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DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING OF INDUSTRIAL SCALE, COAL FIRED COMBUSTION SYSTEM, PHASE 3 (open access)

DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING OF INDUSTRIAL SCALE, COAL FIRED COMBUSTION SYSTEM, PHASE 3

In the second half of calendar year 1998, no work was performed on the present project. The 20 MMBtu/hr combustor-boiler facility was operated for 11 tests, primarily with Coal Tech resources on biomass combustion and gasification. The total test days on the Philadelphia facility to the end of August 1998 was 119. Of these, 36 tests were part of another DOE project on sulfur retention is slag, and 8 were on an in-house biomass combustion effort. The test days on the other project are listed here because they demonstrate the durability of the combustor, which is one of the objectives of the present project. Also, the test work of 1998 revealed for the first time the major potential of this combustor for biomass combustion. These tests are double the 63 tests in the original plan for this project. All key project objectives have been exceeded including combustor durability, automated combustor operation, NO{sub x} emissions as low as 0.07 lb/MMBtu and SO{sub 2} emissions as low as 0.2 lb/MMBtu. In addition, a novel post-combustion NOx control process has been tested on a 37 MW and 100 MW utility boiler. The only effort remaining on this project is facility disassembly and Final …
Date: March 11, 1999
Creator: Zauderer, Dr. Bert
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inter-Laboratory Uranium Double-Spike Experiment (open access)

Inter-Laboratory Uranium Double-Spike Experiment

In environmental samples, the major analytical limitation on the use of uranium {sup 238}U/{sup 235}U determinations as an indicator of uranium enrichment is mass dependent bias occurring during the measurement. The double-spike technique can be used to correct the data for this effect. The purpose of this experiment was to evaluate the variation of mass bias among several laboratories and to determine the extent to which the double-spike could be used to reduce analytical uncertainty. Four laboratories performed replicate analyses on each of three samples. Generally mass bias was determined to be small compared to the random scatter of the measurements, but in at least one case, the bias was > 1%. In 8 of 12 cases, intra-laboratory variance was reduced when the double-spike correction was applied. For all three samples, the inter-laboratory variance was decreased, though the decrease was small. Based on a reasonable assumption about the true isotopic compositions of the samples, the accuracy of 11 of the twelve analyses was improved by applying the double spike correction. When the double spike is used to correct for mass bias, the {sup 238}U/{sup 235}U accuracy is better than 1% even for samples as small as 1 ng. For 50 …
Date: November 11, 1999
Creator: Russ, G. P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive air emissions notice of construction for deactivation of the PUREX storage tunnel number 2 (open access)

Radioactive air emissions notice of construction for deactivation of the PUREX storage tunnel number 2

The Plutonium-Uranium Extraction (PUREX) Plant Storage Tunnel Number 2 (hereafter referred to as the PUREX Tunnel) was built in 1964. Since that time, the PUREX Tunnel has been used for storage of radioactive and mixed waste. In 1991, the PUREX Plant ceased operations and was transitioned to deactivation. The PUREX Tunnel continued to receive PUREX Plant waste material for storage during transition activities. Before 1995, a decision was made to store radioactive and mixed waste in the PUREX Tunnel generated from other onsite sources, on a case-by-case basis. This notice of construction (NOC) describes the activities associated with the reactivation of the PUREX Tunnel ventilation system and the transfer of up to 3.5 million curies (MCi) of radioactive waste to the PUREX Tunnel from any location on the Hanford Site. The unabated total effective dose equivalent (TEDE) estimated for the hypothetical offsite maximally exposed individual (MEI) is 5.6 E-2 millirem (mrem). The abated TEDE conservatively is estimated to account for 1.9 E-5 mrem to the MEI. The following text provides information requirements of Appendix A of Washington Administrative Code (WAC) 246-247 (requirements 1 through 18).
Date: October 11, 1999
Creator: Johnson, R. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance Test Procedure for New Pumping and Instrumentation Control Skid L (open access)

Acceptance Test Procedure for New Pumping and Instrumentation Control Skid L

This Acceptance Test Procedure (ATP) provides for the inspection and testing of the new Pumping and Instrumentation Control (PIC) skid designed as ''L''. The ATP will be performed after the construction of the PIC skid in the shop.
Date: October 11, 1999
Creator: Koch, M. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monitoring Guidance for Vadose Zone Monitoring of Liquid Waste Disposal Facilities for the Hanford Groundwater Project (open access)

Monitoring Guidance for Vadose Zone Monitoring of Liquid Waste Disposal Facilities for the Hanford Groundwater Project

None
Date: August 11, 1999
Creator: Horton, D. G.; Reidel, S. P. & Last, G. V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solubility of Plutonium (IV) Oxalate During Americium/Curium Pretreatment (open access)

Solubility of Plutonium (IV) Oxalate During Americium/Curium Pretreatment

Approximately 15,000 L of solution containing isotopes of americium and curium (Am/Cm) will undergo stabilization by vitrification at the Savannah River Site (SRS). Prior to vitrification, an in-tank pretreatment will be used to remove metal impurities from the solution using an oxalate precipitation process. Material balance calculations for this process, based on solubility data in pure nitric acid, predict approximately 80 percent of the plutonium in the solution will be lost to waste. Due to the uncertainty associated with the plutonium losses during processing, solubility experiments were performed to measure the recovery of plutonium during pretreatment and a subsequent precipitation process to prepare a slurry feed for a batch melter. A good estimate of the plutonium content of the glass is required for planning the shipment of the vitrified Am/Cm product to Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).The plutonium solubility in the oxalate precipitation supernate during pretreatment was 10 mg/mL at 35 degrees C. In two subsequent washes with a 0.25M oxalic acid/0.5M nitric acid solution, the solubility dropped to less than 5 mg/mL. During the precipitation and washing steps, lanthanide fission products in the solution were mostly insoluble. Uranium, and alkali, alkaline earth, and transition metal impurities were soluble as …
Date: August 11, 1999
Creator: Rudisill, T.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Char crystalline transformations during coal combustion and their implications for carbon burnout (open access)

Char crystalline transformations during coal combustion and their implications for carbon burnout

Residual, or unburned carbon in fly ash affects many aspects of power plant performance and economy including boiler efficiency, electrostatic precipitator operation, and ash as a salable byproduct. There is a large concern in industry on the unburned carbon problem due to a variety of factors, including low-NOx combustion system and internationalization of the coal market. In recent work, it has been found that residual carbon extracted from fly ash is much less reactive than the laboratory chars on which the current kinetics are based. It has been suggested that thermal deactivation at the peak temperature in combustion is a likely phenomenon and that the structural ordering is one key mechanism. The general phenomenon of carbon thermal annealing is well known, but there is a critical need for more data on the temperature and time scale of interest to combustion. In addition, high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) fringe imaging, which provides a wealth of information on the nature and degree of crystallinity in carbon materials such as coal chars, has become available. Motivated by these new developments, this University Coal Research project has been initiated with the following goals: to determine transient, high-temperature, thermal deactivation kinetics as a function …
Date: March 11, 1999
Creator: Hurt, R.H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Estimates of Particulate Mass for an MCO Containing Mark 1A Fuel (open access)

Estimates of Particulate Mass for an MCO Containing Mark 1A Fuel

High, best estimate, and low values are given for particulate inventories within an MCO basket containing freshly cleaned Mark 1A fuel. The findings are compared with the estimates of particulate inventories for an MCO basket containing freshly cleaned Mark IV fuel.
Date: August 11, 1999
Creator: WYMAN, H.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste Feed Delivery System Phase 1 Preliminary Reliability and Availability and Maintainability Analysis [SEC 1 and 2] (open access)

Waste Feed Delivery System Phase 1 Preliminary Reliability and Availability and Maintainability Analysis [SEC 1 and 2]

The document presents updated results of the preliminary reliability, availability, maintainability analysis performed for delivery of waste feed from tanks 241-AZ-101 and 241-AN-105 to British Nuclear Fuels Limited, inc. under the Tank Waste Remediation System Privatization Contract. The operational schedule delay risk is estimated and contributing factors are discussed.
Date: November 11, 1999
Creator: Carlson, A. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance Test Report for AMS-4 Continuous Air Monitors (CAM) at 241AN Exhausters (open access)

Acceptance Test Report for AMS-4 Continuous Air Monitors (CAM) at 241AN Exhausters

This report provides the completed copy and test results of the Acceptance Test Procedure (TWR-4713). Test results were actually hand written in the ATP including redline changes. All acceptance criteria steps were completed satisfactorily without exceptions.
Date: November 11, 1999
Creator: SCAIEF, C.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
VA Health Care: Third-Party Charges Based on Sound Methodology; Implementation Challenges Remain (open access)

VA Health Care: Third-Party Charges Based on Sound Methodology; Implementation Challenges Remain

A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a legislative requirement, GAO provided information on the Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA) third party charges, focusing on: (1) the soundness of VA's methodology for setting reasonable charges for inpatient facility, skilled nursing, outpatient facility, physician, and nonphysician services; and (2) potential effects of the new charge-based system on VA, insurers, and veterans."
Date: June 11, 1999
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defense Acquisitions: Naval Surface Fire Support Program Plans and Costs (open access)

Defense Acquisitions: Naval Surface Fire Support Program Plans and Costs

A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a legislative requirement, GAO reviewed the Navy's program to modernize its naval surface fire support (NSFS) capabilities, focusing on the cost of the modernization."
Date: June 11, 1999
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of Experimental Background using FLUKA (open access)

Simulation of Experimental Background using FLUKA

In November 1997, Experiment T423 began acquiring data with the intentions of understanding the energy spectra of high-energy neutrons generated in the interaction of electrons with lead. The following describes a series of FLUKA simulations studying (1) particle yields in the absence of all background; (2) the background caused from scattering in the room; (3) the effects of the thick lead shielding which surrounded the detector; (4) the sources of neutron background created in this lead shielding; and (5) the ratio of the total background to the ideal yield. In each case, particular attention is paid to the neutron yield.
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: Rokni, Sayed
System: The UNT Digital Library
Validation of a Photovoltaic Module Energy Ratings Procedure at NREL (open access)

Validation of a Photovoltaic Module Energy Ratings Procedure at NREL

The procedure determines the energy production of a PV module for five reference days. The reference days represent possible operating environments and are qualitatively described as Hot Sunny, Cold Sunny, Hot Cloudy, Cold Cloudy, and Nice. Based on statistical weather criteria, these days were selected from the National Solar Radiation Database (NSRDB). Besides the hourly solar radiation and meteorological data from the NSRDB, the reference days include air mass, angle of incidence, plane of array, and spectral irradiance for a south-facing PV module at latitude tilt, battery-charging voltage, and parameters f1 and f2 for determining PV module temperature. Indoor I-V curve measurements over a range of temperatures and irradiances characterize the electrical performance of a PV module and are used to determine factors to correct for non-linear performance when irradiance and temperature vary. They also serve as a matrix of reference I-V curves for translating to reference-day condition s. The sensitivity of a PV module to variations in the spectral distribution of the incident radiation is accounted for by using an incident irradiance. Differences in PV module thermal characteristics are accounted for by using a PV module's installed nominal operating cell temperature (INOCT) for input to the Fuentes temperature model. …
Date: August 11, 1999
Creator: Marion, B.; Kroposki, B.; Emery, K.; del Cueto, J.; Myers, D. & Osterwald, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Surface topographies of one-year weight-loss coupons of alloy C-22 from long-term corrosion testing (open access)

Surface topographies of one-year weight-loss coupons of alloy C-22 from long-term corrosion testing

We have used an atomic force microscope (AFM) to characterize the surface topographies of weight-loss coupons of Alloy C-22 which had been exposed to two different environments in the Long-Term Corrosion Test Facility at LLNL for one year. We have observed a silicate deposit on these coupons, with the most extensive coverage occurring on the coupon immersed in an acidified bath. We have not detected localized corrosion on these coupons.
Date: June 11, 1999
Creator: Bedrossian, P J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chaos in Accelerators (open access)

Chaos in Accelerators

Chaos is a general phenomenon in nonlinear dynamical systems. Accelerators--storage rings in particular--in which particles are stored for 10{sup 10} revolutions constitute a particularly intricate nonlinear dynamical system. (In comparison, the earth has revolved around the sun for only 10{sup 9} turns.) Storage rings therefore provide an ideal testing ground for chaos physics. In fact, it is the chaos phenomenon that imposes one of the key design criteria for these accelerators. One might arguably say that the demise of the Superconducting Super Collider project originated from a misjudgement in its chaos analysis at one point along its design path, leading to its first substantial cost escalation. This talk gives an elementary introduction to the study of chaos in accelerators.
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: Chao, Alex
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization of the Luminosity Spectrum in the NLC (open access)

Optimization of the Luminosity Spectrum in the NLC

The energy spectrum of electrons at the interaction point of a linear collider is determined largely by the beamstrahlung spectrum. The beamstrahlung spectrum in turn is sensitive to the design parameters at the interaction point. In this paper we examine the optimization of the luminosity spectrum for discovery and detailed exploration of various physics processes of interest in the NLC, in particular, top and stop pair production, and a class of processes occurring via W-W scattering.
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: Thompson, Kathleen A
System: The UNT Digital Library
LHC IRQ cryostat support mechanical performance (open access)

LHC IRQ cryostat support mechanical performance

The LHC Interaction Region Quadrupoles (IRQ) will be shipped from Fermilab to CERN. The IRQ magnets are supported by glass fiber supports. A prototype cryostat support has been tested under various mechanical forces in order to check its mechanical behavior. These measurements have been made in order to validate a numerical model. A large range of mechanical loads simulates loads due to the shipment of the device, the weight of the cold mass as well as the cool down conditions. Its mechanical properties are measured by means of a dedicated arrangement operating at room temperature. This study appears to be essential to optimize the design of the support. The purpose of this note is to summarize the first measurements related to mechanical tests performed with the support.
Date: October 11, 1999
Creator: Darve, Ch.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parametric Instabilities in Laser/Matter Interaction: From Noise Levels to Relativistic Regimes (open access)

Parametric Instabilities in Laser/Matter Interaction: From Noise Levels to Relativistic Regimes

The purpose of this LDRD was the study of parametric instabilities on a laser-produced plasma, addressing crucial issues affecting the coupling between the laser and the plasma. We have made very good progress during these three years, in advancing our understanding in many different fronts. Progress was made in both theoretical and experimental areas. The coupling of high-power laser light to a plasma through scattering instabilities is still one of the most complex processes in laser-plasma interaction physics. In spite of the relevance of these parametric processes to inertial confinement fusion (ICF) and all other situations where a high-power laser beam couples to a plasma, many aspects of the interaction remain unexplained, even after many years of intensive experimental and theoretical efforts. Important instabilities under study are stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS), stimulated Raman scattering (SRS), and the Langmuir decay instability (LDI). The study of these instabilities is further complicated by the competition and interplay between them, and, in the case of ICF, by the presence of multiple overlapping interaction beams. Stimulated Brillouin scattering consists of the decay of the incident electromagnetic (EM) wave into a scattered EM wave and an ion acoustic wave (IAW). Similarly, SRS consists of the decay …
Date: February 11, 1999
Creator: Baldis, H. A.; Kruer, W. L. & Labaune, C. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Appropriations for FY1999: Legislative Branch (open access)

Appropriations for FY1999: Legislative Branch

This report is a guide to appropriations of Legislative Branch.
Date: March 11, 1999
Creator: Dwyer, Paul E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Justice Department Ethics: Legislative Activity in the 106th Congress (open access)

Justice Department Ethics: Legislative Activity in the 106th Congress

None
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation Result Phase Jump Mistiming (open access)

Simulation Result Phase Jump Mistiming

None
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: C., Tang & Wei, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interaction Region Closed Orbits (open access)

Interaction Region Closed Orbits

None
Date: December 11, 1999
Creator: Peggs, S.; Ptitsin, V.; Tepikian, S.; Thompson, P. & Trbojevic, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
FRACTURED PETROLEUM RESERVOIRS (open access)

FRACTURED PETROLEUM RESERVOIRS

The four chapters that are described in this report cover a variety of subjects that not only give insight into the understanding of multiphase flow in fractured porous media, but they provide also major contribution towards the understanding of flow processes with in-situ phase formation. In the following, a summary of all the chapters will be provided. Chapter I addresses issues related to water injection in water-wet fractured porous media. There are two parts in this chapter. Part I covers extensive set of measurements for water injection in water-wet fractured porous media. Both single matrix block and multiple matrix blocks tests are covered. There are two major findings from these experiments: (1) co-current imbibition can be more efficient than counter-current imbibition due to lower residual oil saturation and higher oil mobility, and (2) tight fractured porous media can be more efficient than a permeable porous media when subjected to water injection. These findings are directly related to the type of tests one can perform in the laboratory and to decide on the fate of water injection in fractured reservoirs. Part II of Chapter I presents modeling of water injection in water-wet fractured media by modifying the Buckley-Leverett Theory. A major …
Date: June 11, 1999
Creator: Firoozabadi, Abbas
System: The UNT Digital Library