30 MJ superconducting magnetic energy storage stabilizing coil. Final report for construction (open access)

30 MJ superconducting magnetic energy storage stabilizing coil. Final report for construction

This report covers Phase II, Fabrication and Delivery of the 30 MJ Superconducting Magnetic Energy Storage Stabilizing Coil. A history of the manufacturing and assembly phase of the magnet is presented. Major problems and solutions are summarized, and illustrations of the major operations are provided. The Quality Assurance program is described with a listing of all nonconformance reports. Design documentation is provided, including a Design Document Index, monthly progress reports, and a list of papers given on the project. Appendices to the report contain copies of released and revised design calculations, test reports, assembly procedure, and nonconformance reports and engineering dispositions.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of volcanic hazard studies for the Nevada Nuclear Waste Storage Investigations (open access)

Status of volcanic hazard studies for the Nevada Nuclear Waste Storage Investigations

Volcanism studies of the Nevada Test Site (NTS) region are concerned with hazards of future volcanism with respect to underground disposal of high-level radioactive waste. The hazards of silicic volcanism are judged to be negligible; hazards of basaltic volcanism are judged through research approaches combining hazard appraisal and risk assessment. The NTS region is cut obliquely by a N-NE trending belt of volcanism. This belt developed about 8 Myr ago following cessation of silicic volcanism and contemporaneous with migration of basaltic activity toward the southwest margin of the Great Basin. Two types of fields are present in the belt: (1) large-volume, long-lived basalt and local rhyolite fields with numerous eruptive centers and (2) small-volume fields formed by scattered basaltic scoria cones. Late Cenozoic basalts of the NTS region belong to the second field type. Monogenetic basalt centers of this region were formed mostly by Strombolian eruptions; Surtseyean activity has been recognized at three centers. Geochemically, the basalts of the NTS region are classified as straddle A-type basalts of the alkalic suite. Petrological studies indicate a volumetric dominance of evolved hawaiite magmas. Trace- and rare-earth-element abundances of younger basalt (<4 Myr) of the NTS region and southern Death Valley area, California, …
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Crowe, B.M.; Vaniman, D.T. & Carr, W.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear waste package materials testing report: basaltic and tuffaceous environments (open access)

Nuclear waste package materials testing report: basaltic and tuffaceous environments

The disposal of high-level nuclear wastes in underground repositories in the continental United States requires the development of a waste package that will contain radionuclides for a time period commensurate with performance criteria, which may be up to 1000 years. This report addresses materials testing in support of a waste package for a basalt (Hanford, Washington) or a tuff (Nevada Test Site) repository. The materials investigated in this testing effort were: sodium and calcium bentonites and mixtures with sand or basalt as a backfill; iron and titanium-based alloys as structural barriers; and borosilicate waste glass PNL 76-68 as a waste form. The testing also incorporated site-specific rock media and ground waters: Reference Umtanum Entablature-1 basalt and reference basalt ground water, Bullfrog tuff and NTS J-13 well water. The results of the testing are discussed in four major categories: Backfill Materials: emphasizing water migration, radionuclide migration, physical property and long-term stability studies. Structural Barriers: emphasizing uniform corrosion, irradiation-corrosion, and environmental-mechanical testing. Waste Form Release Characteristics: emphasizing ground water, sample surface area/solution volume ratio, and gamma radiolysis effects. Component Compatibility: emphasizing solution/rock, glass/rock, glass/structural barrier, and glass/backfill interaction tests. This area also includes sensitivity testing to determine primary parameters to be studied, …
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Bradley, D. J.; Coles, D. G.; Hodges, F. N.; McVay, G. L. & Westerman, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atlantic coastal experiment 5: R/V advance II cruise (MESEX I) 27 April--2 May 1979, data report (open access)

Atlantic coastal experiment 5: R/V advance II cruise (MESEX I) 27 April--2 May 1979, data report

68 hydrographic stations were arranged as boundary transects, and a proximate calibration matrix, to an array of current meters and fluorometers moored within the coastal boundary layer near southern Long Island. Assessments were made of water-mass characterization, nutrient distribution, chlorophyll variability and phytoplankton composition. Supplemental thermal structure was obtained from expendable bathythermographs.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: von Bock, K. (ed.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atlantic Coastal Experiment III: R/V KNORR cruise 68, 4-30 August 1977; FRV ALBATROSS IV cruise 77-07, 1-4, 16-31 August 1977. Data report, volume 1 (open access)

Atlantic Coastal Experiment III: R/V KNORR cruise 68, 4-30 August 1977; FRV ALBATROSS IV cruise 77-07, 1-4, 16-31 August 1977. Data report, volume 1

Data are reported from KNORR cruise 68, the major investigation of the third Atlantic Coastal Experiment (ACE), conducted during a period of pro-nounced water-column stratification. One hundred fifty-five stations, including 6 time-series sitings, were occupied within the shelf and shelf- break regimes of New York Bight. Measurements were made to assess water-mass characterization, nutrient cycling, carbon/nitrogen assimilation, bio-mass distribution and diel dynamics and benthic/water-column interfacial exchange. Data are also included from the cruise of ALBATROSS IV carried out contemporaneously with the KNORR investigations, in an area ranging from Nantucket Shoals to the upper reaches of the Gulf of Maine. 20 hydrographic stations were used to augment underway mapping in order to elucidate surface-layer chlorophyll and nutrient distributions occurring at an impor-tant boundary of the New York Bight.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Judkins, D.C. & von Bock, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atlantic Coastal Experiment III: R/V KNORR cruise 68, 4-30 August 1977; FRV ALBATROSS IV cruise 77-07, 1-4, 16-31 August 1977. Data Report, volume 2. (open access)

Atlantic Coastal Experiment III: R/V KNORR cruise 68, 4-30 August 1977; FRV ALBATROSS IV cruise 77-07, 1-4, 16-31 August 1977. Data Report, volume 2.

Data are reported from KNORR cruise 88, the major investigation of the third Atlantic Coastal Experiment (ACE), conducted during a period of pronounced water-column stratification.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Judkins, D.C. & von Bock, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Federal Geothermal Program Plan for Fiscal Year 1983 (open access)

Federal Geothermal Program Plan for Fiscal Year 1983

This is an internal DOE Geothermal Program planning and control document. Many of these reports were issued only in draft form. This is a report of the Interagency Geothermal Coordinating Committee (IGCC). (DJE 2005)
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Seventh Annual Interagency Geothermal Coordiinating Council Report, Fiscal Year 1982 (open access)

The Seventh Annual Interagency Geothermal Coordiinating Council Report, Fiscal Year 1982

The U.S. Interagency Geothermal Coordinating Council was a multi-agency group charged with identifying and reducing barriers to geothermal energy development in the U.S. Many of the issues covered related to regulations for and progress in the leasing of Federal lands in the West for power development. The IGCC reports are important sources of historical information.
Date: March 30, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental Pyrolysis Studies (open access)

Fundamental Pyrolysis Studies

Progress on the direct mass spectrometric sampling of pyrolysis products from wood and its constituents is described for the period from June 1982 to February 1983. A brief summary and references to detailed reports, of the qualitative demonstration of our approach to the study of the separated processes of primary and secondary pyrolysis is presented. Improvements and additions to the pyrolysis and data acquisition systems are discussed and typical results shown. Chief of these are a heated-grid pyrolysis system for controlled primary pyrolysis and a sheathed flame arrangement for secondary cracking studies. Qualitative results of the secondary cracking of cellulose, lignin, and wood are shown as are comparisons with the literature for the pyrolysis spectra of cellulose, lignin, and levoglucosan. 'Fingerprints' for a number of materials are shown, with spectra taken under carefully controlled conditions so that sensitivity calibrations for different compounds, now being determined, can be applied.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Milne, T. A.; Evans, R. J. & Soltys, M. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recommended Procedures for Measuring Radon Fluxes from Disposal Sites of Residual Radioactive Materials (open access)

Recommended Procedures for Measuring Radon Fluxes from Disposal Sites of Residual Radioactive Materials

This report recornmenrls instrumentation and methods suitable for measuring radon fluxes emanating from covered disposal sites of residual radioactive materials such as uranium mill tailings. Problems of spatial and temporal variations in radon flux are discussed and the advantages and disadvantages of several instruments are examined. A year-long measurement program and a two rnonth measurement rnethodology are then presented based on the inherent difficulties of measuring average radon flux over a cover using the recommended instrumentation.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Young, J. A.; Thomas, V. W. & Jackson, P. O.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heber geothermal binary demonstration project quarterly technical progress report, July 1, 1982--September 30, 1982 (open access)

Heber geothermal binary demonstration project quarterly technical progress report, July 1, 1982--September 30, 1982

The purpose of this quarterly technical progress report is to document work completed on the nominal 65 Megawatt (Mwe gross) Heber Geothermal Binary Demonstration Project, located at Heber, California, during the period of July 1, 1982--September 30, 1982. The work was performed by San Diego Gas and Electric Company under the support and cooperation of the U.S. Department of Energy, the Electric Power Research Institute, the Imperial Irrigation District, the California Department of Water Resources, and the Southern California Edison Company. Topics covered in this quarterly report include progress made in the areas of Wells and Fluid Production and Injection Systems, Power Plant Design and Construction, Power Plant Demonstration, and Data Acquisition and Dissemination.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Lacy, R. G.; Allen, R. F.; Dixon, J. R.; Hsiao, W. P.; Liparidis, G. S.; Lombard, G. L. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cogeneration and Small Power Production Quarterly Report to the California Public Utilities Commission First Quarter - March 1983 (open access)

Cogeneration and Small Power Production Quarterly Report to the California Public Utilities Commission First Quarter - March 1983

In the First Quarter of 1983, the number of signed contracts and committed projects rose from 204 to 224, with a total estimated nominal capacity of these projects of 1,246 MW. Of this nominal capacity, about 259 MW is operational, and the balance is under contract for development. Of the 224 signed contracts and committed projects, 70 were cogeneration and solid waste/biomass projects with a potential of 687 MW. PG and E also had under active discussion 30 cogeneration projects that could generate a total of 744 MW to 821 MW, and 12 solid waste/biomass projects with a potential of 118 MW to 126 MW. Two contracts have been signed with geothermal projects, capable of producing 83 MW. There are 6 solar projects with signed contracts and a potential of 36 MW, as well as another solar project under active discussion for 30 MW. Wind farm projects under contract number 17, with a generating capability of 330 MW. Also, discussions are being conducted with 9 wind farm projects, totaling 184 to 189 MW. There are 89 wind projects of 100 kW or less with signed contracts and a potential of almost 1 MW, as well as 9 other projects under …
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Search Coils and Integrator Noise and Drift (open access)

Search Coils and Integrator Noise and Drift

None
Date: March 28, 1983
Creator: Ellison, T.; Mills, F.; Peters, B. & Poll, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
PPA Cavity Power Losses (open access)

PPA Cavity Power Losses

None
Date: March 17, 1983
Creator: ZuBao, Q.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Signal Cables for Magnetic Measurements (open access)

Signal Cables for Magnetic Measurements

None
Date: March 29, 1983
Creator: Ellison, T. & Poll, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of BEACON technology. Quarterly report, April-June 1982 (open access)

Development of BEACON technology. Quarterly report, April-June 1982

The BEACON process involves the catalytic deposition of a highly reactive form of carbon from a gas stream which contains carbon monoxide. The carbon-depleted gas is combusted with air to produce power, and the carbon is reacted with steam to produce methane or hydrogen. Experiments were continued this quarter with the objective of improving the carbon deposition efficiency using a Paraho retort off-gas mixture. Analysis has shown that the use of the Paraho off-gas to make hydrogen would be attractive if the ratio of the heat content of the feedgas to the heat content of the hydrogen produced is less than 3. Experimental conditions to achieve this ratio have been established. Recent work had shown that the volume of a BEACON supported catalyst bed increased with an increase in carbon loading level. Four series of experiments were performed where sieve analyses were made after one or more BEACON process cycles. These tests showed that the volume expansion is due to an increase in the number and size of the larger catalyst particles. The bench-scale testing of unsupported catalysts concentrated in two areas: (a) the completion of batch testing in the 4-inch reactor, and (b) the construction of the Tandem Reactor …
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Critical Technology List update. Final technical report (open access)

Critical Technology List update. Final technical report

ICRC has reviewed and updated its List of critical technology. The List comprises all proposed SRC-I Demonstration Plant equipment whose use has been determined to involve some degree of potential safety, performance, or environmental risk. ICRC has subjected equipment on the Critical Technology c to special technical review to ensure the highest possible level of quality and lowest cost commensurate with acceptable overall risks. Equipment or equipment systems still considered to be high risk are the following: Coal Slurry/Hot Oil Heat Exchangers, Coal Slurry Heaters, Second-Stage Feed Heaters, Vacuum Tower Heater, Vacuum Column, SRC/Light SRC Stripper - CSD, Severe Service Valves, Wastewater Reuse System, and the Solid Waste Disposal System. Equipment systems or pieces of equipment that have been downgraded to a lower risk category are the following: Coal Weigh-Feed System, Coal Slurry Dissolvers, Coal Dissolver Effluent Separator, and LC-Fining Reactors. Finally, ICRC has determined that many types of equipment are no longer Critical Technology, and has therefore removed them from the List.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of voltage control in utility interactive dispersed storage and generation systems (open access)

Effects of voltage control in utility interactive dispersed storage and generation systems

When a small generator is connected to the distribution system, the voltage at the point of interconnection is determined largely by the system and not the generator. This report examines the effect on the generator, on the load voltage and on the distribution system of a number of different voltage control strategies in the generator. Synchronous generators with three kinds of exciter control are considered, as well as induction generators and dc/ac inverters, with and without capacitor compensation. The effect of varying input power during operation (which may be experienced by generators based on renewable resources) is explored, as well as the effect of connecting and disconnecting the generator at ten percent of its rated power.
Date: March 15, 1983
Creator: Kirkham, H. & Das, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal grant program for local governments: revised grant application manual (open access)

Geothermal grant program for local governments: revised grant application manual

This revised grant application manual describes the kinds of activities eligible for geothermal grants, who may apply, and how to apply. It also describes the criteria and procedures the California Energy Commission will use in selecting proposals for grant awards.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mirror Fusion Test Facility: an intermediate device to a mirror fusion reactor (open access)

Mirror Fusion Test Facility: an intermediate device to a mirror fusion reactor

The Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF-B) now under construction at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory represents more than an order-of-magnitude step from earlier magnetic-mirror experiments toward a future mirror fusion reactor. In fact, when the device begins operating in 1986, the Lawson criteria of ntau = 10/sup 14/ cm/sup -3/.s will almost be achieved for D-T equivalent operation, thus signifying scientific breakeven. Major steps have been taken to develop MFTF-B technologies for tandem mirrors. Steady-state, high-field, superconducting magnets at reactor-revelant scales are used in the machine. The 30-s beam pulses, ECRH, and ICRH will also introduce steady-state technologies in those systems.
Date: March 30, 1983
Creator: Karpenko, V.N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ocean energy systems. Quarterly report, January-March 1983 (open access)

Ocean energy systems. Quarterly report, January-March 1983

Progress is reported on the development of Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) systems that will provide synthetic fuels (e.g., methanol), energy-intensive products such as ammonia (for fertilizers and chemicals), and aluminum. The work also includes assessment and design concepts for hybrid plants, such as geothermal-OTEC (GEOTEC) plants. Another effort that began in the spring of 1982 is a technical advisory role to DOE with respect to their management of the conceptual and preliminary design activity of industry teams that are designing a shelf-mounted offshore OTEC pilot plant that could deliver power to Oahu, Hawaii. In addition, a program is underway to evaluate and test the Pneumatic Wave-Energy Conversion System (PWECS), an ocean-energy device consisting of a turbine that is air-driven as a result of wave action in a chamber. This Quarterly Report summarizes the work on the various tasks as of 31 March 1983.
Date: March 30, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pu-238 fuel form activities, January 1-31, 1983 (open access)

Pu-238 fuel form activities, January 1-31, 1983

This monthly report for /sup 238/Pu Fuel Form Activities has two main sections: SRP-PuFF facility and SRL Fuel Form Activities. The program status, budget information, and milestone schedules are discussed in each main section. The Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) for this program is shown. Only one monthly report per year is processed for EDB.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Verification of a numerical simulation technique for natural convection (open access)

Verification of a numerical simulation technique for natural convection

The present paper describes a verification of CONVEC2 for single-zone geometries by comparison with the results of two natural convection experiments performed in small-scale rectangular enclosures. These experiments were selected because of the high Rayleigh numbers obtained and the small heat loss through the insulated surfaces. Comparisons are presented for (1) heat transfer rates, (2) fluid temperature profiles, and (3) surface heat flux distributions.
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Gadgil, A.; Bauman, F.; Altmayer, E. & Kammerud, R.C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
New statistical and non-statistical effects in deep inelastic heavy-ion collisions (open access)

New statistical and non-statistical effects in deep inelastic heavy-ion collisions

The physics of deep inelastic heavy ion collisions is briefly reviewed in the light of the experimental capabilities offered by large Tandem Accelerators. Three aspects are selected for illustration. The first is the problem posed by the angular distributions. The role of quantal fluctuations (diffraction) and of dynamical fluctuations is discussed. The possibility of extracting angular momentum fluctuations from the angular distribution width is pointed out, as well as the way to compare such results with those obtained from gamma-ray multiplicities or angular distributions. The likely sources of angular momentum fluctuations are discussed. The second problem is that of energy dissipation and partition. The experimental evidence from thermal equilibrium is reviewed and experiments to test thermal equilibrium through the measurement of the variance in the energy distribution are suggested. The correlation between energy loss and the mass variance is reviewed in terms of the mass transfer mechanism. Possible ways to determine the mass of the transferred particle are illustrated. The third problem considered is the experimental lack of mass drift in the mass distributions vs Q-value when it is expected on the basis of potential energy considerations. This problem is associated with the fast fragment thermalization and explained in terms …
Date: March 1, 1983
Creator: Moretto, Luciano G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library