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Reconnaissance evaluation of Honduran geothermal sites. Una evaluacion por medio de reconocimiento de seis areas geotermicas en Honduras (open access)

Reconnaissance evaluation of Honduran geothermal sites. Una evaluacion por medio de reconocimiento de seis areas geotermicas en Honduras

Six geothermal spring sites were selected on the basis of preliminary investigations conducted in Honduras over the last decade and were evaluated in terms of their development potential. Of the six, the Platanares and San Ignacio sites have high base temperatures and high surface fluid discharge rates and appear to have the best potential for further development as sources of electrical power. A third site, Azacualpa, has a high enough base temperature and discharge rate to be considered as a back-up, but the logistical problems involved in geophysical surveys make it less attractive than the two primary sites. Of the remaining three sites, Pavana may be a source of direct-use heat for local agricultural processing. Sambo Creek and El Olivar have either severe logistical problems that would impede further investigation and development or base temperatures and flow rates that are too low to warrant detailed investigation at this time.
Date: December 1, 1986
Creator: Eppler, D.; Fakundiny, R. & Ritchie, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Record of the first meeting of the Joint Coordinating Committee for Radiation Effects Research (open access)

Record of the first meeting of the Joint Coordinating Committee for Radiation Effects Research

This conference was held July 27--28, 1994 in Moscow. The main purpose of the meeting was to implement an agreement between the Russian Federation and the US to facilitate cooperative research on health and environmental effects of radiation. It was hoped that the exchange of information would provide a good basis for employing new scientific knowledge to implement practical measures to facilitate the rehabilitation of radioactively contaminated areas and to treat radiation illnesses. The Russian Federation suggested five main scientific areas for cooperative research. They will prepare proposals on 4--5 projects within the scope of the scientific areas discussed and forward them to the US delegation for consideration of the possibility to facilitate joint research.
Date: December 31, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photoproduction de Mesons sur le Nucleon aux Energies Intermediaire (in French) (open access)

Photoproduction de Mesons sur le Nucleon aux Energies Intermediaire (in French)

None
Date: December 1, 1996
Creator: Guidal, Michel
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Ensemble: 1997-12-02 - Men's and Women's Chorus

Choral concert performed at the UNT College of Music Concert Hall.
Date: December 2, 1997
Creator: University of North Texas. Men's Chorus.
Object Type: Sound
System: The UNT Digital Library
SECONDARY MINERAL EVIDENCE OF LARGE-SCALE WATER TABLE FLUCTUATIONS AT YUCCA MOUNTAIN, NYE COUNTY, NEVADA (open access)

SECONDARY MINERAL EVIDENCE OF LARGE-SCALE WATER TABLE FLUCTUATIONS AT YUCCA MOUNTAIN, NYE COUNTY, NEVADA

None
Date: December 29, 1997
Creator: J.F. WHELAN, R.J. MOSCATI & B. MARSHALL
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics division annual report 1999 (open access)

Physics division annual report 1999

This report summarizes the research performed in the past year in the Argonne Physics Division. The Division's programs include operation of ATLAS as a national heavy-ion user facility, nuclear structure and reaction research with beams of heavy ions, accelerator research and development especially in superconducting radio frequency technology, nuclear theory and medium energy nuclear physics. The Division took significant strides forward in its science and its initiatives for the future in the past year. Major progress was made in developing the concept and the technology for the future advanced facility of beams of short-lived nuclei, the Rare Isotope Accelerator. The scientific program capitalized on important instrumentation initiatives with key advances in nuclear science. In 1999, the nuclear science community adopted the Argonne concept for a multi-beam superconducting linear accelerator driver as the design of choice for the next major facility in the field a Rare Isotope Accelerator (WA) as recommended by the Nuclear Science Advisory Committee's 1996 Long Range Plan. Argonne has made significant R&D progress on almost all aspects of the design concept including the fast gas catcher (to allow fast fragmentation beams to be stopped and reaccelerated) that in large part defined the RIA concept the superconducting rf …
Date: December 6, 2000
Creator: Thayer, K., ed. & Physics
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

Ensemble: 2005-12-01 – African Percussion Ensemble

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Concert performed at the UNT College of Music Concert Hall.
Date: December 1, 2005
Creator: Alorwoyie, Gideon Foli
Object Type: Sound
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status report on high fidelity reactor simulation. (open access)

Status report on high fidelity reactor simulation.

This report presents the effort under way at Argonne National Laboratory toward a comprehensive, integrated computational tool intended mainly for the high-fidelity simulation of sodium-cooled fast reactors. The main activities carried out involved neutronics, thermal hydraulics, coupling strategies, software architecture, and high-performance computing. A new neutronics code, UNIC, is being developed. The first phase involves the application of a spherical harmonics method to a general, unstructured three-dimensional mesh. The method also has been interfaced with a method of characteristics. The spherical harmonics equations were implemented in a stand-alone code that was then used to solve several benchmark problems. For thermal hydraulics, a computational fluid dynamics code called Nek5000, developed in the Mathematics and Computer Science Division for coupled hydrodynamics and heat transfer, has been applied to a single-pin, periodic cell in the wire-wrap geometry typical of advanced burner reactors. Numerical strategies for multiphysics coupling have been considered and higher-accuracy efficient methods proposed to finely simulate coupled neutronic/thermal-hydraulic reactor transients. Initial steps have been taken in order to couple UNIC and Nek5000, and simplified problems have been defined and solved for testing. Furthermore, we have begun developing a lightweight computational framework, based in part on carefully selected open source tools, to …
Date: December 11, 2006
Creator: Palmiotti, G.; Smith, M.; Rabiti, C.; Lewis, E.; Yang, W.; Leclere,M. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of operations and performance of the Utica aquifer and North Lake Basin wetlands restoration project in December 2005-November 2006. (open access)

Summary of operations and performance of the Utica aquifer and North Lake Basin wetlands restoration project in December 2005-November 2006.

This document summarizes the performance of the groundwater restoration systems installed by the Commodity Credit Corporation of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (CCC/USDA) at the former CCC/USDA grain storage facility in Utica, Nebraska, during the second year of system operation, from December 1, 2005, until November 31, 2006. In the project at Utica, the CCC/USDA is cooperating with multiple state and federal agencies to remove carbon tetrachloride contamination from a shallow aquifer underlying the town and to provide supplemental treated groundwater for use in the restoration of a nearby wetlands area. Argonne National Laboratory has assisted the CCC/USDA by providing technical oversight for the aquifer restoration effort and facilities during this review period. This document presents overviews of the aquifer restoration facilities (Section 2) and system operations (Section 3), then describes groundwater production results (Section 4), groundwater treatment results (Section 5), and associated groundwater monitoring, system modifications, and costs during the review period (Section 6). Section 7 summarizes the present year of operation.
Date: December 21, 2006
Creator: LaFreniere, L. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trigger Detectors of the Forward Muon System for the D0 Experiment (open access)

Trigger Detectors of the Forward Muon System for the D0 Experiment

None
Date: December 1, 2008
Creator: Vasilyev, I.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fuel cycle comparison of distributed power generation technologies. (open access)

Fuel cycle comparison of distributed power generation technologies.

The fuel-cycle energy use and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with the application of fuel cells to distributed power generation were evaluated and compared with the combustion technologies of microturbines and internal combustion engines, as well as the various technologies associated with grid-electricity generation in the United States and California. The results were primarily impacted by the net electrical efficiency of the power generation technologies and the type of employed fuels. The energy use and GHG emissions associated with the electric power generation represented the majority of the total energy use of the fuel cycle and emissions for all generation pathways. Fuel cell technologies exhibited lower GHG emissions than those associated with the U.S. grid electricity and other combustion technologies. The higher-efficiency fuel cells, such as the solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) and molten carbonate fuel cell (MCFC), exhibited lower energy requirements than those for combustion generators. The dependence of all natural-gas-based technologies on petroleum oil was lower than that of internal combustion engines using petroleum fuels. Most fuel cell technologies approaching or exceeding the DOE target efficiency of 40% offered significant reduction in energy use and GHG emissions.
Date: December 8, 2008
Creator: Elgowainy, A.; Wang, M. Q. & Systems, Energy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the Cross Section of Charmed Hadrons and the Nuclear Dependence Alpha (open access)

Measurement of the Cross Section of Charmed Hadrons and the Nuclear Dependence Alpha

With data from the SELEX experiment we study charm hadro-production. We report the differential production cross sections as function of the longitudinal and transverse momentum, as well as for two different target materials, of 14 charmed hadron and/or their decay modes. This is the most extensive study to date. SELEX is a fixed target experiment at Fermilab with high forward acceptance; it took data during 1996-1997 with 600 GeV/c {Sigma}{sup -} and {pi}{sup -}, and 540 GeV/c proton and {pi}{sup +} beams. It used 5 target foils (two copper and three diamond). We use the results to determine {alpha}, used in parametrizing the production cross section as {infinity} A{sup {alpha}}, where A is the mass number of the target nuclei. We found within our statistics that {alpha} is independent of the longitudinal momentum fraction x{sub F} in the interval 0.1 < x{sub F} < 1.0, with {alpha} = 0.778 {+-} 0.014. The average value of {alpha} for charm production by pion beams is {alpha}{sub meson} = 0.850 {+-} 0.028. This is somewhat larger than the corresponding average {alpha}{sub baryon} = 0.755 {+-} 0.016 for charm production by baryon beams ({Sigma}{sup -} and protons).
Date: December 1, 2009
Creator: Blanco-Covarrubias, E.Alejandro & U., /San Luis Potosi
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Ensemble: 2010-12-02 – Women's Chorus, Men's Chorus, and Metropolitan Winds

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Choir and band concert presented at the UNT College of Music Winspear Performance Hall.
Date: December 2, 2010
Creator: University of North Texas. Women's Chorus.
Object Type: Sound
System: The UNT Digital Library
A review of battery life-cycle analysis : state of knowledge and critical needs. (open access)

A review of battery life-cycle analysis : state of knowledge and critical needs.

A literature review and evaluation has been conducted on cradle-to-gate life-cycle inventory studies of lead-acid, nickel-cadmium, nickel-metal hydride, sodium-sulfur, and lithium-ion battery technologies. Data were sought that represent the production of battery constituent materials and battery manufacture and assembly. Life-cycle production data for many battery materials are available and usable, though some need updating. For the remaining battery materials, lifecycle data either are nonexistent or, in some cases, in need of updating. Although battery manufacturing processes have occasionally been well described, detailed quantitative information on energy and material flows is missing. For all but the lithium-ion batteries, enough constituent material production energy data are available to approximate material production energies for the batteries, though improved input data for some materials are needed. Due to the potential benefit of battery recycling and a scarcity of associated data, there is a critical need for life-cycle data on battery material recycling. Either on a per kilogram or per watt-hour capacity basis, lead-acid batteries have the lowest production energy, carbon dioxide emissions, and criteria pollutant emissions. Some process-related emissions are also reviewed in this report.
Date: December 22, 2010
Creator: Sullivan, J. L.; Gaines, L. & Systems, Energy
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Well-To-Wheels Analysis of Fast Pyrolysis Pathways With the GREET Model. (open access)

Well-To-Wheels Analysis of Fast Pyrolysis Pathways With the GREET Model.

The pyrolysis of biomass can help produce liquid transportation fuels with properties similar to those of petroleum gasoline and diesel fuel. Argonne National Laboratory conducted a life-cycle (i.e., well-to-wheels [WTW]) analysis of various pyrolysis pathways by expanding and employing the Greenhouse Gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy Use in Transportation (GREET) model. The WTW energy use and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the pyrolysis pathways were compared with those from the baseline petroleum gasoline and diesel pathways. Various pyrolysis pathway scenarios with a wide variety of possible hydrogen sources, liquid fuel yields, and co-product application and treatment methods were considered. At one extreme, when hydrogen is produced from natural gas and when bio-char is used for process energy needs, the pyrolysis-based liquid fuel yield is high (32% of the dry mass of biomass input). The reductions in WTW fossil energy use and GHG emissions relative to those that occur when baseline petroleum fuels are used, however, is modest, at 50% and 51%, respectively, on a per unit of fuel energy basis. At the other extreme, when hydrogen is produced internally via reforming of pyrolysis oil and when bio-char is sequestered in soil applications, the pyrolysis-based liquid fuel yield is low (15% …
Date: December 1, 2011
Creator: Han, J.; Elgowainy, A.; Palou-Rivera, I.; Dunn, J.B. & Wang, M.Q. (Energy Systems)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste-to-wheel analysis of anaerobic-digestion-based renewable natural gas pathways with the GREET model. (open access)

Waste-to-wheel analysis of anaerobic-digestion-based renewable natural gas pathways with the GREET model.

In 2009, manure management accounted for 2,356 Gg or 107 billion standard cubic ft of methane (CH{sub 4}) emissions in the United States, equivalent to 0.5% of U.S. natural gas (NG) consumption. Owing to the high global warming potential of methane, capturing and utilizing this methane source could reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The extent of that reduction depends on several factors - most notably, how much of this manure-based methane can be captured, how much GHG is produced in the course of converting it to vehicular fuel, and how much GHG was produced by the fossil fuel it might displace. A life-cycle analysis was conducted to quantify these factors and, in so doing, assess the impact of converting methane from animal manure into renewable NG (RNG) and utilizing the gas in vehicles. Several manure-based RNG pathways were characterized in the GREET (Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation) model, and their fuel-cycle energy use and GHG emissions were compared to petroleum-based pathways as well as to conventional fossil NG pathways. Results show that despite increased total energy use, both fossil fuel use and GHG emissions decline for most RNG pathways as compared with fossil NG and petroleum. …
Date: December 14, 2011
Creator: Han, J.; Mintz, M. & Wang, M. (Energy Systems)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Verification and validation of the PLTEMP/ANL code for thermal hydraulic analysis of experimental and test reactors (open access)

Verification and validation of the PLTEMP/ANL code for thermal hydraulic analysis of experimental and test reactors

None
Date: December 3, 2012
Creator: Kalimullah, M.; Olson, A.O.; Feldman, E.E.; Hanan, N. & Dionne, B. (Nuclear Engineering Division)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

Ensemble: 2017-12-08 – Sounds of the Holidays

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Choir concert performed at the UNT College of Music Winspear Hall.
Date: December 8, 2017
Creator: University of North Texas. Concert Choir.
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library

Ensemble: 2018-12-07 – Concert Choir, Concert Orchestra, Men's Chorus, Women's Chorus, University Singers, and A Capella Choir

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Concert and Concert Orchestra performance at UNT College of Music Winspear Hall.
Date: December 7, 2018
Creator: University of North Texas. Concert Choir.
Object Type: Sound
System: The UNT Digital Library