10 MW Supercritical CO2 Turbine Test (open access)

10 MW Supercritical CO2 Turbine Test

The Supercritical CO2 Turbine Test project was to demonstrate the inherent efficiencies of a supercritical carbon dioxide (s-CO2) power turbine and associated turbomachinery under conditions and at a scale relevant to commercial concentrating solar power (CSP) projects, thereby accelerating the commercial deployment of this new power generation technology. The project involved eight partnering organizations: NREL, Sandia National Laboratories, Echogen Power Systems, Abengoa Solar, University of Wisconsin at Madison, Electric Power Research Institute, Barber-Nichols, and the CSP Program of the U.S. Department of Energy. The multi-year project planned to design, fabricate, and validate an s-CO2 power turbine of nominally 10 MWe that is capable of operation at up to 700°C and operates in a dry-cooled test loop. The project plan consisted of three phases: (1) system design and modeling, (2) fabrication, and (3) testing. The major accomplishments of Phase 1 included: Design of a multistage, axial-flow, s-CO2 power turbine; Design modifications to an existing turbocompressor to provide s-CO2 flow for the test system; Updated equipment and installation costs for the turbomachinery and associated support infrastructure; Development of simulation tools for the test loop itself and for more efficient cycle designs that are of greater commercial interest; Simulation of s-CO2 power cycle …
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Turchi, Craig
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Submission of Final Scientific/Technical Report [Solar Avoided Cost Solution: SunShot 6 Final Report] (open access)

Submission of Final Scientific/Technical Report [Solar Avoided Cost Solution: SunShot 6 Final Report]

The core objectives of this project were two separate but integrated products, collectively providing game-changing Avoided Cost capabilities. • The first was a kit of avoided cost tools and data that any solar provider can use a-lacarte or as a whole. It’s open and easily accessible nature allows the rapid and accurate calculation of avoided cost in whatever context and software that make sense (“Typical and Avoided Cost Tools”). This kit includes a dataset of typical energy rates, costs and usage that can be used for solar prospecting, lead generation and any situation where data about an opportunity is missing or imperfect. • The second is a web application and related APIs specifically built for solar providers to radically streamline their lead-to-sale process (“Solar Provider Module”). The typical and Avoided Cost tools are built directly into this, and allow for solar providers to track their opportunities, collaborate with their installers and financiers, and close more sales faster.
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Danziger, Eric
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fourier-transform Inelastic X-ray Scattering from time and Momentum Dependent Phonon-phonon Correlations (open access)

Fourier-transform Inelastic X-ray Scattering from time and Momentum Dependent Phonon-phonon Correlations

None
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Trigo, M.; Fuchs, M.; Chen, J.; Jiang, M. P.; Kozina, M. E.; Ndabashimiye, G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mobility of Source Zone Heavy Metals and Radionuclides: The Mixed Roles of Fermentative Activity on Fate and Transport of U and Cr. Final Report (open access)

Mobility of Source Zone Heavy Metals and Radionuclides: The Mixed Roles of Fermentative Activity on Fate and Transport of U and Cr. Final Report

Various U. S. Department of Energy (DOE) low and medium-level radioactive waste sites contain mixtures of heavy metals, radionuclides and assorted organic materials. In addition, there are numerous sites around the world that are contaminated with a mixture of organic and inorganic contaminants. In most sites, over time, water infiltrates the wastes, and releases metals, radionuclides and other contaminants causing transport into the surrounding environment. We investigated the role of fermentative microorganisms in such sites that may control metal, radionuclide and organics migration from source zones. The project was initiated based on the following overarching hypothesis: Metals, radionuclides and other contaminants can be mobilized by infiltration of water into waste storage sites. Microbial communities of lignocellulose degrading and fermenting microorganisms present in the subsurface of contaminated DOE sites can significantly impact migration by directly reducing and immobilizing metals and radionuclides while degrading complex organic matter to low molecular weight organic compounds. These low molecular weight organic acids and alcohols can increase metal and radionuclide mobility by chelation (i.e., certain organic acids) or decrease mobility by stimulating respiratory metal reducing microorganisms. We demonstrated that fermentative organisms capable of affecting the fate of Cr6+, U6+ and trinitrotoluene can be isolated from organic-rich …
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Gerlach, Robin; Peyton, Brent M. & Apel, William A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A flexible method to calculate the distributions of discretization errors in operator-split codes with stochastic noise in problem data (open access)

A flexible method to calculate the distributions of discretization errors in operator-split codes with stochastic noise in problem data

None
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Chen, X; Connors, J M & Tong, C H
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary and Preliminary Interpretation of Tritium and Dissolved Noble Gas Data from Site 300 (open access)

Summary and Preliminary Interpretation of Tritium and Dissolved Noble Gas Data from Site 300

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Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Visser, A; Singleton, M; Madrid, V & Esser, B
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Phosphate, Fluoride, and Nitrate on Gibbsite Dissolution Rate and Solubility (open access)

Effect of Phosphate, Fluoride, and Nitrate on Gibbsite Dissolution Rate and Solubility

Laboratory tests have been completed with simulated tank waste samples to investigate the effects of phosphate, fluoride, and nitrate on the dissolution rate and equilibrium solubility of gibbsite in sodium hydroxide solution at 22 and 40{degrees}C. Results are compared to relevant literature data and to computer model predictions. The presence of sodium nitrate (3 M) caused a reduction in the rate of gibbsite dissolution in NaOH, but a modest increase in the equilibrium solubility of aluminum. The increase in solubility was not as large, though, as the increase predicted by the computer model. The presence of phosphate, either as sodium phosphate or sodium fluoride phosphate, had a negligible effect on the rate of gibbsite dissolution, but caused a slight increase in aluminum solubility. The magnitude of the increased solubility, relative to the increase caused by sodium nitrate, suggests that the increase is due to ionic strength (or water activity) effects, rather than being associated with the specific ion involved. The computer model predicted that phosphate would cause a slight decrease in aluminum solubility, suggesting some Al-PO4 interaction. No evidence was found of such an interaction.
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Herting, Daniel L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel Heavy Quark Phenomena in QCD (open access)

Novel Heavy Quark Phenomena in QCD

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Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shock and ramp compression experiments: recent developments (open access)

Shock and ramp compression experiments: recent developments

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Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Eggert, J H
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
SciDAC Institute: Combinatorial Scientific Computing and Petascale Simulations (CSCAPES). Final Report (open access)

SciDAC Institute: Combinatorial Scientific Computing and Petascale Simulations (CSCAPES). Final Report

Final project report
Date: January 29, 2014
Creator: Catalyurek, Umit V.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library