Interpretation of a dipole-dipole electrical resistivity survey, Colado geothermal area, Pershing County, Nevada (open access)

Interpretation of a dipole-dipole electrical resistivity survey, Colado geothermal area, Pershing County, Nevada

An electrical resistivity survey in the Colado geothermal area, Pershing County, Nevada has defined areas of low resistivity on each of five lines surveyed. Some of these areas appear to be fault controlled. Thermal fluids encountered in several drill holes support the assumption that the hot fluids may be associated with areas of low resistivity. The evidence of faulting as interpreted from modeling of the observed resistivity data is therefore particularly significant since these structures may be the conduits for the thermal fluids. Sub-allurial fault zones are interpreted to occur between stations 0 to 5 NW on Line D and on Line A between stations 4 NW and 4 SE. Fault zones are also interpreted on Line C near stations 1 NW, 1 SE, and 3 SE, and on Line E between stations 2 to 4 NW and near 1 SE. No faulting is evident under the alluvial cover on the southwest end of Line B. A deep conductive zone is noted within the mountain range on two resistivity lines. There is no definite indication that thermal fluids are associated with this resistivity feature.
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Mackelprang, C.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrosion Behavior of Reactor Materials in Fluoride Salt Mixtures (open access)

Corrosion Behavior of Reactor Materials in Fluoride Salt Mixtures

Molten fluoride salts, because of their radiation stability and ability to contain both Th and U, offer important advantages as high-temperature fuel solutions for nuclear reactors and as media suitable for nuclear fuel processing. Both applications have stimulated experimental and theoretical studies of the corrosion processes by which molten salt mixtures attack potential reactor materials. Corrosion experiments with fluoride salts which were conducted in support of the Molten-Salt Reactor E xperiment and analytical methods employed to interpret corrosion and masstransfer behavior in this reactor system are discussed. The products of corrosion of metals by fluoride melts are soluble in the molten salt; accordingly passivation is precluded and corrosion depends directly on the thermodynamic driving force of the corrosion reactions. Compatibility of the container metal and molten salt, therefore, demands the selection of salt constituents which are not appreciably reduced by useful structural alloys and the development of container materials whose components are in near thermodynamic equilibrium with the salt medium. Utilizing information gained in corrosion testing of commercial alloys and in fundamental interpretations of the corrosion process, an alloy development program was conducted to provide a high temperature container material that combined corrosion resistance with useful mechanical properties. The program …
Date: September 19, 1962
Creator: DeVan, J. H. & Evans, R. B., III
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Protective coatings and sealants for solar applications (open access)

Protective coatings and sealants for solar applications

An aging study has been completed which evaluated a number of polymeric materials for potential use as (1) protective coatings for back surfaces of mirrors and (2) solar heliostat edge seals. These investigations were conducted in an artificial weathering chamber that accelerated thermal cycling. The primary mirror failure mode was observed to be silver corrosion resulting from moisture exposure. To increase mirror longevity in current heliostat designs, intimate bonding at all the composite interfaces is essential to minimize moisture pathways to the silvered surface. If any voids or delaminations are present, mirror degradation will eventually occur. Delaminations can also occur as the result of mechanical stresses brought about by mismatches in the various materials coefficients of thermal expansion. If good bonding cannot be achieved or mechanical stresses avoided, then improved moisture barriers must be designed to assure mirror longevity. With good adhesion, a KRATON rubber was found to exhibit superior back surface mirror protection (12 months in environmental chamber with no corrosion). An ultraviolet stabilized butyl rubber appeared to be the best edge seal. All heliostats edge sealed with silicones showed silver corrosion which indicated either poor bonding or moisture permeation.
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Wischmann, K. B. & Gonzales, M. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Phase I of the Near-Term Hybrid Vehicle Program. Final report (open access)

Phase I of the Near-Term Hybrid Vehicle Program. Final report

Heat engine/electric hybrid vehicles offer the potential of greatly reduced petroleum consumption, compared to conventional vehicles, without the disadvantages of limited performance and operating range associated with pure electric vehicles. This report documents a hybrid vehicle design approach which is aimed at the development of the technology required to achieve this potential, in such a way that it is transferable to the auto industry in the near term. The development of this design approach constituted Phase I of the Near-Term Hybrid Vehicle Program. The major tasks in this program were: mission analysis and performance specification studies; design tradeoff studies; and preliminary design. Detailed reports covering each of these tasks are included as appendices to this report. A fourth task, sensitivity studies, is also included in the report on the design tradeoff studies. Because of the detail with which these appendices cover methodology and results, the body of this report has been prepared as a brief executive summary of the program activities and results, with appropriate references to the detailed material in the appendices.
Date: September 10, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of microfabrication technology to thermionic energy conversion. Progress report 4, 1 May 1980 to 31 July 1980 (open access)

Application of microfabrication technology to thermionic energy conversion. Progress report 4, 1 May 1980 to 31 July 1980

Two applications of microfabrication technology to thermionic converters have been investigated theoretically. The first is a novel method of maintaining micron or submicron spacings over large areas (>1 cm/sup 2/), using metals of different expansion coefficients to eliminate the shear stresses on the insulating pillars separating the electrodes. The second uses low-voltage field-emission sources to create ions in a large (approx. 1 mm) interelectrode gap for space charge neutralization. The theoretical results for both these approaches are highly encouraging.
Date: September 5, 1980
Creator: Brodie, I.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
LFCM vitrification technology. Quarterly progress report, January-March 1986 (open access)

LFCM vitrification technology. Quarterly progress report, January-March 1986

This report is compiled by the Nuclear Waste Treatment Progrqam and the Hanford Waste Vitrification Program at Pacific Northwest Laboratory to document progress on liquid-fed ceramic melter (LFCM) vitrification technology. Progress in the following technical subject areas during the second quarter of FY 1986 is discussed: melting process chemistry and glass development, feed preparation and transfer systems, melter systems, canister filling and handling systems, off-gas systems, and process/product modeling and control.
Date: September 1, 1986
Creator: Burkholder, H. C. & Minor, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Toroidal plasma equilibrium with gravity (open access)

Toroidal plasma equilibrium with gravity

Toroidal magnetic field configuration in a gravitational field is calculated both from a simple force-balance and from the calculation using magnetic surfaces. The configuration is found which is positionally stable in a star. The vibrational frequency near the equilibrium point is proportional to the hydrostatic frequency of a star multiplied by the ratio (W/sub B//W/sub M/)/sup 1/2/ where W/sub B/ is the magnetic field energy density, and W/sub M/ is the material pressure at the equilibrium point. It is proposed that this frequency may account for the observed solar spot cycles.
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Yoshikawa, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrochemical photovoltaic cells. Project 65039 quarterly technical progress report, April 15-July 31, 1980 (open access)

Electrochemical photovoltaic cells. Project 65039 quarterly technical progress report, April 15-July 31, 1980

Liquid-junction photoelectrochemical cells can be used either for the direct conversion of solar energy to electricity or to generate stored chemical species available for later electrochemical discharge. The objectives of this program are to identify experimental approaches for electrochemical photovoltaic cells that not only show promise of high power-conversion efficiencies but also have the potential to achieve long life and the capacity for energy storage. The work is organized as follows: (1) selection of high-efficiency semiconductor photoelectrode/electrolyte systems, (2) development of long-life electrochemical photovoltaic cells, (3) all solid-state electrochemical photovoltaic cell with in situ storage, and (4) demonstration of laboratory-size photoelectrochemical cell with redox storage. This program is directed toward identifying a suitable match between the proposed semiconductor and the redox species present in aqueous, nonaqueous, and solid electrolytes for achieving the necessary performance and semiconductor stability requirements. Emphasis is on aqueous electrolyte-based systems where fast kinetics are favored. The proposed systems will be compatible with convenient storage of the electroactive species generated and its later electrochemical discharge in a redox cell. Progress is reported.
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Ang, P. G.P. & Sammells, A. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High beta studies on ISX-B with neutral beam injection (open access)

High beta studies on ISX-B with neutral beam injection

Injection of H/sup 0/ into D/sup +/ plasmas with beam power P/sub b/ of up to 1.7 MW has produced rms betas of approx. 4%, volume-averaged betas of approx. 3%, and central betas of approx. 10% in the ISX-B tokamak. Although theoretical calculations indicate that the observed equilibria may be unstable to ballooning modes, no catastrophic loss of confinement has been observed, and beta continues to increase with injection power. In these beam-dominated high-beta discharges the electron and ion energy confinement times are still similar to those obtained with ohmic heating: ion energy confinement is neoclassical within a factor of approx. 2, and electron energy confinement follows the usual Alcator scaling. In high-power injection discharges the character of the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) behavior changes, the particle confinement time decreases, and the inward impurity transport appears to be inhibited. These effects, however, may not be linked directly to beta.
Date: September 1980
Creator: Sheffield, J.; Bates, S.C. & Bush, C.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
SNAP 2 REACTOR PUMP DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM (RADIAL GAP PERMANENT-MAGNET PUMP) (open access)

SNAP 2 REACTOR PUMP DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM (RADIAL GAP PERMANENT-MAGNET PUMP)

A compact electromagnetic pump utilizing a rotating permanent magnet with radial gap was developed for possible application to the SNAP 2 reactor coolant system. The pump was designed for circulation of NaK at 1000 deg F and 11.2 gpm with a developed pressure of 3 psi, operation at 40,000 rpm, minimum weight and size, and high reliability. The performance characteristics of four developmental pump models were measured in a 1000 deg F NaK test loop and compared with design predictions. The capability of the pump design concept was demonstrated, though further development work is needed to meet the SNAP 2 pump requirements. A flow capacity of 6.8 gpm of NaK at 1000 deg F with a developed head of 3 psi with attained at a magnet rotor speed of 40,000 rpm. The weight of this pump is 3 pounds. Reasonable agreement was obtained between the actual pump characteristics and the design predictions. (auth)
Date: September 1, 1961
Creator: Sudar, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advancement of flash hydrogasification. Quarterly technical progress report, October-December 1984 (open access)

Advancement of flash hydrogasification. Quarterly technical progress report, October-December 1984

The design of test hardware and process development unit (PDU) modifications had been completed previously. Task VII involves the fabrication of test hardware and the modification of an existing 1-ton/h hydroliquefaction PDU at Rockwell's facilities for use as a hydrogasifier test facility. Test hardware fabrication has been completed. Modifications to the PDU were completed in July 1984. The modified facility can accommodate both 10- and 20-ft-long hydrogasifier reactors so that residence times will be in the range of 2 to 6 s when coal is fed at a nominal 1/2 ton/h into reactors at 1000 psia pressure. Provisions have been made for real-time analysis of the product gases using an on-line gas chromatograph system. Separate supplies of coal, hydrogen, oxygen, methane, and water (for steam generation) are provided so that short duration (1 to 2 h) hydrogasification tests along with preburner assembly performance evaluation tests can be conducted to meet the overall test program objectives. Performance characterization testing of the preburner assembly and two coal reactor tests to establish FHP reactor performance at baseline (low-steam concentration) hydrogasification conditions have been completed. Three reactor tests to investigate steam enhancement effects were conducted during this report period. An important program milestone was …
Date: September 1, 1985
Creator: Falk, A. Y.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Complex temporal and spatial patterns in nonequilibrium systems (open access)

Complex temporal and spatial patterns in nonequilibrium systems

Dynamical systems methods are being developed and used to characterize the formation and evolution of temporal and spatial patterns in systems maintained far from equilibrium. In particular, experiments and analyses are considering electrodeposition of fractal metallic clusters, pattern formation in reaction-diffusion systems, and the primary instabilities of some fluid flows. Novel reactors have been developed to search for chemical patterns (spatial variations in the chemical composition), and sustained patterns have been found in several different one- and two-dimensional geometries. Bifurcations in these patterns are studied by varying control parameters, e.g., the concentrations of the feed chemicals or the temperature. The observed two-dimensional chemical patterns range from the stationary patterns, similar to those predicted by Turing in 1952 but not observed until 1990, to chemical turbulence, which is characterized by large numbers of defects and a rapid decay of spatial correlations. These provide general insights into the formation of spatiotemporal patterns in nonequilibrium systems.
Date: September 1, 1991
Creator: Swinney, H. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploratory research on solvent refined coal liquefaction. Annual technical progress report, January 1-December 31, 1979 (open access)

Exploratory research on solvent refined coal liquefaction. Annual technical progress report, January 1-December 31, 1979

This report summarizes the progress of the Exploratory Research on Solvent Refined Coal Liquefaction project by The Pittsburg and Midway Coal Mining Co.'s Merriam Laboratory during 1979. In a series of experiments with varying feed gas composition, low levels (5 to 10 mole %) of carbon monoxide had little effect on the SRC II processing of Pittsburgh Seam coal (Powhatan No. 5 Mine) while higher levels (20 to 40 mole %) resulted in a general degradation of operability and reduced oil yields. Addition of finely divided (approx. 1 ..mu..m) pyrite to the reactive Powhatan coal had little effect on oil yields although the molecular weight of the distillation residue was apparently decreased. When finely divided pyrite and magnetite were added to the less reactive coals from the Loveridge and Blacksville No. 1 Mines (also Pittsburgh Seam), however, substantial increases in oil yields and product quality were obtained. In a comparison of upflow and downflow dissolver configurations with Powhatan coal in the SRC II mode, there was no difference in yields or product quality. A study characterizing specific reactors revealed a significantly higher conversion in the SRC I mode with a reactor approximating plug flow conditions compared to a completely backmixed …
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron heating and confinemet measurements in EBT-S using Thomson scattering (open access)

Electron heating and confinemet measurements in EBT-S using Thomson scattering

Thomson scattering of ruby laser light was used to measure electron temperatures and densities in the ELMO Bumpy Torus-Scale (EBT-S) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The measurements were made primarily during May 1980, although some were taken during January 1980. The scattering system, which was designed for very low electron density measurements, features a 14-J ruby laser, a high-throughput spectrometer, and 15% quantum efficiency photomultipliers. The measured electron densities lie in the range 5 X 10/sup 11/ cm/sup -3/ to 2.2 X 10/sup 12/ cm/sup -3/ with electron temperatures from 50 to 500 eV. The radial profiles of T/sub e/ and n/sub e/ are reasonably flat over an 8-cm region from the plasma center outward. The dependence of T/sub e/ and n/sub e/ on microwave power input and on background pressure is discussed. The electron data are used to derive approximate values of the energy confinement time.
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Bighel, L. & Cobble, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Marketing of coal mining equipment. Evaluation of present techniques: suggestions to aid commercialization. Final report (open access)

Marketing of coal mining equipment. Evaluation of present techniques: suggestions to aid commercialization. Final report

This report is an examination of the equipment preferences and decision-making methodology of the coal industry. The prime purpose is to indicate directions in which equipment research might proceed and also to indicate methods by which investment in new, more productive mining equipment could be encouraged. In addition to this, an investigation of the research and development decisions of major mining equipment manufacturers was conducted. The findings can best be condensed into three categories: needs for equipment in underground mining, needs for equipment in surface mining, and the purchase decision by coal mine operators.
Date: September 19, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multiple track Doppler-shift spectroscopy system for TFTR neutral beam injectors (open access)

Multiple track Doppler-shift spectroscopy system for TFTR neutral beam injectors

A Doppler-shift spectroscopy system has been installed on the TFTR neutral beam injection system to measure species composition during both conditioning and injection pulses. Two intensified vidicon detectors and two spectrometers are utilized in a system capable of resolving data from up to twelve ion sources simultaneously. By imaging the light from six ion sources onto one detector, a cost-effective system has been achieved. Fiber optics are used to locate the diagnostic in an area remote from the hazards of the tokamak test cell allowing continuous access, and eliminating the need for radiation shielding of electronic components. Automatic hardware arming and interactive data analysis allow beam composition to be computed between tokamak shots for use in analyzing plasma heating experiments. Measurements have been made using lines of sight into both the neutralizer and the drift duct. Analysis of the data from the drift duct is both simpler and more accurate since only neutral particles are present in the beam at this location. Comparison of the data taken at these two locations reveals the presence of partially accelerated particles possessing an estimated 1/e half-angle divergence of 15/sup 0/ and accounting for up to 30% of the extracted power.
Date: September 1, 1986
Creator: Kamperschroer, J. H.; Kugel, H. W.; Reale, M. A.; Hayes, S. L.; Johnson, G. A.; Lowrance, J. L. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Seal-Shell-a Digital Program to Determine Stresses and Deflections in an Axisymmetric Shell of Revolution (open access)

Seal-Shell-a Digital Program to Determine Stresses and Deflections in an Axisymmetric Shell of Revolution

SEAL-SRELL, a FORTRAN II program registered as code number M0077 at Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory, is written for the Philco 2000 computer with two tape units. The program is designed to determine loads, deflections, and stresses in a thin shell of revolution under axisymmetric end loads and pressure. (auth)
Date: September 1, 1961
Creator: Friedrich, C.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metals and Ceramics Division. Annual progress report, ending June 30, 1980 (open access)

Metals and Ceramics Division. Annual progress report, ending June 30, 1980

Research is reported concerning: (1) engineering materials, including materials compatibility, mechanical properties, nondestructive testing, pressure vessel technology, and welding and brazing; (2) fuels and processes consisting of ceramic technology, fuel cycle technology, fuels evaluation, fuel fabrication and metals processing; and (3) materials science which includes, ceramic studies, physical metallurgy properties, radiation effects and microstructural analysis, metastable and superconducting materials, structure and properties of surfaces, theroretical research and x-ray research and applications. Highlights of the work of the metallographic group and the current state of the High-Temperature Materials Laboratory (HTML) and the Materials and Structures Technology Management Center (MSTMC) are presented. (FS)
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reactor Development Program Progress Report, August 1961 (open access)

Reactor Development Program Progress Report, August 1961

Progress is reviewed on the following reactors: EBWR; Borax-V; ZPR-III- ZPR-VI; ZPR-IX; EBR-I; and EBR-II. An outline of fast and slow reactor safety studies in TREAT is presented. Progress is also reported in applied nuclear and reactor physics; development of reactor fuels, materials, and components; heat engineering technology; separation processes; and advanced reactor concepts. (T.F.H.)
Date: September 15, 1961
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermonuclear inverse magnetic pumping power cycle for stellarator reactors (open access)

Thermonuclear inverse magnetic pumping power cycle for stellarator reactors

A novel power cycle for direct conversion of alpha-particle energy into electricity is proposed for an ignited plasma in a stellarator reactor. The plasma column is alternately compressed and expanded in minor radius by periodic variation of the toroidal magnetic field strength. As a result of the way a stellarator is expected to work, the plasma pressure during expansion is greater than the corresponding pressure during compression. Therefore, negative work is done on the plasma during a complete cycle. This work manifests itself as a back-voltage in the toroidal field coils, and direct electrical energy is obtained from this voltage. For a typical reactor, the average power obtained from this cycle (with a minor radius compression factor on the order of 50%) can be as much as 50% of the electrical power obtained from the thermonuclear neutrons without compressing the plasma. Thus, if it is feasible to vary the toroidal field strength, the power cycle provides an alternative scheme of energy conversion for a deuterium-tritium fueled reactor. The cycle may become an important method of energy conversion for advanced neutron-lean fueled reactors. By operating two or more reactors in tandem, the cycle can be made self-sustaining.
Date: September 1, 1985
Creator: Ho, D.D.M. & Kulsrud, R.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Divertor experiments in a toroidal plasma, with E x B drift due to an applied radial electric field (open access)

Divertor experiments in a toroidal plasma, with E x B drift due to an applied radial electric field

It is proposed that the E x B drift arising from an externally applied electric field could be used in a tokamak or other toroidal magnetic plasma confinement device to remove plasma and impurities from the region near the wall and reduce the amount of plasma striking the wall. This could either augment or replace a conventional magnetic field divertor. Among the possible advantages of this scheme are easy external control over the rate of removal of plasma, more rapid removal than the naturally occurring rate in a magnetic divertor, and simplification of construction if the magnetic divertor is eliminated. Results of several related experiments performed in the Wisconsin Levitated Octupole are presented.
Date: September 1, 1979
Creator: Strait, E.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photophoresis and the scattering of electromagnetic radiation (open access)

Photophoresis and the scattering of electromagnetic radiation

Electron-microscope photographs of soot lend support to the picture in which a soot particle is modeled as a collection of chains of small carbon spheres. The soot particle itself is typically considerably larger than the small carbon spheres making up the chains. Thus the soot particles might have a size approx.0.1 - 1 ..mu..m while the small carbon spheres might have a size approx.0.03 ..mu..m in typical situations. Further, measurements of the density of soot yield values much less than that of normal carbon, indicating that an individual soot particle has a rather small filling factor, i.e., the fraction of the volume of the particle tht is occupied by chains. If a soot particle is taken to be a sphere partially filled with carbon chains, what are its scattering and absorption properties. Several workers have adopted the view that the net scattering and absorption properties can be determined simply by summing the cross-sections for the individual small carbon spheres. We feel that such a procedure cannot be valid in general because it neglects coherence effects among the various randomly located scatterers within the soot particle. It appears that in a first rough approximation the scattering and absorption properties of soot …
Date: September 1, 1985
Creator: Ipser, J.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photodisintegration of /sup 3/H and /sup 3/He. [Threshold to 25 MeV] (open access)

Photodisintegration of /sup 3/H and /sup 3/He. [Threshold to 25 MeV]

The photoneutron cross sections for /sup 3/H and /sup 3/He have been measured from threshold to approx. 25 MeV with monoenergetic photons from the annihilation in flight of fast positrons at the LLL Electron-Positron Linear Accelerator facility. These reactions include the two-body breakup of /sup 3/H and the three-body breakup of both /sup 3/H and /sup 3/He; these measurements for /sup 3/H are the first to span the energy region across the peaks of the cross sections. An efficient BF/sub 3/-tube-and-paraffin neutron detector and high-pressure gaseous samples of several moles each (the activity of the /sup 3/H sample was approx. 200,000 Ci) were employed in these measurements. Measurements on /sup 16/O and /sup 2/H also were performed to verify the absolute cross-section scale. The results, when compared with each other and with results for the two-body breakup cross section for /sup 3/He from the literature, show that the two-body breakup cross sections for /sup 3/H and /sup 3/He have nearly the same shape, but the one for /sup 3/He lies lower in magnitude; the three-body breakup cross section for /sup 3/He lies higher in magnitude and is broader in the peak region and also rises less sharply from threshold than …
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Faul, D.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technology for large tandem mirror experiments (open access)

Technology for large tandem mirror experiments

Construction of a large tandem mirror (MFTF-B) will soon begin at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). Designed to reach break-even plasma conditions, the facility will significantly advance the physics and technology of magnetic-mirror-based fusion reactors. This paper describes the objectives and the design of the facility.
Date: September 4, 1980
Creator: Thomassen, K.I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library