NREL Combined Experimental Final Report--Phase II (open access)

NREL Combined Experimental Final Report--Phase II

Predicting peak power and loads on a fixed-pitch wind turbine. How does the performance of the airfoil in the wind tunnel differ from the performance of an operating horizontal-axis wind turbine (HAWT)?
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Butterfield, C. P.; Musial, W. P.; Scott, G. N. & Simms, D. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simplified modeling for infiltration and radon entry (open access)

Simplified modeling for infiltration and radon entry

Air leakage in the envelopes of residential buildings is the primary mechanism for provided ventilation to those buildings. For radon the same mechanisms that drive the ventilation, drive the radon entry This paper attempts to provide a simplified physical model that can be used to understand the interactions between the building leakage distribution, the forces that drive infiltration and ventilation, and indoor radon concentrations, Combining both ventilation and entry modeling together allows an estimation of Radon concentration and exposure to be made and demonstrates how changes in the envelope or ventilation system would affect it. This paper will develop simplified modeling approaches for estimating both ventilation rate and radon entry rate based on the air tightness of the envelope and the driving forces. These approaches will use conventional leakage values (i.e. effective leakage area ) to quantify the air tightness and include natural and mechanical driving forces. This paper will introduce a simplified parameter, the Radon Leakage Area, that quantifies the resistance to radon entry. To be practical for dwellings, modeling of the occupant exposures to indoor pollutants must be simple to use and not require unreasonable input data. This paper presents the derivation of the simplified physical model, and …
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Sherman, M. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geophysics: Building E5375 decommissioning, Aberdeen Proving Ground (open access)

Geophysics: Building E5375 decommissioning, Aberdeen Proving Ground

Building E5375 was one of ten potentially contaminated sites in the Canal Creek area of the Edgewood section of Aberdeen Proving Ground examined by a geophysical team from Argonne National Laboratory in April and May 1992. Noninvasive geophysical surveys, including magnetics, electrical resistivity, and ground-penetrating radar (GPR), were conducted around the perimeter of the building to guide a sampling program prior to decommissioning and dismantling. Several anomalies wear, noted: (1) An underground storage tank located 25 ft east of Building E5375 was identified with magnetic, resistivity, and GPR profiling. (2) A three-point resistivity anomaly, 12 ft east of the northeast comer of Building E5374 (which borders Building E5375) and 5 ft south of the area surveyed with the magnetometer, may be caused by another underground storage tank. (3) A 2,500-gamma magnetic anomaly near the northeast corner of the site has no equivalent resistivity anomaly, although disruption in GPR reflectors was observed. (4) A one-point magnetic anomaly was located at the northeast comer, but its source cannot be resolved. A chaotic reflective zone to the east represents the radar signature of Building E5375 construction fill.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: McGinnis, M.G.; McGinnis, L.D.; Miller, S.F. & Thompson, M.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The influence of Savannah River discharge and changing SRS cooling water requirements on the potential entrainment of ichthyoplankton at the SRS Savannah River intakes (open access)

The influence of Savannah River discharge and changing SRS cooling water requirements on the potential entrainment of ichthyoplankton at the SRS Savannah River intakes

Entrainment (i.e., withdrawal of fish larvae and eggs in cooling water) at the SRS Savannah River intakes is greatest when periods of high river water usage coincide with low river dischargeduring the spawning season. American shad and striped bass are the two species of greatest concern because of their recreational and/or commercial importance and because they produce drifting eggs and larvae vulnerable to entrainment. In the mid-reaches of the Savannah River, American shad and striped bass spawn primarily during April and May. An analysis of Savannah River discharge during April and May 1973--1989 indicated the potential for entrainment of 4--18% of the American shad and striped bass larvae and eggs that drifted past the SRS. This analysis assumed the concurrent operation of L-, K-, and P-Reactors. Additional scenarios investigated were: (1) shutting down L- and P-Reactors, and operating K-Reactor with a recycle cooling tower; and (2) shutting down L- and P-Reactors, eliminating minimum flows to Steel Creek, and operating K-Reactor with a recycle cooling tower. The former scenario reduced potential entrainment to 0.7--3.3%, and the latter scenario reduced potential entrainment to 0.20.8%. Thus, the currently favored scenario of operating K-Reactor with a cooling tower and not operating L- and P-Reactors …
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Paller, M.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
TESLA test cell cryostat support post thermal and structural analysis (open access)

TESLA test cell cryostat support post thermal and structural analysis

TeV Superconducting Linear Accelerator (TESLA) cryostats consist of eight, 1-meter-long radio frequency (RF) cavity modules cryogenically connected in series with one focusing quadrupole. Each module contains one, 9-cell superconducting RF cavity operating at 1.3 GHz in a 1.8K helium bath. Individual modules are self-contained in the that they have their own input couplers, high order mode couplers, and tuning mechanisms. Services common to the entire cryostat consist of 70K and 4.5K thermal radiation shields, shield supply and return lines, a 1.8K helium supply line, and a gas helium return pipe. All cavity modules, the quadrupole, and cryogenic seances are contained in a single 12-meter-long vacuum vessel. The goal of the present work on TESLA is the successful fabrication and test of four complete cryostat assemblies. These cryostats will be installed in a string cooled to operating temperature, and powered. This test will address problems which may arise when modules are installed in a tunnel environment It will also permit testing of the basic cooling concepts, measurement of static heat losses, and measurement of the RF performance of all cavities.
Date: August 15, 1992
Creator: Nicol, T.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Innovative coke oven gas cleaning system for retrofit applications (open access)

Innovative coke oven gas cleaning system for retrofit applications

The coke plant at the Sparrows Point Plant consist of three coke oven batteries and two coal chemical plants. The by-product coke oven gas (COG) consists primarily of hydrogen, methane, carbon monoxide, nitrogen and contaminants consisting of tars, light oils (benzene, toluene, and xylene) hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, water vapor and other hydrocarbons. This raw coke oven gas needs to be cleaned of most of its contaminants before it can be used as a fuel at other operations at the Sparrows Point Plant. In response to environmental concerns, BSC decided to replace much of the existing coke oven gas treatment facilities in the two coal chemical Plants (A and B) with a group of technologies consisting of: Secondary Cooling of the Coke oven Gas; Hydrogen Sulfide Removal; Ammonia Removal; Deacification of Acid Gases Removed; Ammonia Distillation and Destruction; and, Sulfur Recovery. This combination of technologies will replace the existing ammonia removal system, the final coolers, hydrogen sulfide removal system and the sulfur recovery system. The existing wastewater treatment, tar recovery and one of the three light oil recovery systems will continue to be used to support the new innovative combination of COG treatment technologies.
Date: August 24, 1992
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiolabeled androgens and progestins as imaging agents for tumors of the prostate and breast (open access)

Radiolabeled androgens and progestins as imaging agents for tumors of the prostate and breast

We are preparing progestins and androgens, labeled with the single photon emitters technetium-99m and rhenium-186 and the positron-emitting radionuclide fluorine-18. In both cases, ligands selected have very high affinity for the respective receptor, low affinity for blood and non-specific binders and to be reasonably resistant to metabolism: The progestins will be derivatives of the potent progestins ORG2058, norgestrel, RU486, and an unusual retroprogestin and the androgens will be derivatives of the high affinity analogs of natural and synthetic androgens. Radiometal labeling will involve carefully designed steroid conjugates with N[sub 2]S[sub 2] or related chelates, or novel metal linkages, and metal complexes that themselves mimic a steroid. Fluorine substitution will be made at positions where bulk and polarity are tolerated and metabolic defluorination is minimal. In vitro competitive binding studies will be performed on the unlabeled analogs to determine their binding characteristics towards a series of steroid receptors and blood binding proteins, and Log P values will be estimated from BPLC. Tissue distribution studies with the radiolabeled progestins will be done in estrogen-primed rats using the uterus as a target, and with the radioandrogens in estrogen-treated rats using the prostate as a target. Ultimately, in collaborative studies, these radiopharmaceuticals are to …
Date: August 8, 1992
Creator: Katzenellenbogen, J.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of ORNL long-term surveillance at the FFTF (open access)

Summary of ORNL long-term surveillance at the FFTF

Oak Ridge National Laboratory has used an automated system between 1983 and 1987 to collect and analyze primary system noise data at the Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF) located in Hanford, Washington, System operation and data handling are described, data collection efforts are summarized, and principal findings are presented.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Damiano, B. & Thie, J.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Office of Technology Development integrated program for development of in situ remediation technologies (open access)

Office of Technology Development integrated program for development of in situ remediation technologies

The Department of Energy's Office of Technology Development has instituted an integrated program focused on development of in situ remediation technologies. The development of in situ remediation technologies will focus on five problem groups: buried waste, contaminated soils, contaminated groundwater, containerized wastes and underground detonation sites. The contaminants that will be included in the development program are volatile and non volatile organics, radionuclides, inorganics and highly explosive materials as well as mixtures of these contaminants. The In Situ Remediation Integrated Program (ISR IP) has defined the fiscal year 1993 research and development technology areas for focusing activities, and they are described in this paper. These R D topical areas include: nonbiological in situ treatment, in situ bioremediation, electrokinetics, and in situ containment.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Peterson, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron correlations in semiconductors: Bulk cohesive properties and magnetic-field-induced Wigner crystal at heterojunctions (open access)

Electron correlations in semiconductors: Bulk cohesive properties and magnetic-field-induced Wigner crystal at heterojunctions

A correlated wavefunction variational quantum Monte Carlo approach to the studies of electron exchange and correlation effects in semiconductors is presented. Applications discussed include the cohesive and structural properties of bulk semiconductors, and the magnetic-field-induced Wigner electron crystal in two dimensions. Landau level mixing is shown to be important in determining the transition between the quantum Hall liquid and the Wigner crystal states in the regime of relevant experimental parameters.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Louie, S.G. & Zhu, X.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator physics analysis with an integrated toolkit (open access)

Accelerator physics analysis with an integrated toolkit

Work is in progress on an integrated software toolkit for linear and nonlinear accelerator design, analysis, and simulation. As a first application, beamline'' and MXYZPTLK'' (differential algebra) class libraries, were used with an X Windows graphics library to build an user-friendly, interactive phase space tracker which, additionally, finds periodic orbits. This program was used to analyse a theoretical lattice which contains octupoles and decapoles to find the 20th order, stable and unstable periodic orbits and to explore the local phase space structure.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Holt, J.A.; Michelotti, L. & Satogata, T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Superconducting accelerator magnets: A review of their design and training (open access)

Superconducting accelerator magnets: A review of their design and training

This paper reviews the basic mechanical designs of most of the superconducting magnets developed for high energy hadron accelerators. The training performance of these magnets is compared with an instability factor defined by the square of the current density in the stabilizing copper divided by the surface-to-volume ratio of the strands. A good correlation is observed.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Palmer, R.B. (Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Menlo Park, CA (United States) Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, NY (United States))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pennsylvania Source Term Tracking System (open access)

Pennsylvania Source Term Tracking System

The Pennsylvania Source Term Tracking System tabulates surveys received from radioactive waste generators in the Commonwealth of radioactive waste is collected each quarter from generators using the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Quarterly Report Form (hereafter called the survey) and then entered into the tracking system data base. This personal computer-based tracking system can generate 12 types of tracking reports. The first four sections of this reference manual supply complete instructions for installing and setting up the tracking system on a PC. Section 5 presents instructions for entering quarterly survey data, and Section 6 discusses generating reports. The appendix includes samples of each report.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Organic acid modeling and model validation: Workshop summary (open access)

Organic acid modeling and model validation: Workshop summary

A workshop was held in Corvallis, Oregon on April 9--10, 1992 at the offices of E S Environmental Chemistry, Inc. The purpose of this workshop was to initiate research efforts on the entitled Incorporation of an organic acid representation into MAGIC (Model of Acidification of Groundwater in Catchments) and testing of the revised model using Independent data sources.'' The workshop was attended by a team of internationally-recognized experts in the fields of surface water acid-bass chemistry, organic acids, and watershed modeling. The rationale for the proposed research is based on the recent comparison between MAGIC model hindcasts and paleolimnological inferences of historical acidification for a set of 33 statistically-selected Adirondack lakes. Agreement between diatom-inferred and MAGIC-hindcast lakewater chemistry in the earlier research had been less than satisfactory. Based on preliminary analyses, it was concluded that incorporation of a reasonable organic acid representation into the version of MAGIC used for hindcasting was the logical next step toward improving model agreement.
Date: August 14, 1992
Creator: Sullivan, T.J. & Eilers, J.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
DWPF PCCS version 2. 0 test case (open access)

DWPF PCCS version 2. 0 test case

To verify the operation of the Product Composition Control System (PCCS), a test case specific to DWPF operation was developed. The values and parameters necessary to demonstrate proper DWPF product composition control have been determined and are presented in this paper. If this control information (i.e., for transfers and analyses) is entered into the PCCS as illustrated in this paper, and the results obtained correspond to the independently-generated results, it can safely be said that the PCCS is operating correctly and can thus be used to control the DWPF. The independent results for this test case will be generated and enumerated in a future report. This test case was constructed along the lines of the normal DWPF operation. Many essential parameters are internal to the PCCS (e.g., property constraint and variance information) and can only be manipulated by personnel knowledgeable of the Symbolics[reg sign] hardware and software. The validity of these parameters will rely on induction from observed PCCS results. Key process control values are entered into the PCCS as they would during normal operation. Examples of the screens used to input specific process control information are provided. These inputs should be entered into the PCCS database, and the results …
Date: August 13, 1992
Creator: Brown, K.G. & Pickett, M.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Revisions to the hydrogen gas generation computer model (open access)

Revisions to the hydrogen gas generation computer model

Waste Management Technology has requested SRTC to maintain and extend a previously developed computer model, TRUGAS, which calculates hydrogen gas concentrations within the transuranic (TRU) waste drums. TRUGAS was written by Frank G. Smith using the BASIC language and is described in the report A Computer Model of gas Generation and Transport within TRU Waste Drums (DP- 1754). The computer model has been partially validated by yielding results similar to experimental data collected at SRL and LANL over a wide range of conditions. The model was created to provide the capability of predicting conditions that could potentially lead to the formation of flammable gas concentrations within drums, and to assess proposed drum venting methods. The model has served as a tool in determining how gas concentrations are affected by parameters such as filter vent sizes, waste composition, gas generation values, the number and types of enclosures, water instrusion into the drum, and curie loading. The success of the TRUGAS model has prompted an interest in the program's maintenance and enhancement. Experimental data continues to be collected at various sites on such parameters as permeability values, packaging arrangements, filter designs, and waste contents. Information provided by this data is used to …
Date: August 31, 1992
Creator: Jerrell, J.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experiments on the nuclear interactions of pions and electrons. [Dept. of Physics, Univ. of Virginia] (open access)

Experiments on the nuclear interactions of pions and electrons. [Dept. of Physics, Univ. of Virginia]

The analysis of the deuterium content in the CD target used in an experiment to study the [pi] + d [yields] 2p reaction at incident pion energies from 4 to 20 MeV was completed. The final paper describing this experiment will be submitted for publication this summer. Analysis of LAMPF Exp. on pion absorption in [sup 4]He is continuing. In 1991, we collaborated with D. Pocanic from the Univ. of Virginia on a measurement at LAMPF of the [pi][sup 0] production in [pi] + p interactions. This run proved the validity of the method and additional data were obtained in a second run during the summer of 1992, using a new target. Current collaborations at LAMPF include the search for the decay [mu][sup +] [yields] e[sup +] + [gamma](MEGA) and a measurement of the Michel [rho] parameter in the decay [mu] [yields] e + v + v. A U.Va.--PSI collaboration is measuring pion beta decay to an accuracy of less than 1%, using a large acceptance CsI detector to measure the [pi][sup 0] following decay of stopped [pi][sup +] mesons. Most of the U.Va. effort is devoted to the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) program to the construction of the …
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Minehart, R.C. & Ziock, K.O.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Decoherence of multimode thermal squeezed coherent states (open access)

Decoherence of multimode thermal squeezed coherent states

It is well known that any multimode positive definite quadratic Hamiltonian can be transformed into a hamiltonian of uncoupled harmonic oscillators. Based on this theorem, the multimode thermal squeezed coherent states are constructed in terms of density operators. Decoherence of multimode thermal squeezed coherent states in investigated via the characteristic function and it is shown that the decohered (reduced) states are still thermal squeezed coherent states in general.
Date: August 14, 1992
Creator: Yeh, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Heat Load Synchrotron Optics (open access)

High Heat Load Synchrotron Optics

Third generation synchrotron radiation sources currently being constructed worldwide will produce x-ray beams of unparalleled power and power density these high heat fluxes coupled with the stringent dimensional requirements of the x-ray optical components pose a prodigious challenge to designers of x-ray optical elements, specifically x-ray mirrors and crystal monochromators. Although certain established techniques for the cooling of high heat flux components can be directly applied to this problem, the thermal management of high heat load x-ray optical components has several unusual aspects that may ultimately lead to unique solutions. This manuscript attempts to summarize the various approaches currently being applied to this undertaking and to point out the areas of research that require further development.
Date: August 1992
Creator: Mills, Dennis M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A high resolution, single bunch, beam profile monitor (open access)

A high resolution, single bunch, beam profile monitor

Efficient linear colliders require very small beam spots to produce high luminosities with reasonable input power, which limits the number of electrons which can be accelerated to high energies. The small beams, in turn, require high precision and stability in all accelerator components. Producing, monitoring and maintaining beams of the required quality has been, and will continue to be, difficult. A beam monitoring system which could be used to measure beam profile, size and stability at the final focus of a beamline or collider has been developed and is described here. The system uses nonimaging bremsstrahlung optics. The immediate use for this system would be examining the final focus spot at the SLAC/FFTB. The primary alternatives to this technique are those proposed by P. Chen / J. Buon, which analyses the energy and angular distributions of ion recoils to determine the aspect ratio of the electron bunch, and a method proposed by Shintake, which measures intensity variation of compton backscattered photons as the beam is moved across a pattern of standing waves produced by a laser.
Date: August 26, 1992
Creator: Norem, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High energy elastic and diffractive scattering (open access)

High energy elastic and diffractive scattering

The developments in high energy pp and p{bar p} elastic scattering in the last 30 years are summarized. The Regge pole model and the geometrical models are reviewed and their agreement with experimental data discussed. The experimental method for measuring the total cross section and the ratio of the real to the imaginary part of the forward elastic scattering amplitude, p, is described. The asymptotic behavior of the total cross section at high energy is discussed in the light of the new results on p{bar p} elastic scattering at {radical}s=1.8 TeV. Predictions from geometrical models and Regge phenomenology are compared with experimental data. The 2-gluon model of the Pomeron by Low and Nussinov is discussed. Future measurements on elastic pp and p{bar p} elastic scattering are discussed.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Shukla, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Materials Development Program, Ceramic Technology Project addendum to program plan: Cost effective ceramics for heat engines (open access)

Materials Development Program, Ceramic Technology Project addendum to program plan: Cost effective ceramics for heat engines

This is a new thrust in the Ceramic Technology project. This effort represents an expansion of the program and an extension through FY 1997. Moderate temperature applications in conventional automobile and truck engines will be included along with high-temp. gas turbine and low heat rejection diesel engines. The reliability goals are expected to be met on schedule by end of FY 1993. Ceramic turbine rotors have been run (in DOE's ATTAP program) for 1000 h at 1370C and full speed. However, the cost of ceramic components is a deterrrent to near-term commercialization. A systematic approach to reducing this cost includes the following elements: economic cost modeling, ceramic machining, powder synthesis, alternative forming and densification processes, yield improvement, system design studies, standards development, and testing and data base development. A draft funding plan is outlined. 6 figs, 1 tab.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste acceptance and the DWPF Startup Test Program: Impacts of process changes (open access)

Waste acceptance and the DWPF Startup Test Program: Impacts of process changes

The DWPF is currently carrying out a Startup Test Program which will lead to radioactive operations in the facility. The objective of a significant portion of this program is to demonstrate that the DWPF can reliably make glass which satisfies DOE's product specifications. This objective will be achieved through a series of integrated process campaigns using feeds of various compositions (the Qualification Runs).2 During these campaigns, the DWPF Glass Product Control Programs (GPCP) will be used to ensure that glass is made which meets specifications. The GPCP uses a correlation between glass composition and leach test results to determine whether a particular batch of feed will make acceptable glass (i.e., glass which will meet the specifications).
Date: August 24, 1992
Creator: Plodinec, M.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Healy clean coal project (open access)

Healy clean coal project

The objective of the Healy Clean Coal Project is to demonstrate the integration of an advanced combustor and a heat recovery system with both high and low temperature emission control processes. Resulting emission levels of SO[sub 2], NO[sub x], and particulates are expected to be significantly better than the federal New source Performance standards. During this past quarter, engineering and design continued on the boiler, combustion flue gas desulfurization (FGD), and turbine/generator systems. Balance of plant equipment procurement specifications continue to be prepared. Construction activities commenced as the access road construction got under way. Temporary ash pond construction and drilling of the supply well will be completed during the next quarter.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library