Two dimensional NMR and NMR relaxation studies of coal structure (open access)

Two dimensional NMR and NMR relaxation studies of coal structure

This report covers the progress made on the title project for the project period. Four major areas of inquiry are being pursued. Advanced solid state NMR methods are being developed to assay the distribution of the various important functional groups that determine the reactivity of coals. Special attention is being paid to methods that are compatible with the very high magic angle sample spinning rates needed for operation at the high magnetic field strengths available today. Polarization inversion methods utilizing the difference in heat capacities of small groups of spins are particularly promising. Methods combining proton-proton spin diffusion with {sup 13}C CPMAS readout are being developed to determine the connectivity of functional groups in coals in a high sensitivity relay type of experiment. Additional work is aimed a delineating the role of methyl group rotation in the proton NMR relaxation behavior of coals.
Date: May 27, 1992
Creator: Zilm, K.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental mechanisms in flue gas conditioning (open access)

Fundamental mechanisms in flue gas conditioning

This project is divided into four tasks. The Management Plan was developed in task 1. Task 2, Evaluation of Mechanisms in FGD Sorbent and Ash Interactions, focuses on the characteristics of binary mixtures of these distinct powders. Task 3, Evaluation of Mechanisms in Conditioning Agents and Ash, is designed to examine the effects of various conditioning agents on fine ash particles to determine the mechanisms by which these agents alter the physical properties of the ash. Tasks 2 and 3 began with an extensive literature search and the assembly of existing theories. This phase of the project is now complete. During the past quarter, initial preparations of laboratory equipment for laboratory testing have been made. A plan for initial laboratory tests has been submitted to the Project Manager for review. Laboratory testing will commence once these laboratory plans have been formally approved. The results of the work performed under task 2 and 3 will be included in a Flue Gas Conditioning Model that will be issued under task 4. The Final Report for the project will also be prepared under task 4.
Date: April 27, 1992
Creator: Snyder, T. R.; Robinson, M. S. & Bush, P. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Information systems for engineering sustainable development (open access)

Information systems for engineering sustainable development

The ability of a country to follow sustainable development paths is determined to a large extent by the capacity or capabilities of its people and its institutions. Specifically, capacity-building in the UNCED terminology encompasses the country's human, scientific, technological, organizational, institutional, and resource capabilities. A fundamental goal of capacity-building is to enhance the ability to pose, evaluate and address crucial questions related to policy choices and methods of implementation among development options. As a result the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) Agenda 21 planning process has identified the need for better methods by which information can be transferred between industrialized nations and developing nations. The reasons for better methods of information transfer include facilitating decisions related to sustainable development and building the capacity of developing nations to better plan their future in both an economical and environmentally sound manner. This paper is a discussion on mechanisms for providing information and technologies available for presenting the information to a variety of cultures and levels of technical literacy. Consideration is given to access to information technology as well as to the cost to the user. One concept discussed includes an Engineering Partnership'' which brings together the talents and resources …
Date: February 27, 1992
Creator: Leonard, R.S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of well test data---Application of probabilistic models to infer hydraulic properties of fractures. [Contains list of standardized terminology or nomenclatue used in statistical models] (open access)

Analysis of well test data---Application of probabilistic models to infer hydraulic properties of fractures. [Contains list of standardized terminology or nomenclatue used in statistical models]

Statistical and probabilistic methods for estimating the probability that a fracture is nonconductive (or equivalently, the conductive-fracture frequency) and the distribution of the transmissivities of conductive fractures from transmissivity measurements made in single-hole injection (well) tests were developed. These methods were applied to a database consisting of over 1,000 measurements made in nearly 25 km of borehole at five sites in Sweden. The depths of the measurements ranged from near the surface to over 600-m deep, and packer spacings of 20- and 25-m were used. A probabilistic model that describes the distribution of a series of transmissivity measurements was derived. When the parameters of this model were estimated using maximum likelihood estimators, the resulting estimated distributions generally fit the cumulative histograms of the transmissivity measurements very well. Further, estimates of the mean transmissivity of conductive fractures based on the maximum likelihood estimates of the model's parameters were reasonable, both in magnitude and in trend, with respect to depth. The estimates of the conductive fracture probability were generated in the range of 0.5--5.0 percent, with the higher values at shallow depths and with increasingly smaller values as depth increased. An estimation procedure based on the probabilistic model and the maximum likelihood …
Date: September 27, 1991
Creator: Osnes, J. D. (RE/SPEC, Inc., Rapid City, SD (United States)); Winberg, A.; Andersson, J. E. & Larsson, N. A. (Sveriges Geologiska AB, Goeteborg (Sweden))
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The 40th AAAS Gordon Conference on nuclear chemistry (open access)

The 40th AAAS Gordon Conference on nuclear chemistry

I am pleased to speak at the Fortieth Gordon Conference on Nuclear Chemistry. I served as Chairman of the first Gordon Conference on Nuclear Chemistry held June 23--27, 1952, at New Hampton, New Hampshire. In my remarks, during which I shall quote from my journal, I shall describe some of the background leading up to the first Gordon Conference on Nuclear Chemistry and my attendance at the first seven Gordon Conferences during the period 1952 through 1958. I shall also quote my description of my appearance as the featured speaker at the Silver Anniversary of the Gordon Research Conferences on December 27, 1956 held at the Commodore Hotel in New York City. I shall begin with reference to my participation in the predecessor to the Gordon Conferences, the Gibson Island Research Conferences 45 years ago, on Thursday, June 20, 1946, as a speaker. This was 15 years after the start of these conferences in 1931. Neil Gordon played a leading role in these conferences, which were named (in 1948) in his honor -- the Gordon Research Conferences -- soon after they were moved to Colby Junior College, New London, New Hampshire in 1947. W. George Parks became Director in 1947, …
Date: June 27, 1991
Creator: Seaborg, G. T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Baseline design/economics for advanced Fischer-Tropsch technology (open access)

Baseline design/economics for advanced Fischer-Tropsch technology

The objectives of the study are to: Develop a baseline design for indirect liquefaction using advanced Fischer-Tropsch (F-T) technology. Prepare the capital and operating costs for the baseline design. Develop a process flowsheet simulation (PFS) model. The baseline design, the economic analysis, and the computer model will be the major research planning tools that Pittsburgh Energy Technology Center will use to plan, guide, and evaluate its ongoing and future research and commercialization programs relating to indirect coal liquefaction for the manufacture of synthetic liquid fuels from coal.
Date: April 27, 1992
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applications of Micellar Enzymology to Clean Coal Technology. [Laccase] (open access)

Applications of Micellar Enzymology to Clean Coal Technology. [Laccase]

This project is designed to develop methods for pre-combustion coal remediation by implementing recent advances in enzyme biochemistry. The novel approach of this study is incorporation of hydrophilic oxidative enzymes in reverse micelles in an organic solvent. Enzymes from commercial sources or microbial extracts are being investigated for their capacity to remove organic sulfur from coal by oxidation of the sulfur groups, splitting of C-S bonds and loss of sulfur as sulfuric acid. Dibenzothiophene (DBT) and ethylphenylsulfide (EPS) are serving as models of organic sulfur-containing components of coal in initial studies.
Date: April 27, 1990
Creator: Walsh, C. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Vertical Scanning Long Trace Profiler: A Tool for Metrology of X-Ray Mirrors. (open access)

Vertical Scanning Long Trace Profiler: A Tool for Metrology of X-Ray Mirrors.

None
Date: July 27, 1997
Creator: Li, H.; Takacs, P. Z. & Oversluizen, T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structure and thermochemical kinetic studies of coal pyrolysis (open access)

Structure and thermochemical kinetic studies of coal pyrolysis

The overall objectives of this project is an intensive effort on the application of laser to the microscopic structure and thermochemical kinetic studies of coal particles pyrolysis, char combustion and ash transformation at combustion level that fluxes in a laser beam. Research emphasis in FY91 is placed on setup and calibration of the laser pyrolysis system, preparation and mass loss studies of Beulah lignite and subbituminous coals. The task is therefore divided into three subtasks. 4 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: August 27, 1991
Creator: Dodoo, J.N.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of contractors' personnel security clearances at the DOE Field Office, Albuquerque (open access)

Review of contractors' personnel security clearances at the DOE Field Office, Albuquerque

The DOE Field Office, Albuquerque (AL) Personnel Security Operations Division was responsible for ensuring that the need to access classified information was limited to persons with proper security clearance levels. The responsibility included justifying that need as well as designating, granting, and rescinding employees {prime} clearances based on the Department of Energy's (Department) access requirements. The purpose of this audit was to determine if the Department unnecessarily granted Q security clearances to Management and Operating (M O) contractor employees who did not have a need to access classified information.
Date: September 27, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design criteria for Waste Coolant Processing Facility and preliminary proposal 722 for Waste Coolant Processing Facility (open access)

Design criteria for Waste Coolant Processing Facility and preliminary proposal 722 for Waste Coolant Processing Facility

This document contains the design criteria to be used by the architect-engineer (A-E) in the performance of Titles 1 and 2 design for the construction of a facility to treat the biodegradable, water soluble, waste machine coolant generated at the Y-12 plant. The purpose of this facility is to reduce the organic loading of coolants prior to final treatment at the proposed West Tank Farm Treatment Facility.
Date: September 27, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A note on the automated differentiation of implicit functions (open access)

A note on the automated differentiation of implicit functions

This paper answers the question: Can automated differentiation be used on functions that are defined implicitly, recursively, or iteratively Consider, for example, the simple function x(m) defined by the equation, x(m) {equals} cos(m{center dot}x(m)).
Date: June 27, 1991
Creator: Michelotti, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Signals from cosmic ray sources, some statistical issues (open access)

Signals from cosmic ray sources, some statistical issues

The possible existence of discrete sources of cosmic rays is presently one of the main topics of study in non-accelerator particle physics. The search is being conducted in a wide variety of experiments using UHE-{gamma} rays, VHE-{gamma} rays, EeV particles, underground {mu}'s and {nu}'s. The current experimental situation, however, can be described as chaotic. The number of claimed observations of sources by different groups using a variety of experimental techniques is quite large, but a consistent interpretation of the various results has failed to emerge. Most of the observations rely on either on dc excess'' from the direction of the source, a periodicity of the events from that direction, or some combination of these two effects. In the first section of this paper, we discuss some of the techniques that may be used in searching for a dc excess. We review two common bin free tests of the light curves. We discuss a particular problem involving phase coherence when doing a period search. This paper discusses some of the issues and meanings involved in combining probabilities from more than one test. Prescribing the right'' way to do analysis is certainly beyond this paper's scope. However some of the issues and …
Date: October 27, 1990
Creator: Goodman, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Audit of New Mexico gross receipts taxes paid by DOE Field Office, Albuquerque Management and Operating contractors (open access)

Audit of New Mexico gross receipts taxes paid by DOE Field Office, Albuquerque Management and Operating contractors

The purpose of the audit was to assess whether the Department and its M O contractors had established controls to assure that the contractors accurately computed their tax liability and issued certificates when appropriate. The audit objectives were to determine if the Department and its M O contractors (1) incurred unnecessary New Mexico gross receipts tax, and (2) complied with laws and regulations concerning their taxes. This report discusses the findings of the audit. (JL)
Date: September 27, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Workshop on technology issues of superconducting Maglev transportation systems (open access)

Workshop on technology issues of superconducting Maglev transportation systems

There exists a critical need in the United States to improve its ground transportation system. One suggested system that offers many advantages over the current transportation infrastructure is Maglev. Maglev represents the latest evolution in very high and speed ground transportation, where vehicles are magnetically levitated, guided, and propelled over elevated guideways at speeds of 300 miles per hour. Maglev is not a new concept but is, however, receiving renewed interest. The objective of this workshop was to further promote these interest by bringing together a small group of specialists in Maglev technology to discuss Maglev research needs and to identify key research issues to the development of a successful Maglev system. The workshop was organized into four sessions based on the following technical areas: Materials, Testing, and Shielding; Magnet Design and Cryogenic Systems; Propulsion and Levitation Systems; and, System Control and Integration.
Date: September 27, 1991
Creator: Wegrzyn, J.E. (Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, NY (United States)) & Shaw, D.T. (New York State Inst. of Superconductivity, Buffalo, NY (United States))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
(Durability of building materials and components) (open access)

(Durability of building materials and components)

The traveler participated in the fourth meeting of RILEM 100-TSL, Techniques for Service Life Prediction,'' and The Fifth International Conference on Durability of Building Materials and Components.'' In addition, the traveler met with staff members at Taywood Engineering Ltd., Electricite de France, and AEA Technology. The meeting pertained to performance of concrete materials in nuclear power plant structures, time variation of concrete material properties, methods for evaluating concrete structures, and modeling to predict the effects of degradation factors on concrete materials. As many of the concrete structures in general civil engineering applications as well as nuclear power plant applications in Europe are aging, there is increasing emphasis on assessing the durability of these structures. Information was provided of direct application to the Structural Aging Program which would not have been available without these visits. Of equal, or possibly more importance, was the individual contacts established at the organizations visited. Each organization was extremely interested in both the approach and scope of the Structural Aging Program and requested that they be informed of progress. The initial steps were taken to cooperate with several of these researchers and this should help the Structural Aging Program keep abreast of related European activities. In …
Date: November 27, 1990
Creator: Naus, D.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Systematic effects in CALOR simulation code to model experimental configurations (open access)

Systematic effects in CALOR simulation code to model experimental configurations

CALOR89 code system is being used to simulate test beam results and the design parameters of several calorimeter configurations. It has been bench-marked against the ZEUS, D{theta} and HELIOS data. This study identifies the systematic effects in CALOR simulation to model the experimental configurations. Five major systematic effects are identified. These are the choice of high energy nuclear collision model, material composition, scintillator saturation, shower integration time, and the shower containment. Quantitative estimates of these systematic effects are presented. 23 refs., 6 figs., 7 tabs.
Date: March 27, 1991
Creator: Job, P.K.; Proudfoot, J. (Argonne National Lab., IL (USA)); Handler, T. (Tennessee Univ., Knoxville, TN (USA). Dept. of Physics and Astronomy) & Gabriel, T.A. (Oak Ridge National Lab., TN (USA))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of advanced NO sub x control concepts for coal-fired utility boilers (open access)

Development of advanced NO sub x control concepts for coal-fired utility boilers

CombiNO{sub x} is an integration of three technologies: modified reburning, promoted selective noncatalytic reduction (SNCR) and methanol injection. These technologies are combined to achieve high levels of NO{sub x}, emission reduction from coal fired power plants equipped with SO{sub 2} scrubbers. The first two steps, modified reburning and promoted SNCR are linked. It has been shown that, performance of the SNCR agent is dependent upon local oxidation of CO. Reburning is used to generate the optimum amount of CO to promote the SNCR agent, although lower levels of reburning are needed than are traditionally applied in the reburning process. If the reburn fuel is natural gas, the combination of reburning and SNCR may result in a significant cost savings over conventional reburning. The third step, injection of methanol into the flue gas, is used to convert NO to NO{sub 2} which may subsequently be removed in a wet scrubber.
Date: May 27, 1992
Creator: Evans, A.; Newhall, J.; England, G. & Seeker, W. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental studies of fusion plasmas (open access)

Fundamental studies of fusion plasmas

Work on ICRF interaction with the edge plasma is reported. ICRF generated convective cells have been established as an important mechanism for influencing edge transport and interaction with the H-mode, and for controlling profiles in the tokamak scrape-off-layer. Power dissipation by rf sheaths has been shown to be significant for some misaligned ICRF and IIBW antenna systems. Near-field antenna sheath work has been extended to the far-field case, important for experiments with low single pass absorption. Impurity modeling and Faraday screen design support has been provided for the ICRF community. In the area of core-ICRF physics, the kinetic theory of heating by applied ICRF waves has been extended to retain important geometrical effects relevant to modeling minority heated tokamak plasmas, thereby improving on the physics base that is standard in presently employed codes. Both the quasilinear theory of ion heating, and the plasma response function important in wave codes have been addressed. In separate studies, it has been shown that highly anisotropic minority heated plasmas can give rise to unstable field fluctuations in some situations. A completely separate series of studies have contributed to the understanding of tokamak confinement physics. Additionally, a diffraction formalism has been produced which will be …
Date: April 27, 1993
Creator: Aamodt, R. E.; Catto, P. J.; D'Ippolito, D. A.; Myra, J. R. & Russell, D. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental mechanisms in flue gas conditioning (open access)

Fundamental mechanisms in flue gas conditioning

This project is divided into four tasks. We developed our management plan in Task 1. Task 2, evaluation of mechanisms in FGD sorbent and ash interactions, focuses on characteristics of binary mixtures of these distinct powders. Task 3, evaluation of mechanisms in conditioning agents and ash, is designed to examine effects of various conditioning agents on fine ash particles to determine mechanisms by which these agents alter physical properties of ash. We began Tasks 2 and 3 with an extensive literature search and assembly of existing theories. We completed this phase of the project with publication of two special Topical Reports. Our laboratory analyses during the past quarter covered a variety of topics. We quantified increases in surface area, changes in particle morphology, and increases in cohesivity that result when sorbents are mixed with ashes. Measurements of water content illustrated the increased tendency of the mixtures to adsorb and absorb water. Our analyses of leached and unleached dust cake ashes provided some interesting insights into effects that compounds adsorbed on surfaces of ash particles can have on bulk ash behavior. We also observed the effects that pozzolanic reactions can have on ash resistivity. Initial examinations of outputs of the SRI-EPA …
Date: October 27, 1992
Creator: Snyder, T. R. & Vann Bush, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The design of the AIE: An object-oriented application development system (open access)

The design of the AIE: An object-oriented application development system

Three years ago, in response to our challenging development context, the Advanced Modeling and Analysis Section designed and implemented an object-oriented environment -- the Application Interface Engine (AIE). Our prototyping requirements forced existing application development systems beyond their capabilities. Programmers at AMAS and its contractors have developed over twenty applications using AIE. Our initial experience has been very positive. AIE extends an object-oriented programming language with syntax and classes to support applications specification. This extended system improves all stages of the application engineering life cycle, from rapid prototyping to long term maintenance.
Date: February 27, 1992
Creator: Fuja, R.S. & Widing, M.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
CANVAS: C++ objects for easy graphics on an Evans and Sutherland PS390 terminal (open access)

CANVAS: C++ objects for easy graphics on an Evans and Sutherland PS390 terminal

The C++ classes described in this note comprise an attempt to provide an object-oriented approach, and if there was ever a graphics terminal naturally suited to object-oriented programming, the PS390 is it. Since a canvas is not a program but a variable to be used in programs, users can write software to suit their particular needs. By simply declaring canvas variables the application program is provided with an object which accepts data and displays it automatically. Any number of canvases can be placed anywhere on the screen, so data can be viewed in a variety of ways simultaneously. Further, the real-time'' transformation capabilities of the PS390 are activated in one step by connecting'' its external devices, the dials and the puck, to the desired canvas. There is no need for the applications programmer to construct his own function networks, choose names for nodes, and do any of the other administrative tasks laid out in the manuals, including connecting the terminal to a host computer and initializing it. These are handled automatically by the canvases themselves, thus removing this clutter from the application program.
Date: August 27, 1990
Creator: Michelotti, Leo & Kick, Richard
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bench-scale co-processing (open access)

Bench-scale co-processing

The objective of this contract is to extend and optimize UOP's single-stage slurry-catalyzed co-processing scheme. Particular emphasis is given to defining and improving catalyst utilization and costs, evaluating alternative and disposable slurry-catalyst systems, and improving catalyst recycle and recovery techniques. The work during this quarter involved a series of temperature studies with different concentrations of Mo slurry catalyst. The results of bench-scale Runs 26 and 27 are discussed in the following report. 25 figs.
Date: March 27, 1990
Creator: Nafis, D.A.; Gatsis, J.G.; Lea, C. & Miller, M.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fermion loops in the effective potential of N = 1 supergravity, with application to no-scale models (open access)

Fermion loops in the effective potential of N = 1 supergravity, with application to no-scale models

Powerful and quite general arguments suggest that N = 1 supergravity, and in particular the superstring-inspired no-scale models, may describe the physics of the four-dimensional vacuum at energy densities below the Planck scale. These models are not renormalizable, since they arise as effective theories after the large masses have been integrated out of the fundamental theory; thus, they have divergences in their loop amplitudes that must be regulated by imposing a cutoff. Before physics at experimental energies can be extracted from these models, the true vacuum state or states must be identified: at tree level, the ground states of the effective theories are highly degenerate. Radiative corrections at the one-loop level have been shown to break the degeneracy sufficiently to identify the states of vanishing vacuum energy. As the concluding step in a program to calculate these corrections within a self-consistent cutoff prescription, all fermionic one-loop divergent corrections to the scalar effective potential are evaluated. (The corresponding bosonic contributions have been found elsewhere.) The total effective scalar Lagrange density for N = 1 supergravity is written down, and comments are made about cancellations between the fermionic and bosonic loops. Finally, the result is specialized to a toy no-scale model with …
Date: March 27, 1990
Creator: Burton, J.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library