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10-MWe pilot-plant-receiver-panel test-requirements document: Solar Thermal Test Facility (open access)

10-MWe pilot-plant-receiver-panel test-requirements document: Solar Thermal Test Facility

Plans are presented for insolation testing of a full-scale test receiver panel and supporting hardware which essentially duplicate both physically and functionally the design planned for the 10 MWe pilot plant. Testing includes operation during normal start and shutdown, intermittent cloud conditions, and emergencies to determine the transient and steady state operating characteristics and performance under conditions equal to or exceeding those expected in the pilot plant. The effects of variations of input and output conditions on receiver operation are also to be investigated. A brief description of the pilot plant receiver subsystem is presented, followed by a detailed description of the receiver assembly to be tested at the Solar Thermal Test Facility. Major subassemblies are described, including the receiver panel, flow control, electrical control and instrumentation, and the structural assembly. Requirements of the Solar Thermal Test Facility for the tests are given. System safety measures are described. The tests, operating conditions, and expected results are presented. Quality assurance, task responsibilities, and test documentation are also discussed. (LEW)
Date: June 10, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acetic acid production from marine algae. Progress report No. 3, January 1, 1978--March 31, 1978 (open access)

Acetic acid production from marine algae. Progress report No. 3, January 1, 1978--March 31, 1978

The program for acetic acid production from marine algae has made significant progress in the current quarter. Some of the significant developments during this period are: (1) conversion of the available reducing equivalents in Chondrus crispus to organic acids has been carried to better than 80% completion; (2) thermophilic fermentations produce higher ratios of acetic acid to total acid than is the case for mesophilic fermentations (80% vs. 50%); (3) a membrane extraction process for removing organic acid products has been developed which has potential for commercial use; (4) a large scale fermentation was shown to convert over 50% of the available carbon in five days; (5) a reducing equivalents balance on the large scale fermentation was closed to with 96% of theoretical.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Sanderson, J.E. & Wise, D.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advance notice of proposed rulemaking. Chapter II, subchapter D. Energy conservation; Part 440. Weatherization assistance for low-income persons (open access)

Advance notice of proposed rulemaking. Chapter II, subchapter D. Energy conservation; Part 440. Weatherization assistance for low-income persons

Proposals to amend Appendix A of Part 440 of Weatherization Assistance for Low-Income Persons are described. The proposals establish new specifications for the materials purchased for utilization in the weatherization of dwellings which qualify for assistance under Part 440. These proposed regulations prescribe the minimum requirements which must be met or exceeded by each type of material and the Federal standards to which they must conform. In addition, these regulations include installation requirements for each class of material installed at the request of the enduser. (MCW)
Date: June 29, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Gas Cooled Nuclear Reactor Materials Evaluation and Development Program. Progress report, January 1, 1978--March 31, 1978 (open access)

Advanced Gas Cooled Nuclear Reactor Materials Evaluation and Development Program. Progress report, January 1, 1978--March 31, 1978

The activities associated with the procurement of the materials for the screening test program, information from vendor certification for the materials received, and preliminary information from the materials characterization tests performed by GE are reported. The construction status of the simulated reactor helium supply system, testing equipment, and gas chemistry analysis instrumentation and equipment are discussed. The final recommended impurity levels for the screening phase helium are presented and the rational behind this gas chemistry is discussed. The status of the data management system is presented.
Date: June 26, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced methods for nuclear reactor gas laser coupling (open access)

Advanced methods for nuclear reactor gas laser coupling

Research is described that led to the discovery of three nuclear-pumped lasers (NPLs) using mixtures of Ne--N/sub 2/, He--Hg, and He or Ne with CO or CO/sub 2/. The Ne--N/sub 2/ NPL was the first laser obtained with modest neutron fluxes from a TRIGA reactor (vs fast burst reactors used elsewhere in such work), the He--Hg NPL was the first visible nuclear-pumped laser, while the Ne--CO and He--CO/sub 2/ lasers are the first to provide energy storage on a millisecond time scale. Important potential applications of NPLs include coupling and power transmission from remote power stations such as nuclear plants in satellites and neutron-feedback operation of inertial confinement fusion plants.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Miley, George H. & Verdeyen, Joseph T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advances in reactor physics. Proceedings of an American Nuclear Society topical meeting (open access)

Advances in reactor physics. Proceedings of an American Nuclear Society topical meeting

The individual papers were abstracted separately for the data base. (DG)
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Silver, E.G. (ed.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advances in the heat treatment of steels (open access)

Advances in the heat treatment of steels

A number of important recent advances in the processing of steels have resulted from the sophisticated uses of heat treatment to tailor the microstructure of the steels so that desirable properties are established. These new heat treatments often involve the tempering or annealing of the steel to accompish a partial or complete reversion from martensite to austenite. The influence of these reversion heat treatments on the product microstructure and its properties may be systematically discussed in terms of the heat treating temperature in relation to the phase diagram. From this perspective, four characteristic heat treatments are defined: (1) normal tempering, (2) inter-critical tempering, (3) intercritical annealing, and (4) austenite reversion. The reactions occurring during each of these treatments are described and the nature and properties of typical product microstructures discussed, with specific reference to new commercial or laboratory steels having useful and exceptional properties.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Morris, J. W., Jr.; Kim, J. I. & Syn, C. K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Summer School on Nuclear Science (open access)

Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Summer School on Nuclear Science

Separate abstracts were prepared for the three lectures presented. (JFP)
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Cooper, M.; Redwine, R. & Mischke, R. (eds.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Algorithm for linear least squares problems with equality and nonnegativity constraints (open access)

Algorithm for linear least squares problems with equality and nonnegativity constraints

A new algorithm for solving a linear least-squares problem with linear constraints is presented. The constraints can be equality constraint equations and nonnegativity constraints on selected variables. This problem, while appearing to be quite special, is the core problem arising in the solution of the general linearly constrained linear least-squares problem. The reduction process of the general problem to the core problem can be done in many ways. Three such techniques are discussed. The method employed for solving the core problem is based on combining the equality constraints with differentially weighted least-squares equations to form an augmented least-squares system. This weighted least-squares system is solved with nonnegativity constraints on selected variables. Seven small examples, including a constrained least-squares curve fitting example, are presented. A reference to user instructions for subprograms to compute solutions of constrained least-squares problems is included. 3 figures, 9 tables.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Haskell, Karen H. & Hanson, Richard J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Amplitude analysis of the K/sup -/K/sup +/ system produced in the reactions. pi. /sup -/p. -->. K/sup -/K/sup +/N and. pi. /sup +/N. -->. K/sup -/K/sup +/p at 6 GeV/c. [S'(1300)] (open access)

Amplitude analysis of the K/sup -/K/sup +/ system produced in the reactions. pi. /sup -/p. -->. K/sup -/K/sup +/N and. pi. /sup +/N. -->. K/sup -/K/sup +/p at 6 GeV/c. [S'(1300)]

An amplitude analysis of the K/sup -/K/sup +/ system produced in the reactions ..pi../sup -/p ..-->.. K/sup -/K/sup +/n and ..pi../sup +/n ..-->.. K/sup -/K/sup +/p was carried out using data from a high statistics experiment carried out with the Argonne Effective Mass Spectrometer. Combining the results from the two reactions allows the separation of the KantiK production amplitudes into their isospin-zero and one components. An enhancement is deserved in the S-wave amplitude near 1300 MeV which we call the S'. Using various physical arguments, including the t dependence of the amplitudes, six out of eight mathematically-allowed solutions can be eliminated for the magnitudes and phases of the amplitudes and shown that this new S-wave state has isospin zero. Requiring a reasonable behavior for the isospin-one P wave shows that the S' amplitude has a slow phase variation through the peak region.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Cohen, D.; Ayres, D. S.; Diebold, R.; Kramer, S. L.; Pawlicki, A. J. & Wicklund, A. B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Federal incentives used to stimulate energy production (open access)

Analysis of Federal incentives used to stimulate energy production

Federal incentives for the development of solar energy are examined. A Federal incentive is any action that can be taken by the government to expand residential and commercial use of solar energy. The development of solar energy policy could be enhanced by identification, quantification, and analysis of Federal incentives that have been used to simulate the development of other forms of energy. The text of this report identifies, quantifies, and analyzes such incentives and relates them to current thought about solar energy. Four viewpoints used in this discussion come from 4 types of analysis: economic, political, organizational, and legal. The next chapter identifies actions (primarily domestic) that the Federal government has taken concerning energy. This analysis uses the typology of actions described in the previous chapter to identify actions, and the four viewpoints described there to determine whether an action concerns energy. Once identified, the actions are described and then quantified by an estimate of the 1976 cost of accomplishing them. Then incentives, investments, liabilities, regulations, and other factors are analyzed in detail for nuclear energy, hydroelectric power, coal, petroleum, and natural gas. Incentives of all energy sources are then discussed with respect to solar energy policy. (MCW)
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of No. 2 heating oil prices for the 1977--78 heating season (open access)

Analysis of No. 2 heating oil prices for the 1977--78 heating season

The factual findings of DOE's Office of Fuels Regulation regarding No. 2 heating oil price data for the 1977-1978 heating season are presented. OFR's analysis was based on data gathered by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) in connection with the current program to monitor the prices of home heating oil. Results show that the average price paid by residential customers increased 5.2%; the average increase in the prices wholesalers charged other wholesalers and retailers was 1.6%; the average increase in prices that wholesalers paid refiners was 1.4%; and the refiner index was marginally exceeded twice during the heating season and, on average, refiner prices to wholesalers were below the guideline. Information is included on retail, wholesale, and refiners gross margins and on analytic constraints. (JRD)
Date: June 30, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the Madaras Rotor Power Plant: an alternate method for extracting large amounts of power from the wind. Executive summary (open access)

Analysis of the Madaras Rotor Power Plant: an alternate method for extracting large amounts of power from the wind. Executive summary

The purpose of the program was to analyze and up-date the design of the Madaras Rotor Power Plant concept that had been developed in the 1930's to determine the technical and economic feasibility of this system to be competitive with conventional horizontal axis wind turbines. The Madaras concept uses rotating cylinders, vertically mounted on flat cars, to react with the wind like a sail and propel an endless train of connected cars around a closed track at constant speed. Electricity is generated by alternators on each car that are geared to the wheels. Electrical power is transmitted from each car to the power house by a trolley system. A four-task program consisting of a series of wind tunnel tests, an electro-mechanical analysis, a performance analysis, and a cost analysis was conducted.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Whitford, D. H.; Minardi, J. E.; West, B. S. & Dominic, R. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the Madaras Rotor Power Plant: an alternate method for extracting large amounts of power from the wind. Volume 2. Technical report (open access)

Analysis of the Madaras Rotor Power Plant: an alternate method for extracting large amounts of power from the wind. Volume 2. Technical report

The purpose of the program was to analyze and up-date the design of the Madaras Rotor Power Plant concept that had been developed in the 1930's to determine the technical and economic feasibility of this system to be competitive with conventional horizontal axis wind turbines. A four-task program consisting of a series of wind tunnel tests, an electro-mechanical analysis, a performance analysis, and a cost analysis was conducted.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Whitford, D. H.; Minardi, J. E.; West, B. S. & Dominic, R. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the Powder Diffraction File (open access)

Analysis of the Powder Diffraction File

The International Centre for Powder Diffraction Data has compiled an extensive powder diffraction database available on magnetic tape. The database was evaluated to determine the type and quality of the information it contains, including an analysis of d-I pairs per pattern, symmetry, quality marks, Q values, and intensities for subfiles of known crystal class. In addition, nine functions were evaluated to assess pattern quality for cubic and triclinic data. This document presents a minimum amount of data analysis, but concentrates on the distribution and statistics. It also describes how these data were obtained.
Date: June 22, 1978
Creator: Snyder, R. L.; Johnson, Q. C.; Kahara, E.; Smith, G. S. & Nichols, M. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Master Plan for the analysis of the data from the electric utility rate demonstration projects (open access)

Analytical Master Plan for the analysis of the data from the electric utility rate demonstration projects

The Federal Energy Administration (now the US Department of Energy), in cooperation with state public utility commissions and participating utilities, has initiated 16 electric utility rate demonstration projects. The primary purpose of these projects was to evaluate experimentally the effects of time-of-use pricing of electricity for residential customers. The time-of-use rate most frequently employed was a time-of-day (TOD) rate. The method employed by the states to evaluate TOD rates was to select a subset of the residential population, place these people on TOD rates, and with special meters, monitor their temporal use of electricity. As might be expected, with the varying objectives of the states, available resources, and background in load management studies, a variety of approaches were employed, and a variety of data generated by the projects. Also, the received and expected analyses of the data vary considerably among the projects due to the differing interests of the states, available resources, and the composition of the project teams. The three purposes of this Analytical Master Plan (AMP) are: to ensure the data derived from the FEA projects and from related sources are subjected to econometric and statistical analysis that is both rigorous and as highly sophisticated as the state …
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annealing behavior and selected applications of ion-implanted alloys (open access)

Annealing behavior and selected applications of ion-implanted alloys

Thermally activated processes cause ion-implanted metals to evolve from the initial state toward thermodynamic equilibrium. The degree of equilibration is strongly dependent upon temperature and is considered for three temperature regimes which are distinguished by the varying mobilities of interstitial and substitutional atoms. In addition, perturbations resulting from the irradiation environment are discussed. Examples are given of the use of implanted and annealed alloys in studies of diffusion, phase diagrams, and solute trapping.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Myers, S. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annual report on the Characterization on the high-level waste glasses. (open access)

Annual report on the Characterization on the high-level waste glasses.

The waste compo itions PW-7c and PW-9 were defined and glass development was completed. Major variations in major oxide concentration would not grossly affect the leach rates of the glass. Impact and strength tests on nonradioactive glass showed that the waste glasses produced slightly less fine particulate than commercial glass. Waste glass had 60% of the strength of the soda-lime glass. A water-quench reduced thermal conductivity about 20%, and a 24-h hold at devitrification temperatures did not produce a significant change. Densities of waste glass at process temperature were 6.6 to 9.3% lower than at room temperature. The effects of glass composition on volatility were measured. Leach tests of highly devitrified samples of 72-68 have shown that leach rates of Cs, Sr and U are increased up to 10X and that Zn leach rates are reduced by nearly 200X. In glass 76-68, where devitrification is much slower, elemental differencesbetween as-formed and thermally-treated samples have not been significant. Average Cs leach rates from the 76-68 glass in an IAEA type long-term test have decreased to 3.3 x 10/sup -8/ g/cm/sup 2//day. High temperature (250 and 350/sup 0/C) leach tests showed that glass is comparable to other ceramic materials. In salt brine …
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Ross, W.A.; Bradley, D.J. & Bunnell, L.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of a time-space clustering methodology to the assessment of acute environmental effects on respiratory illnesses (open access)

Application of a time-space clustering methodology to the assessment of acute environmental effects on respiratory illnesses

A new methodology is proposed for the identification of environmental events of health significance. Health indices measured on a daily basis at various locations in a single geographical area are collected over time. First, the daily variations are examined to determine whether they reflect purely random variations or whether there are days on which there are extreme variations not plausibly explicable as random events. After such days are identified, the question of whether they occur only at a single location within the larger geographical area at one time, or whether they occur simultaneously at more than one location is investigated. Tests of statistical significance for both temporal and spatial clustering are proposed. The methodology is applied to daily hospital emergency room visits for various respiratory complaints to several New York City hospitals situated in two geographically separated districts which, however, have populations of similar socio-economic and ethnic composition.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Goldstein, I F & Cuzick, J
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Appraisal of Underground Radioactive Waste Disposal in Argillaceous and Crystalline Rocks: Some Geochemical, Geomechanical, and Hydrogeological Questions (open access)

Appraisal of Underground Radioactive Waste Disposal in Argillaceous and Crystalline Rocks: Some Geochemical, Geomechanical, and Hydrogeological Questions

Results are presented of an appraisal of the potential for the storage of radioactive wastes by burial in underground repositories and of efforts to define the more significant factors affecting the selection and design of a repository. Those areas in geomechanics, hydrogeology, and geochemistry where further research is needed to provide answers of the quality and certainty needed to resolve these issues are examined. Results of this appraisal suggest that argillaceous and crystalline rocks may provide suitable sites for nuclear waste repositories. The most important factor affecting their suitability appears to be the flux of groundwater through the repository. Although intense fracturing would be advantageous in retarding migration of hazardous materials from a repository in these rocks by sorption, the hydraulic conductivities of these fractures would have to be very small and the hydraulic gradient low.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Apps, J. A.; Cook, N. G. W. & Witherspoon, P. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of /sup 99/Tc releases to the atmosphere: a plea for applied research. [Dose to man through food chain concentration] (open access)

Assessment of /sup 99/Tc releases to the atmosphere: a plea for applied research. [Dose to man through food chain concentration]

Recent experimental data suggest that the concentration factor for uptake of /sup 99/Tc by vegetation from soils may be two to three orders of magnitude higher than the 0.25 value currently being used in radiological assessments. Following a survey of the literature, a concentration factor of 50 was applied to evaluate the dose from a 1.0 Ci/year release to the atmosphere by a hypothetical uranium enrichment facility. Doses to the GI tract and thyroid of an adult living 1600 m from the facility were 18 millirems and 80 millirems, respectively. These doses are delivered entirely through transport of /sup 99/Tc through food chain pathways. This assessment indicates a potential for /sup 99/Tc exposures to exceed recently proposed standards of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in 40 CFR 190. The previously assumed concentration factor of 0.25 would have produced corresponding doses of 0.13 millirem to the GI tract and 0.57 millirem to the thyroid. The results of this analysis demonstrate the need for additional research on the environmental behavior and dosimetry of /sup 99/Tc. In particular, data are needed to elucidate the retention of /sup 99/Tc in soils and the uptake of /sup 99/Tc by edible vegetation in field studies of …
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Till, J. E.; Hoffman, F. O. & Dunning, D. E., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of thermal insulation materials and systems for building applications (open access)

Assessment of thermal insulation materials and systems for building applications

The primary goal of the study was to provide a proper foundation for decision making by the federal government, industry, and consumer. The report may be used to identify areas where new test methods and standards are needed to establish new programs for improving thermal performance of buildings, and as a basis for setting new or improved standards after the recommended test programs have been completed.
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric statistical dynamic models. Climate experiments: albedo experiments with a zonal atmospheric model (open access)

Atmospheric statistical dynamic models. Climate experiments: albedo experiments with a zonal atmospheric model

The zonal model experiments with modified surface boundary conditions suggest an initial chain of feedback processes that is largest at the site of the perturbation: deforestation and/or desertification ..-->.. increased surface albedo ..-->.. reduced surface absorption of solar radiation ..-->.. surface cooling and reduced evaporation ..-->.. reduced convective activity ..-->.. reduced precipitation and latent heat release ..-->.. cooling of upper troposphere and increased tropospheric lapse rates ..-->.. general global cooling and reduced precipitation. As indicated above, although the two experiments give similar overall global results, the location of the perturbation plays an important role in determining the response of the global circulation. These two-dimensional model results are also consistent with three-dimensional model experiments. These results have tempted us to consider the possibility that self-induced growth of the subtropical deserts could serve as a possible mechanism to cause the initial global cooling that then initiates a glacial advance thus activating the positive feedback loop involving ice-albedo feedback (also self-perpetuating). Reversal of the cycle sets in when the advancing ice cover forces the wave-cyclone tracks far enough equatorward to quench (revegetate) the subtropical deserts. (Ellsaesser, 1975).
Date: June 1, 1978
Creator: Potter, G.L.; Ellsaesser, H.W.; MacCracken, M.C. & Luther, F.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Automated array Assembly, Phase II. Quarterly report No. 3, April 1--June 30, 1978 (open access)

Automated array Assembly, Phase II. Quarterly report No. 3, April 1--June 30, 1978

The purpose of the overall program is to establish technological readiness and provide verification for the elements of a manufacturing sequence which would ultimately be suitable for the large-scale production of silicon solar-array modules at a selling price of less than $500/kW. A program and process plan for accomplishing this objective was developed and put into operation. This plan is centered around a processing sequence using Czochralski, silicon wafers. Three junction-formation processes are considered since cost analyses show that they do not differ greatly in cost. The progress made in the various process steps of the plan is described, and plans for the next quarter are summarized.
Date: June 1978
Creator: D'Aiello, R. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library