Hydraulic Fracture Stimulation and Acid Treatment of Well Baca 20; Geothermal Reservoir Well Stimulation Program (open access)

Hydraulic Fracture Stimulation and Acid Treatment of Well Baca 20; Geothermal Reservoir Well Stimulation Program

The U.S. Department of Energy-sponsored Geothermal Reservoir Well Stimulation Program was initiated in February 1979 to pursue industry interest in geothermal well stimulation work and to develop technical expertise in areas directly related to geothermal well stimulation activities. This report provides an overview of the two experiments conducted in the high-temperature reservoir in Baca, New Mexico. The report discusses resource and reservoir properties, and provides a description of the stimulation experiment, a description of the treatment evaluation, and a summary of the experiment costs. (DJE-2005)
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Decision-Making Process for Selection of a Low-Kilowatt Space Nuclear Power System for Development (open access)

A Decision-Making Process for Selection of a Low-Kilowatt Space Nuclear Power System for Development

There is an extra copy in the ESD files. Not appropriate for OSTI submission.
Date: July 14, 1983
Creator: Kling, Harry P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commercial production of ethanol in the San Luis Valley, Colorado. Final Report (open access)

Commercial production of ethanol in the San Luis Valley, Colorado. Final Report

The purpose of this study is to assess the commercial feasibility of producing between 76 and 189 million liters (20 and 50 million gallons) of ethanol annually in the San Luis Valley, Colorado using geothermal energy as the primary heat source. The San Luis Valley is located in south-central Colorado. The valley is a high basin situated approximately 2316 meters (7600 feet) above sea level which contains numerous warm water wells and springs. A known geothermal resource area (KGRA) is located in the east-central area of the valley. The main industry in the valley is agriculture, while the main industry in the surrounding mountains is lumber. Both of these industries can provide feedstock for the production of ethanol.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Hewlett, E. M.; Erickson, M. V.; Ferguson, C. D.; Sherwood, P. B.; Boswell, B. S.; Walter, K. M. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Actinide Production in the Reaction of Heavy Ions withCurium-248 (open access)

Actinide Production in the Reaction of Heavy Ions withCurium-248

Chemical experiments were performed to examine the usefulness of heavy ion transfer reactions in producing new, neutron-rich actinide nuclides. A general quasi-elastic to deep-inelastic mechanism is proposed, and the utility of this method as opposed to other methods (e.g. complete fusion) is discussed. The relative merits of various techniques of actinide target synthesis are discussed. A description is given of a target system designed to remove the large amounts of heat generated by the passage of a heavy ion beam through matter, thereby maximizing the beam intensity which can be safely used in an experiment. Also described is a general separation scheme for the actinide elements from protactinium (Z = 91) to mendelevium (Z = 101), and fast specific procedures for plutonium, americium and berkelium. The cross sections for the production of several nuclides from the bombardment of {sup 248}Cm with {sup 18}O, {sup 86}Kr and {sup 136}Xe projectiles at several energies near and below the Coulomb barrier were determined. The results are compared with yields from {sup 48}Ca and {sup 238}U bombardments of {sup 248}Cm. Simple extrapolation of the product yields into unknown regions of charge and mass indicates that the use of heavy ion transfer reactions to produce …
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Moody, K. J.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Scoping Experiments for a Space Reactor (open access)

Some Scoping Experiments for a Space Reactor

Some scoping experiments were performed to evaluate fuel performance in a lithium heat pipe reactor operating at a nominal 1500K heat pipe temperature. Fuel-coolant and fuel-coolant-clad relationships showed that once a failed heat pipe occurs temperatures can rise high enough so that large concentrations of uranium can be transported by the vapor phase. Upon condensation this uranium would be capable of penetrating heat pipes adjacent to the failed pipe. The potential for propagation of failure exists with UO/sub 2/ and a lithium heat pipe. Changing the composition of the metal of the heat pipe would have only a second order effect on the kinetics of the failure mechanism. Uranium carbide and nitride were considered as potential fuels which are nonreactive in a lithium environment. At high temperatures the nitride would be favored because of its better compatibility with potential cladding materials. Compositions of UN with small additions of YN appear to offer very attractive properties for a compact high temperature high power density reactor.
Date: July 7, 1983
Creator: Alexander, C. A. & Ogden, J. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Internal R and D task summary report: analytical methods development (open access)

Internal R and D task summary report: analytical methods development

International Coal Refining Company (ICRC) conducted two research programs to develop analytical procedures for characterizing the feed, intermediates,and products of the proposed SRC-I Demonstration Plant. The major conclusion is that standard analytical methods must be defined and assigned statistical error limits of precision and reproducibility early in development. Comparing all SRC-I data or data from different processes is complex and expensive if common data correlation procedures are not followed. ICRC recommends that processes be audited analytically and statistical analyses generated as quickly as possible, in order to quantify process-dependent and -independent variables. 16 references, 10 figures, 20 tables.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Schweighardt, F.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hawaii basic data for thermal springs and wells as recorded in geotherm (open access)

Hawaii basic data for thermal springs and wells as recorded in geotherm

GEOTHERM sample file contains 34 records for Hawaii. The high average ambient air temperature found on the Hawaiian Islands required fluid samples to have a temperature of at least 30/sup 0/C to be included. A computer-generated index is found in appendices A of this report. The index give one line summaries of each GEOTHERM record describing the chemistry of geothermal springs and wells in the sample file for Hawaii. The index is found in appendix A (p. is sorted by county and by the name of the source. Also given are well number (when appropriate), site type (spring, well, fumarole), latitude, longitude (both use decimal minutes), GEOTHERM record identifier, and temperature (/sup 0/C). In conducting a search of Appendix A, site names are quite useful for locating springs or wells for which a specific name is commonly used, but sites which do not have specific names are more difficult to locate.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Bliss, J. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Btu coal gasification in the United States: company topical. [Brick producers] (open access)

Low-Btu coal gasification in the United States: company topical. [Brick producers]

Hazelton and other brick producers have proved the reliability of the commercial size Wellman-Galusha gasifier. For this energy intensive business, gas cost is the major portion of the product cost. Costs required Webster/Hazelton to go back to the old, reliable alternative energy of low Btu gasification when the natural gas supply started to be curtailed and prices escalated. Although anthracite coal prices have skyrocketed from $34/ton (1979) to over $71.50/ton (1981) because of high demand (local as well as export) and rising labor costs, the delivered natural gas cost, which reached $3.90 to 4.20/million Btu in the Hazelton area during 1981, has allowed the producer gas from the gasifier at Webster Brick to remain competitive. The low Btu gas cost (at the escalated coal price) is estimated to be $4/million Btu. In addition to producing gas that is cost competitive with natural gas at the Webster Brick Hazelton plant, Webster has the security of knowing that its gas supply will be constant. Improvements in brick business and projected deregulation of the natural gas price may yield additional, attractive cost benefits to Webster Brick through the use of low Btu gas from these gasifiers. Also, use of hot raw gas (that …
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Boesch, L. P.; Hylton, B. G. & Bhatt, C. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of ebullated bed fluid dynamics. Final progress report, September 1980-July 1983 (open access)

Study of ebullated bed fluid dynamics. Final progress report, September 1980-July 1983

The fluid dynamics occurring in HRI's H-coal process development unit coal liquefaction reactor during Run PDU-10 were measured and compared with Amoco Oil cold-flow fluidization results. It was found that catalyst bed expansions and gas holdups are higher in the PDU than those observed in the cold-flow tests for slurries having the same nominal viscosity. Comparison of PDU results with cold-flow results shows that the bulk of the operating reactor gas flow lies in the ideal bubbly regime. It also appears that the gas bubbles in these PDU tests are rising quite slowly. Only two of the operating points in our test program on the PDU were found to lie in the churn turbulent regime. Existence of churn turbulent behavior during these two experiments is consistent with trends observed in earlier cold-flow experiments. Two- and three-phase fluidization experiments were carried out in Amoco's cold-flow fluid dynamics unit. The data base now includes fluidization results for coal char/kerosene slurry concentrations of 4.0, 9.8, and 20.7 vol% in addition to the 15.5 and 17.8 vol% data from our earlier work. Both HDS-2A and Amocat-1A catalysts were used in the tests. Bed expansion is primarily a function of slurry velocity, with gas velocity …
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Schaefer, R.J.; Rundell, D.N. & Shou, J.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Critical Review of the State-of-the-Art of Fracture Mechanics with Emphasis on Layered Rocks (open access)

Critical Review of the State-of-the-Art of Fracture Mechanics with Emphasis on Layered Rocks

Results are presented of a literature survey of over 70 pertinent publications and critical reviews of fracture mechanics emphasizing the fracture behavior of layered rocks. Historical perspective, fracture mechanisms, linear and nonlinear fracture mechanics, energy theories, ductile and brittle fractures, process regions, specific work of fracture, J-integrals, failure theories, static and dynamic fractures, rock fracture mechanics, fracture toughness of layered rocks (e.g., oil shale), experimental and numerical methods are reviewed and discussed. Innovative and promising methods tailored for the fracture mechanics of layered rocks are recommended.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Kuruppu, M. D.; Cheng, K. P. & Edl Jr., J. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improving the energy efficiency of residential clothes dryers (open access)

Improving the energy efficiency of residential clothes dryers

An experimental study on energy efficient electrical domestic clothes dryers is presented. A literature survey was performed and four basic energy saving techniques were identified: (1) reduced air flow rate and heater input, (2) recirculation of a portion of the exhaust air back into the clothes dryer, (3) heat recovery, utilizing an air-to-air heat exchanger, and (4) 100% recirculation of air through the dryer and a heat pump to condense water out of the air. Reduced air flow rate and heater input leads to energy savings around 8%, while recirculation of exhaust air reduces the energy consumption by approximately 18%. Because of the low cost of these two measures, they should be pursued by the manufacturers. When utilizing an air-to-air heat exchanger for heat recovery, two modes are considered. The first is to preheat the inlet air with heat from the exhaust air, which results in 20 to 26% energy savings depending upon the location of the dryer in the house. The second more attractive mode is 100% recirculation of air and condensation of water from this air in the heat exchanger (using indoor air as a heat sink) and represents a 100% heat recovery but leads to a 1 …
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Hekmat, D. & Fisk, W.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technically recoverable Devonian shale gas in Ohio (open access)

Technically recoverable Devonian shale gas in Ohio

The technically recoverable gas from Devonian shale (Lower and Middle Huron) in Ohio is estimated to range from 6.2 to 22.5 Tcf, depending on the stimulation method and pattern size selected. This estimate of recovery is based on the integration of the most recent data and research on the Devonian Age gas-bearing shales of Ohio. This includes: (1) a compilation of the latest geologic and reservoir data for the gas in-place; (2) analysis of the key productive mechanisms; and, (3) examination of alternative stimulation and production strategies for most efficiently recovering this gas. Beyond a comprehensive assembly of the data and calculation of the technically recoverable gas, the key findings of this report are as follows: a substantial volume of gas is technically recoverable, although advanced (larger scale) stimulation technology will be required to reach economically attractive gas production rates in much of the state; well spacing in certain of the areas can be reduced by half from the traditional 150 to 160 acres per well without severely impairing per-well gas recovery; and, due to the relatively high degree of permeability anisotropy in the Devonian shales, a rectangular, generally 3 by 1 well pattern leads to optimum recovery. Finally, although …
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Kuushraa, V.A.; Wicks, D.E.; Sawyer, W.K. & Esposito, P.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Properties of jets in high-E/sub T/ events produced in pp collisions at. sqrt. s = 63 GeV (open access)

Properties of jets in high-E/sub T/ events produced in pp collisions at. sqrt. s = 63 GeV

The properties of jets in high-E/sub tau/ events produced in pp collisions at ..sqrt..s = 63 GeV have been studied at the CERN Intersecting Storage Rings. The fragmentation of the jets is found to be similar to that of jets produced in e/sup +/e/sup -/ annihilation. The jets are wider than calculated from a constituent scattering model with no hard bremsstrahlung component. The charge correlations of positive and negative particles show differences consistent with expectation from valence-quark scattering. 11 references.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Akesson, T.; Albrow, M.G.; Almehed, S.; Batley, R.; Benary, O.; Boggild, H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
NCIS - a Nuclear Criticality Information System (overview) (open access)

NCIS - a Nuclear Criticality Information System (overview)

A Nuclear Criticality Information System (NCIS) is being established at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in order to serve personnel responsible for safe storage, transport, and handling of fissile materials and those concerned with the evaluation and analysis of nuclear, critical experiments. Public concern for nuclear safety provides the incentive for improved access to nuclear safety information.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Koponen, B. L. & Hampel, V. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trioxane-initiated formic acid denitration (open access)

Trioxane-initiated formic acid denitration

The Savannah River Laboratory has developed a procedure for controlled low-temperature chemical denitration of acidic solutions. The procedure can be used in semi-continuous denitration facilities and can also be directly applied to nitric acid solutions in a storage tank (in situ denitration) if there is some provision for moderate heating (up to 80/sup 0/C) and cooling. The procedure works well for both highly acidic (approx. 11M) and moderately acidic (approx. 3M) solutions. Trioxane, the cyclic trimer of formaldehyde, is used to initiate the reaction, while the bulk of the denitration is effected by the formic acid. Once initiated, the off-gas rate is controlled by the formic acid addition rate and can easily be maintained within the capacity limits of the off-gas system. The procedure was successfully applied to a plant-scale in situ denitration at the Savannah River Plant.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Reif, D. J.; Wright, W. V. & Monson, P. R., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
HTGR Fuel Technology Program. Semiannual report for the period ending March 31, 1983 (open access)

HTGR Fuel Technology Program. Semiannual report for the period ending March 31, 1983

This document reports the technical accomplishments of the HTGR Fuel Technology Program at GA Technologies Inc. during the first half of FY 83. The activities include the fuel process, fuel materials, fuel cycle, fission product transport, core component verification, and core technology transfer tasks necessary to support the design and development of a steam cycle/cogeneration (SC/C) version of the HTGR.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production of antihyperons in the central region at the ISR. The axial field spectrometer collaboration (open access)

Production of antihyperons in the central region at the ISR. The axial field spectrometer collaboration

We present measurements of the relative production cross-sections of anti p, anti ..lambda.., anti ..xi.., and anti ..cap omega.. at y approx. 0 for 1 less than or equal to p/sub T/ less than or equal to 2 GeV/c in pp collisions at ..sqrt..s = 63 GeV. The results are compared with previous measurements of antibaryon production in hadronic and e/sup +/e/sup -/ collisions.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Akesson, T.; Albrow, M.C.; Almehed, S.; Batley, R.; Benary, O.; Boggild, H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Volume generation of negative ions in high density hydrogen discharges (open access)

Volume generation of negative ions in high density hydrogen discharges

A parametric survey is made of a high-density tandem two-chamber hydrogen negative ion system. The optimum extracted negative ion current densities are sensitive to the atom concentration in the discharge and to the system scale length. For scale lengths ranging from 10 cm to 0.1 cm optimum current densities range from of order 1 to 100 mA cm/sup -2/, respectively.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Hiskes, J.R. & Karo, A.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transport properties of fission product vapors (open access)

Transport properties of fission product vapors

Kinetic theory of gases is used to calculate the transport properties of fission product vapors in a steam and hydrogen environment. Provided in tabular form is diffusivity of steam and hydrogen, viscosity and thermal conductivity of the gaseous mixture, and diffusivity of cesium iodide, cesium hydroxide, diatomic tellurium and tellurium dioxide. These transport properties are required in determining the thermal-hydraulics of and fission product transport in light water reactors.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Im, K. H. & Ahluwalia, R. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Non-linear variation of the beta function with momentum (open access)

Non-linear variation of the beta function with momentum

A theory is presented for computing the non-linear dependence of the ..beta..-functions on momentum. Results are found for the quadratic term. The results of the theory are compared with computed results. A procedure is proposed for computing the strengths of the sextupole correctors to correct the dependence of the ..beta..-function on momentum.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Parzen, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam-blowup study for a weak-strong case (open access)

Beam-blowup study for a weak-strong case

A comparison is made of experimental results obtained on two SLAC storage rings PEP and SPEAR with the theoretical calculations and the dependence of the phenomenon on different machine parameters is studied. In the present paper we present such a comparison with reasonably good agreement between the experiment and the theory. The important conclusion from our study is that any valid theory of the beam-beam phenomenon should take into account the asymmetries of the machine parameters arising in any storage ring from all kinds of machine imperfections.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Kheifets, S.; Helm, R. & Shoaee, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison between experimental and theoretical results for the fast-head-tail instability in PEP (open access)

Comparison between experimental and theoretical results for the fast-head-tail instability in PEP

The fast-head-tail instability has been observed at several storage rings. This is a single-bunch beam instability where the unstable motion can occur in either the horizontal or vertical plane. Kohaupt and Talman have offered a simplified treatment of this instability by modeling the bunch as two rigid macroparticles executing synchrotron oscillations and thus exchanging their longitudinal positions periodically. While the wake field forces which drive the fast-head-tail instability are the same ones which drive the slow-head-tail instability, the growth mechanism is considerably different. The two particle model describes the particle motion with two normal modes; below a certain stability threshold, these two modes are stable with different frequencies. In the limit of zero beam current only one of these modes has a center-of-charge motion. However, as the current is increased, both modes acquire center-of-charge motions and at threshold the center-of-charge components of their motions become equal in magnitude, thus when the center-of-charge motion is excited by an impulse as by an injection kicker, the relative amplitude of the two modes depends upon the ratio of bunch current to the threshold current. We shall describe the character of this coherent motion both theoretically and experimentally.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploration and development of the Cerro Prieto geothermal field (open access)

Exploration and development of the Cerro Prieto geothermal field

A multidisciplinary effort to locate, delineate, and characterize the geothermal system at Cerro Prieto, Baja California, Mexico, began about 25 years ago. It led to the identification of an important high-temperature, liquid-dominated geothermal system which went into production in 1973. Initially, the effort was undertaken principally by the Mexican electric power agency, the Comision Federal de Electricidad (CFE). Starting in 1977 a group of US organizations sponsored by the US Department of Energy, joined CFE in this endeavor. An evaluation of the different studies carried out at Cerro Prieto has shown that: (1) surface electrical resistivity and seismic reflection surveys are useful in defining targets for exploratory drilling; (2) the mineralogical studies of cores and cuttings and the analysis of well logs are important in designing the completion of wells, identifying geological controls on fluid movement, determining thermal effects and inferring the thermal history of the field; (3) geochemical surveys help to define zones of recharge and paths of fluid migration; and (4) reservoir engineering studies are necessary in establishing the characteristics of the reservoir and in predicting its response to fluid production.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Lippmann, M. J.; Goldstein, N. E.; Halfman, S. E. & Witherspoon, P. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library