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Acyclonucleosides of 2-nitroimidazole and uses as diagnostic and therapeutic agents (open access)

Acyclonucleosides of 2-nitroimidazole and uses as diagnostic and therapeutic agents

An acyclonucleoside of nitroimidazole having the ability to specifically bind to tumor cells and useful for therapy, chemotherapy, imaging and radiosensitizing the tumor cells.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Srivastava, Prem C. & Hasan, Ahmad
System: The UNT Digital Library
Precision wire feeder for small diameter wire (open access)

Precision wire feeder for small diameter wire

This invention is comprised of a device for feeding small diameter wire having a diameter less than .04 mm (16 mil) to a welding station which includes a driving wheel for controllably applying a non-deforming driving force to the wire to move the free end of the wire towards the welding station; and a tension device such as a torque motor for constantly applying a reverse force to the wire in opposition to the driving force to keep the wire taut. 1 fig.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Brandon, E. D.; Hooper, F. M. & Reichenbach, M. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A backscattering spectrometry device for identifying unknown elements present in a workpiece (open access)

A backscattering spectrometry device for identifying unknown elements present in a workpiece

This invention is comprised of a backscattering spectrometry method and device for identifying and quantifying impurities in a workpiece during processing and manufacturing of that workpiece. While the workpiece is implanted with an ion beam, that same ion beam backscatters resulting from collisions with known atoms and with impurities within the workpiece. Those ions backscatter along a predetermined scattering angle and are filtered using a self-supporting filter to stop the ions with a lower energy because they collided with the known atoms of the workpiece of a smaller mass. Those ions which pass through the filter have a greater energy resulting from impact with impurities having a greater mass than the known atoms of the workpiece. A detector counts the number and measures the energy of the ions which pass through the filter. From the energy determination and knowledge of the scattering angle, a mass calculation determines the identity, and from the number and solid angle of the scattering angle, a relative concentration of the impurity is obtained.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Doyle, Barney L. & Knapp, James A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Robot arm apparatus (open access)

Robot arm apparatus

A robot arm apparatus is provided for inspecting and/or maintaining an interior of a steam generator which has an outside wall and a port for accessing the interior of the steam generator. The robot arm apparatus includes a flexible movable conduit for conveying inspection and/or maintenance apparatus from outside the steam generator to the interior of the steam generator. The flexible conduit has a terminal working end which is translated into and around the interior of the steam generator. Three motors located outside the steam generator are employed for moving the terminal working end inside the steam generator in ``x,`` ``y,`` and ``z`` directions, respectively. Commonly conducted inspection and maintenance operations include visual inspection for damaged areas, water jet lancing for cleaning sludge deposits, core boring for obtaining sludge deposits, and scrubbing of internal parts.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Nachbar, H. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method of recovering hazardous waste from phenolic resin filters (open access)

Method of recovering hazardous waste from phenolic resin filters

A method has been found for treating phenolic resin filter, whereby the filter is solubilized within the filter cartridge housing so the filter material can be removed from the cartridge housing in a remote manner. The invention consists of contacting the filter within the housing with an aqueous solution of about 8 to 12M nitric acid, at a temperature from about 110 to 190{degree}F, maintaining the contact for a period of time sufficient to solubilize the phenolic material within the housing, and removing the solubilized phenolic material from the housing, thereby removing the filter cartridge from the housing. Any hazardous or other waste material can then be separated from the filter material by chemical or other means.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Meikrantz, David H.; Bourne, Gary L.; McFee, John N.; Burdge, Bradley G. & McConnell, John W., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Process for the recovery of strontium from acid solutions (open access)

Process for the recovery of strontium from acid solutions

The invention is a process for selectively extracting strontium and technetium values from aqueous nitric acid waste solutions containing these and other fission product values. The extractant is a macrocyclic polyether in a diluent which is insoluble in water, but which will itself dissolve a small amount of water. The process will extract strontium and technetium values from nitric acid solutions which are up to 6 molar in nitric acid.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Horwitz, E. P. & Dietz, M. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Process of converting starch to glucose and glucose to lactic acid (open access)

Process of converting starch to glucose and glucose to lactic acid

This document describes a method for converting starch into lactic acid of sufficient purity for use as a substrate for biodegradable plastics. The process is designed to work on industrial food waste streams such as potato wastes or cheese whey permeate. For potato waste, {alpha}-amylase and calcium chloride are added to the starch containing waste and incubated at a pH of 4--7, a temperature of 90--130{degree}C, and a pressure above 15 psi for not less than 15 minutes. At this point, glucoamylase is added and the mixture is incubated at a temperature of 50--70{degree}C and a pH below 6.5 for 4 hours. This results in the conversion of more than 90% of the starch into glucose, which is substantially free of microbial contamination. The hydrolysate is filtered, and introduced with additional nutrients to a fermentor containing a lactose producing microorganism to form a fermentation broth. This results in the fermentation of glucose to lactose, which is filtered and subjected to electrodialysis for purification. Conversion of glucose to lactic acid or lactate occurs with an efficiency of over 95%. 1 fig. (MHB)
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Tsai, TenLin; Sanville, C. Y.; Coleman, R. D. & Schertz, W. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Process and apparatus for coal hydrogenation (open access)

Process and apparatus for coal hydrogenation

In a coal liquefaction process an aqueous slurry of coal is prepared containing a dissolved liquefaction catalyst. A small quantity of oil is added to the slurry and then coal-oil agglomerates are prepared by agitation of the slurry at atmospheric pressure. The resulting mixture is drained of excess water and dried at atmospheric pressure leaving catalyst deposited on the agglomerates. The agglomerates then are fed to an extrusion device where they are formed into a continuous ribbon of extrudate and fed into a hydrogenation reactor at elevated pressure and temperature. The catalytic hydrogenation converts the extrudate primarily to liquid hydrocarbons in the reactor. The liquid drained in recovering the agglomerates is recycled. 1 fig.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Ruether, J. A. & Simpson, T. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method of separating organic contaminants from fluid feedstreams with polyphosphazene membranes (open access)

Method of separating organic contaminants from fluid feedstreams with polyphosphazene membranes

A method is provided for separating polar hydrocarbons from a fluid feedstream. The fluid feedstream is flowed across a first surface of a polyphosphazene semipermeable membrane. At least one polar hydrocarbon from the fluid feedstream permeates through the polyphosphazene semipermeable membrane to a second opposed surface of the semipermeable membrane. Then the permeated polar hydrocarbon is removed from the second opposed surface of the polyphosphazene semipermeable membrane. Outstanding and unexpected separation selectivities on the order of 10,000 were obtained for methylene chloride when a methylene chloride in water feedstream was flowed across the polyphosphazene semipermeable membrane in the invented method.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: McCaffrey, R. R. & Cummings, D. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fiber optic detector (open access)

Fiber optic detector

This invention is comprised of a portable fiber optic detector that senses the presence of specific target chemicals by exchanging the target chemical for a fluorescently-tagged antigen that is bound to an antibody which is in turn attached to an optical fiber. Replacing the fluorescently-tagged antigen reduces the fluorescence so that a photon sensing detector records the reduced light level and activates an appropriate alarm or indicator.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Partin, J. K.; Ward, T. E. & Grey, A. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ammonia-treated phosphate glasses useful for sealing to metals (open access)

Ammonia-treated phosphate glasses useful for sealing to metals

A method of improving surface-dependent properties of phosphate glass such as durability and wear resistance without significantly affecting its thermal expansion coefficient is provided which comprises annealing the glass in a dry ammonia atmosphere at temperatures approximating the transition temperature of the glass. The ammonia annealing treatment of the present invention is carried out for a time sufficient to allow incorporation of a thin layer of nitrogen into the surface of the phosphate glass, and the treatment improves the durability of the glass without the reduction in the thermal expansion coefficient that has restricted the effectiveness of prior ammonia treatments. The improved phosphate glass resulting from this method is superior in wear resistance, yet maintains suitable thermal expansion properties so that it may be used effectively in a variety of applications requiring hermetic glass-metal seals.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Brow, R. K. & Day, D. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detection device for hazardous material (open access)

Detection device for hazardous material

This invention is comprised of a detection device that is activated by the interaction of a hazardous chemical with a coating interactive with said chemical on an optical fiber thereby reducing the amount of light passing through the fiber to a light detector. A combination of optical filters separates the light into a signal beam and a reference beam which after detection, appropriate amplification, and comparison with preset internal signals, activates an alarm means if a predetermined level of contaminant is observed.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Partin, J. K. & Grey, A. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Counterrotating brushless dc permanent magnet motor (open access)

Counterrotating brushless dc permanent magnet motor

An brushless DC permanent magnet motor is provided for driving an autonomous underwater vehicle. In one embodiment, the motor comprises four substantially flat stators disposed in stacked relationship, with pairs of the stators being axially spaced and each of the stators comprising a tape-wound stator coil; and a first and second substantially flat rotors disposed between the spaced pairs of stators. Each of the rotors includes an annular array of permanent magnets embedded therein. A first shaft is connected to the first rotor and a second, concentric shaft is connected to the second rotor, and drive unit causes rotation of the two shafts in opposite directions. The second shaft comprises a hollow tube having a central bore therein in which the first shaft is disposed. Two different sets of bearings support the first and second shAfts. In another embodiment, the motor comprises two ironless stators and pairs and rotors mounted no opposite sides of the stators and driven by counterrotating shafts.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Hawsey, R. A. & Bailey, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improved catalysts and method (open access)

Improved catalysts and method

An improved catalyst and method for the oxyhydrochlorination of methane is disclosed. The catalyst includes a pyrogenic porous support on which is layered as active material, cobalt chloride in major proportion, and minor proportions of an alkali metal chloride and of a rare earth chloride. On contact of the catalyst with a gas flow of methane, HCl and oxygen, more than 60% of the methane is converted and of that converted more than 40% occurs as monochloromethane. Advantageously, the monochloromethane can be used to produce gasoline boiling range hydrocarbons with the recycle of HCl for further reaction. This catalyst is also of value for the production of formic acid as are analogous catalysts with lead, silver or nickel chlorides substituted for the cobalt chloride. 8 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Taylor, C. E. & Noceti, R. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Real time Faraday spectrometer (open access)

Real time Faraday spectrometer

This invention is comprised of a charged particle spectrometer that contains a detection system which embodies the benefits of both foil-light emissions and faraday cups, yet it does not interfere with the particle beam. 5 Figs. (GHH)
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Smith, T. E. Jr.; Struve, K. W. & Colella, N. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Stripline Fast Faraday Cup for measuring GHz structure of ion beams (open access)

A Stripline Fast Faraday Cup for measuring GHz structure of ion beams

The Stripline Fast Faraday Cup is a device which is used to quantitatively and qualitatively measure gigahertz time structure characteristics of ion beams with energies up to at least 30 Mev per nucleon. A stripline geometry is employed in conjunction with an electrostatic screen and a Faraday cup to provide for analysis of the structural characteristics of an ion beam. The stripline geometry allows for a large reduction in the size of the instrument while the electrostatic screen permits measurements of the properties associated with low speed ion beams.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Bogaty, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A method and apparatus for continuous electrophoresis (open access)

A method and apparatus for continuous electrophoresis

A method and apparatus for conducting continuous separation of substances by electrophoresis are disclosed. The process involves electrophoretic separation combined with couette flow in a thin volume defined by opposing surfaces. By alternating the polarity of the applied potential and producing reciprocating short rotations of at least on of the surfaces relative to the other, small increments of separation accumulate to cause substantial, useful segregation of electrophoretically separable components in a continuous flow system.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Watson, J. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Destruction of acid gas emissions (open access)

Destruction of acid gas emissions

A method of destroying NO{sub x} and SO{sub x} in a combustion gas is disclosed. The method includes generating active species by treating stable molecules in a high temperature plasma. Ammonia, methane, steam, hydrogen, nitrogen or a combustion of these gases can be selected as the stable molecules. The gases are subjected to plasma conditions sufficient to create free radicals, ions or excited atoms such as N, NH, NH{sub 2}, OH, CH and/or CH{sub 2}. These active species are injected into a combustion gas at a location of sufficiently high temperature to maintain the species in active state and permit them to react with NO{sub x} and SO{sub x}. Typically the injection is made into the immediate post-combustion gases at temperatures of 475--950{degrees}C. 1 fig.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Mathur, M. P.; Fu, Yuan C.; Ekmann, J. M. & Boyle, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wedge assembly for electrical transformer component spacing (open access)

Wedge assembly for electrical transformer component spacing

This invention is comprised of a wedge assembly that is easily inserted between two surface to be supported thereby, and thereafter expanded to produce a selected spacing between those surfaces. This wedge assembly has two outer members that are substantially identical except that they are mirror images of each other. Oppositely directed faces of these of these outer members are substantially parallel for the purpose of contacting the surfaces to be separated. The other faces of these outer members that are directed toward each other are tapered so as to contact a center member having complementary tapers on both faces. A washer member is provided to contact a common end of the outer members, and a bolt member penetrates this washer and is threadably received in a receptor of the center member. As the bolt member is threaded into the center member, the center member is drawn further into the gap between the outer members and thereby separates these outer members to contact the surfaces to be separated. In the preferred embodiment, the contacting surfaces of the outer member and the center member are provided with guide elements. The wedge assembly is described for use in separating the secondary windings …
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Baggett, F. E. & Cage, W. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Phosphazene polymer containing composites and method for making phosphazene polymer containing composites (open access)

Phosphazene polymer containing composites and method for making phosphazene polymer containing composites

The object of the invention is to provide a composite material comprised of phosphazene polymer. A feature of phosphazene-containing composites is their superior stiffness, thermal stability, and hardness which is lacking in more typical composite constituents. An advantage of using phosphazene composites is a wider range of applications, including uses in harsh environments. Another object of the present invention provides a method for producing phosphazene-containing composite materials through a pultrusion process. In brief, these and other objects are achieved by a composite produced by first coating a reinforcing material with an inorganic phosphazene compound and then polymerizing the phosphazene compound so as to confer superior thermal, physical and chemical resistance qualities to the composite. 2 figs., 6 tabs.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Allen, C. A.; Grey, A. E.; McCaffrey, R. R.; Simpson, B. M. & Stone, M. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A method for joining ceramic shapes (open access)

A method for joining ceramic shapes

The invention is a method for joining shapes of ceramic materials together to form a unitary ceramic structure. In the method of the invention, a mixture of two or more chemical components which will react exothermically is placed between the surfaces to be joined, and the joined shapes heated to a temperature sufficient to initiate the exothermic reaction forming a joining material which acts to bond the shapes together. Reaction materials are chosen which will react exothermically at temperatures below the degradation temperature of the materials to be joined. The process is particularly suited for joining composite materials of the silicon carbide-silicon carbide fiber type.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Rabin, B. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Apparatus and method for separating constituents (open access)

Apparatus and method for separating constituents

A centrifugal separator apparatus and method for improving the efficiency of the separation of constituents in a fluid stream. A cyclone separator includes an assembly for separately discharging both constituents through the same end of the separator housing. A rotary separator includes a rotary housing having a baffle disposed therein for minimizing the differential rotational velocities of the constituents in the housing, thereby decreasing turbulence, and increasing efficiency. The intensity of the centrifugal force and the time which the constituents reside within the housing can be independently controlled to improve efficiency of separation. 4 figs.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Maronde, C. P. & Killmeyer, R. P., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plenum type crystal growth chamber (open access)

Plenum type crystal growth chamber

Crystals are grown in a tank which is divided by a baffle into a crystal growth region above the baffle and a plenum region below the baffle. A turbine blade or stirring wheel is positioned in a turbine tube which extends through the baffle to generate a flow of solution from the crystal growing region to the plenum region. The solution is pressurized as it flows into the plenum region. The pressurized solution flows back to the crystal growing region through return flow tubes extending through the baffle. Growing crystals are positioned near the ends of the return flow tubes to receive a direct flow of solution.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Montgomery, K. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preparation of high specific activity technetium-96 (open access)

Preparation of high specific activity technetium-96

The present invention relates to a method of producing Tc-96 from the proton irradiation of a rhodium target and a technique for isolating under remote hot cell conditions the Tc-96 from the proton irradiated target.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Mausner, L. F.; Srivastava, S. C. & Prach, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library