging behavior of NO/sub 3//sup -/ and methyl viologen, fluorescent lifetimes of dibromobimane and thiols, spectral determination of tricresyl borate, salicylaldehyde method for differentiation of primary and secondary amines, ammonia-gas-sensing electrodes, automated manometric CHN analyzer, computer program for calibration of graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometer, contamination of alumina insulator, organic additives for stabilizing colloidal silica in hypersaline geothermal brine, x-ray fluorescence analysis of geological samples, dissolution of geothermal scale, and characterization of enzyme-catalyzed reactions (alkaline phosphatase). (DLC)
Date: June 18, 1979
Creator: Harrar, J. (ed.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
West Texas geothermal resource assessment. Part II. Preliminary utilization assessment of the Trans-Pecos geothermal resource. Final report (open access)

West Texas geothermal resource assessment. Part II. Preliminary utilization assessment of the Trans-Pecos geothermal resource. Final report

The utilization potential of geothermal resources in Trans-Pecos, Texas was assessed. The potential for both direct use and electric power generation were examined. As with the resource assessment work, the focus was on the Hueco Tanks area in northeastern El Paso County and the Presidio Bolson area in Presidio County. Suitable users of the Hueco Tanks and Presidio Bolson resource areas were identified by matching postulated temperature characteristics of the geothermal resource to the need characteristics of existing users in each resource area. The amount of geothermal energy required and the amount of fossil fuel that geothermal energy would replace were calculated for each of the users identified as suitable. Current data indicate that temperatures in the Hueco Tanks resource area are not high enough for electric power generation, but in at least part of the Presidio Bolson resource area, they may be high enough for electric power generation.
Date: May 18, 1979
Creator: Gilliland, M. W. & Fenner, L. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finite medium Green's function solutions to nuclide transport in porous media (open access)

Finite medium Green's function solutions to nuclide transport in porous media

Current analytical techniques for predicting the transport of nuclides in porous materials center on the Green's function approach - i.e., determining the response characteristics of a geologic pathway to an impulse function input. To data, the analyses all have set the boundary conditions needed to solve the 1-D transport equation as though each pathway were infinite in length. The purpose of this work is to critically examine the effect that this infinite pathway assumption has on Green's function models of nuclide transport in porous media. The work described herein has directly attacked the more difficult problem of obtaining suitable Green's functions for finite pathways whose dimensions, in fact, may not be much greater than the diffusion length. Two different finite media Green's functions describing the nuclide mass flux have been determined, depending on whether the pathway is terminated by a high or a low flow resistance at the outlet end. Pulse shapes and peak amplitudes have been computed for each Green's function over a wide range of geohydrologic parameters. These results have been compared to both infinite and semi-infinite medium solutions. It was found that predicted pulse shapes are quite sensitive to selection of a Green's function model for short …
Date: April 18, 1979
Creator: Oston, S.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic reaction rates in H/sup -/ and D/sup -/ plasmas (open access)

Atomic reaction rates in H/sup -/ and D/sup -/ plasmas

The processes leading to negative ion production in a hydrogen plasma are reviewed. Dissociative attachment of electrons to highly excited vibrational states of hydrogen molecules appears to be the most probable source of negative ions. The possibility of significant negative ion production via dissociative recombination of H/sub 3//sup +/ with electrons cannot be excluded. The survival probability of vibrationally excited hydrogen molecules in wall collisions may be a critical parameter in interpreting the data.
Date: January 18, 1979
Creator: Hiskes, J.R.; Bacal, M. & Hamilton, G.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solar heating system at the office of Burns/Peters Architects. Final technical report (open access)

Solar heating system at the office of Burns/Peters Architects. Final technical report

A 6000 ft/sup 2/ office building is described which uses 820 ft/sup 2/ of concentrating, tracking solar collectors for domestic water heating and part of the space heating. The piping schematic, major maintenance and construction problems, system performance data, acceptance test, and operation and maintenance manual are included. (MHR)
Date: June 18, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of a 20-kWp photovoltaic concentrator experiment at Fauquier High School, Warrenton, Virginia (open access)

Design of a 20-kWp photovoltaic concentrator experiment at Fauquier High School, Warrenton, Virginia

Solar Corporation designed a photovoltaic concentrator system for Fauquier High School in Warrenton, Virginia, 40 miles west of Washington, DC. The system provides both electrical energy from the photovoltaic modules and thermal energy from the cooling of those modules. Direct current electrical energy from the photovoltaic modules will be first converted to ac and then used to provide power for lighting in the vocational/technical building and the system control building. Instead of being rejected, the thermal energy collected is stored in a 6500-gallon tank for use in the wintertime to provide heat for a greenhouse located adjacent to the array. The photovoltaic system supplies 20 kWp of electrical power by means of 40 6' wide by 10' long parabolic-cylinder collectors mounted in a polar mode. The photovoltaic power is fed into a switching system to feed either photovoltaic power or utility power to nine 2 kW lighting circuits in the vocational technical school and to fan, pump and auxiliary loads in the control building. Conceptual system design, systems analysis, and prototype performance are described. (WHK)
Date: October 18, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of a 20-kWp photovoltaic concentrator experiment at Fauquier High School, Warrenton, VA (open access)

Design of a 20-kWp photovoltaic concentrator experiment at Fauquier High School, Warrenton, VA

The design and systems analysis of the photovoltaic concentrator system for Fauquier High School in Warrenton, Virginia, are presented. The system provides both electrical energy from the photovoltaic modules and thermal energy from the cooling of those modules. The dc electrical energy from the photovoltaic modules will be first converted to ac and then used to provide power for lighting in the vocational/technical building and the system control building. The thermal energy collected is stored in a 6500-gallon tank for use in the wintertime to provide heat for a greenhouse located adjacent to the array. The photovoltaic system supplies 20 kWp of electrical power by means of 40 6' wide by 10' long parabolic-cylinder collectors mounted in a polar mode. (WHK)
Date: October 18, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Abbreviated Machining Schedule for Fabricating Beryllium Parts Free of Surface Damage. (open access)

Abbreviated Machining Schedule for Fabricating Beryllium Parts Free of Surface Damage.

This report addresses a study that was performed to develop a more economical method of machining damage-free beryllium components at Rocky Flats
Date: May 18, 1979
Creator: Beitscher, S.; Capes, J. F.; Leslie, W. W.; Luckow, J. R. & Riegel, R. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some features of Rayleigh scattering from light atoms and ions (open access)

Some features of Rayleigh scattering from light atoms and ions

When photon energies are well below 1 MeV the only significant contribution to elastic (coherent) photon-atom scattering comes from Rayleigh scattering, the elastic scattering of photons from bound atomic electrons. This report discusses the Rayleigh scattering cross sections for atoms and ions of low nuclear charge, particularly for photon energies in the vicinity of the threshold for photoionization from the K-shell. Just below this threshold energy there is a sequence of resonances in the elastic scattering amplitude. Each resonance occurs at an energy corresponding to the excitation of a K-shell electron to a higher unfilled shell. For a multi-electron atom the total cross section can go through a near zero minimum just below the resonance region due to interference between K and L amplitudes. The resonance region expands with increasing ionization, on the low side as more interior shells become unfilled and accessible, and, on the high side as the ionization threshold increases. Above the ionization threshold, in an isonuclear sequence the K-shell amplitudes share a common curve differing only in the position of the threshold. When the K-shell is opened the amplitude departs from this common curve. Above, but near, threshold the imaginary part of the K-shell amplitude is …
Date: July 18, 1979
Creator: Parker, J. C. & Pratt, R. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer automation of continuous-flow analyzers for trace constituents in water. Volume 4. Description of program segments. Part 1. TAAIN. [Technicon AutoAnalyzer] (open access)

Computer automation of continuous-flow analyzers for trace constituents in water. Volume 4. Description of program segments. Part 1. TAAIN. [Technicon AutoAnalyzer]

This report describes TAAIN, the first program in the series of programs necessary in automating the Technicon AutoAnalyzer. A flow chart and sequence list that describes and illustrates each logical group of coding, and a description of the contents and functions of each section and subroutine in the program is included. In addition, all arrays, strings, and variables are listed and defined, and a sample program listing with a complete list of symbols and references is provided.
Date: January 18, 1979
Creator: Crawford, R. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library