Review of Desiccant Dehumidification Technology (open access)

Review of Desiccant Dehumidification Technology

This paper overviews applications of desiccant technology for dehumidifying commercial and institutional buildings. Because of various market, policy, and regulatory factors, this technology is especially attractive for dehumidification applications in the I990s.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Pesaran, A. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Steady Winds on Radon-222 Entry from soil into houses (open access)

The Effect of Steady Winds on Radon-222 Entry from soil into houses

Wind affects the radon-222 entry rate from soil into buildings and the resulting indoor concentrations. To investigate this phenomenon, we employ a previously tested three-dimensional numerical model of soil-gas Bow around houses, a commercial computational fluid dynamics code, an established model for determining ventilation rates in the presence of wind, and new wind tunnel results for the ground-surface pressure field caused by wind. These tools and data, applied under steady-state conditions to a prototypical residential building, allow us (1) to determine the complex soil-gas flow patterns that result from the presence of wind-generated ground-surface pressures, (2) to evaluate the effect of these flows on the radon concentration in the soil, and (3) to calculate the effect of wind on the radon entry rate and indoor concentration. For a broad range of soil permeabilities, two wind speeds, and two wind directions, we quantify the"flushing" effect of wind on the radon in the soil surrounding a house, and the consequent sharp decrease in radon entry rates. Experimental measurements of the time-dependent radon concentration in soil gas beneath houses confirm the existence of wind-induced flushing. Comparisons are made to modeling predictions obtained while ignoring the effect of the wind-generated ground-surface pressures. These investigations …
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Riley, W. J.; Gadgil, A. J.; Bonnefous, Y. C. & Nazaroff, W. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
q Profile evolution and enhanced core confinement of high {beta}{sub p} plasmas in DIII-D (open access)

q Profile evolution and enhanced core confinement of high {beta}{sub p} plasmas in DIII-D

In DIII-D the authors have investigated the long pulse evolution of high poloidal beta ({sub beta}{sub p}), double-null diverted H-mode discharges, which exhibit high bootstrap current fractions attractive for a reactor. At low currents I{sub p}, the current profile evolved over several seconds and the on-axis safety factor (q{sub 0}) increased. When q{sub 0} increased above {approximately}2, the MHD character changed from an m/n = 2/1 to an m/n = 3/1 internal kink mode, where m(n) are poloidal (toroidal) mode numbers, which then disappeared with further increases in q{sub 0}. Coincident with a strong reduction of fluctuations, the authors observed enhanced core confinement, leading to strong density peaking, a further rise in {beta}{sub p}, and a bootstrap current increasing to I{sub boot}/I{sub p} {approx} 0.8, peaked within the core. Ideal MHD calculations showed access to second stability during the density rise. During the enhanced performance phase core particle lifetime ({tau}{sub p}) and global energy lifetime ({tau}{sub E}) increased by factors of 2 and 1.2 respectively. Transport analysis showed that core particle and thermal diffusivities D{sub e} and {chi}{sub eff} approached neoclassical values. During the low current experiments, large losses of fast ions (typically {approximately}50% at 0.4 MA) were observed; at …
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Stallard, B. W.; Casper, T. A. & Fenstermacher, M. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrologic data summary for the White Oak Creek watershed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee (January--December 1993) (open access)

Hydrologic data summary for the White Oak Creek watershed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee (January--December 1993)

This report summarizes, for the 12-month period (January through December 1993), the available dynamic hydrologic data collected, primarily, on the White Oak Creek (WOC) watershed along with information collected on the surface flow systems which affect the quality or quantity of surface water. Identification of spatial and temporal trends in hydrologic parameters and mechanisms that affect the movement of contaminants supports the development of interim corrective measures and remedial restoration alternatives. In addition, hydrologic monitoring supports long-term assessment of the effectiveness of remedial actions in limiting the transport of contaminants across Waste Area Grouping (WAG) boundaries and ultimately to the off-site environment. For these reasons, it is of paramount importance to the Environmental Restoration Program (ERP) to collect and report hydrologic data, an activity that contributes to the Site Investigations (SI) component of the ERP. This report provides and describes sources of hydrologic data for Environmental Restoration activities that use monitoring data to quantify and assess the impact from releases of contaminants from ORNL WAGs.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Borders, D. M.; Frederick, B. J.; Reece, D. K.; McCalla, W. L.; Watts, J. A. & Ziegler, K. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Keeping the peace green: Integrating arms control and environmental protection (open access)

Keeping the peace green: Integrating arms control and environmental protection

This talk is about how to avoid turning swords into Superfund sites. The problem we address is the potential conflict between the desire to take advantage of the greater international security brought by the end of the Cold War by entering arms control agreements requiring various military weapons to be dismantled, and the desire to avoid further degrading the environment in the process of destroying them. We will use as an illustration of these issues the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), which is intended to cause the destruction of all chemical weapons in the world. First, we will provide a brief overview of the CWC, then we will focus in on its environmental provisions, and, finally, we will discuss potential conflicts with United States law and how they might be resolved.
Date: October 21, 1994
Creator: Tanzman, E. A. & Kellman, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal modeling of the lithium/polymer battery (open access)

Thermal modeling of the lithium/polymer battery

Research in the area of advanced batteries for electric-vehicle applications has increased steadily since the 1990 zero-emission-vehicle mandate of the California Air Resources Board. Due to their design flexibility and potentially high energy and power densities, lithium/polymer batteries are an emerging technology for electric-vehicle applications. Thermal modeling of lithium/polymer batteries is particularly important because the transport properties of the system depend exponentially on temperature. Two models have been presented for assessment of the thermal behavior of lithium/polymer batteries. The one-cell model predicts the cell potential, the concentration profiles, and the heat-generation rate during discharge. The cell-stack model predicts temperature profiles and heat transfer limitations of the battery. Due to the variation of ionic conductivity and salt diffusion coefficient with temperature, the performance of the lithium/polymer battery is greatly affected by temperature. Because of this variation, it is important to optimize the cell operating temperature and design a thermal management system for the battery. Since the thermal conductivity of the polymer electrolyte is very low, heat is not easily conducted in the direction perpendicular to cell layers. Temperature profiles in the cells are not as significant as expected because heat-generation rates in warmer areas of the cell stack are lower than …
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Pals, C. R.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parametric design using IGRIP (open access)

Parametric design using IGRIP

The Department of Energy`s (DOE) Hanford site near Richland, Washington is being cleaned up after 50 years of nuclear materials production. One of the most serious problems at the site is the waste stored in single-shell underground storage tanks. There are 149 of these tanks containing the spent fuel residue remaining after the fuel is dissolved in acid and the desired materials (primarily plutonium and uranium) are separated out. The tanks are upright cylinders 75 ft. in diameter with domed tops. They are made of reinforced concrete, have steel liners, and each tank is buried under 7--12 ft. of overburden. The tanks are up to 40-ft. high, and have capacities of 500,000, 750,000, or 1,000,000 gallons of waste. As many as one-third of these tanks are known or suspected to leak. The waste form contained in the tanks varies in consistency from liquid supernatant to peanut-butter-like gels and sludges to hard salt cake (perhaps as hard as low-grade concrete). The current waste retrieval plan is to insert a large long-reach manipulator through a hole cut in the top of the tank, and use a variety of end-effectors to mobilize the waste and remove it from the tank. PNL has, with …
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Baker, C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isotopic Scaling of Transport in Deuterium-Tritium Plasmas (open access)

Isotopic Scaling of Transport in Deuterium-Tritium Plasmas

Both global and thermal energy confinement improve in high-temperature supershot plasmas in the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR) when deuterium beam heating is partially or wholly replaced by tritium beam heating. For the same heating power, the tritium-rich plasmas obtain up to 22% higher total energy, 30% higher thermal ion energy, and 20-25% higher central ion temperature. Kinetic analysis of the temperature and density profiles indicates a favorable isotopic scaling of ion heat transport and electron particle transport, with {tau}{sub Ei}(a/2) {proportional_to} (A){sup 0.7-0.8} and {tau}{sub pe}(a) {proportional_to} (A){sup 0.8}.
Date: October 1994
Creator: Scott, S. D.; Adler, H.; Bell, M. G.; Bell, R.; Budny, R. V.; Ernst, D. R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
In-situ containment and stabilization of buried waste: Annual report FY 1994 (open access)

In-situ containment and stabilization of buried waste: Annual report FY 1994

The two landfills of specific interest are the Chemical Waste Landfill (CWL) and the Mixed Waste Landfill (MWL), both located at Sandia National Laboratory. The work is comprised of two subtasks: (1) In-Situ Barriers and (2) In-Situ Stabilization of Contaminated Soils. The main environmental concern at the CWL is a chromium plume resulting from disposal of chromic acid and chromic sulfuric acid into unlined pits. This program has investigated means of in-situ stabilization of chromium contaminated soils and placement of containment barriers around the CWL. The MWL contains a plume of tritiated water. In-situ immobilization of tritiated water with cementitious grouts was not considered to be a method with a high probability of success and was not pursued. This is discussed further in Section 5.0. Containment barriers for the tritium plume were investigated. FY 94 work focused on stabilization of chromium contaminated soil with blast furnace slag modified grouts to bypass the stage of pre-reduction of Cr(6), barriers for tritiated water containment at the MWL, continued study of barriers for the CWL, and jet grouting field trials for CWL barriers at an uncontaminated site at SNL. Cores from the FY 93 permeation grouting field trails were also tested in FY …
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Allan, M. L. & Kukacka, L. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Whirl plus tilt (open access)

Whirl plus tilt

It is shown that, for an idealized rotor with identical magnetic bearings of negligible mass, precession and rotation are decoupled from the center-of-mass motion so that stabilization of whirl instabilities can be designed independent of tilt. The bearing torques that cause whirl also apply torques on the free-body- rotational motion in a tilted state. The rotational equations of motion including these torques are given in the paper. An approximate solution for a special case suggests the possibility of tilt instability above a critical frequency.
Date: October 12, 1994
Creator: Fowler, T. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Charged particle beam current monitoring tutorial (open access)

Charged particle beam current monitoring tutorial

A tutorial presentation is made on topics related to the measurement of charged particle beam currents. The fundamental physics of electricity and magnetism pertinent to the problem is reviewed. The physics is presented with a stress on its interpretation from an electrical circuit theory point of view. The operation of devices including video pulse current transformers, direct current transformers, and gigahertz bandwidth wall current style transformers is described. Design examples are given for each of these types of devices. Sensitivity, frequency response, and physical environment are typical parameters which influence the design of these instruments in any particular application. Practical engineering considerations, potential pitfalls, and performance limitations are discussed.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Webber, R. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary safety evaluation for 241-C-106 waste retrieval, project W-320 (open access)

Preliminary safety evaluation for 241-C-106 waste retrieval, project W-320

This document presents the Preliminary Safety Evaluation for Project W-320, Tank 241-C-106 Waste Retrieval Sluicing System (WRSS). The US DOE has been mandated to develop plans for response to safety issues associated with the waste storage tanks at the Hanford Site, and to report the progress of implementing those plans to Congress. The objectives of Project W-230 are to design, fabricate, develop, test, and operate a new retrieval system capable of removing a minimum of about 75% of the high-heat waste contained in C-106. It is anticipated that sluicing operations can remove enough waste to reduce the remaining radiogenic heat load to levels low enough to resolve the high-heat safety issue as well as allow closure of the tank safety issue.
Date: October 18, 1994
Creator: Conner, J. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis and characterization of double shell tank 241-AP-108 (open access)

Analysis and characterization of double shell tank 241-AP-108

This document is the first part of a three-part report describing the analysis and characterization of double shell tank 241-AP-108 which is located at the Hanford Reservation.This document is the analytical laboratory data package entitled `Analysis and Characterization of Double Shell Tank 241-AP-108` which contains a case sampling history, the sampling protocols, the analytical procedures, sampling and analysis quality assurance and quality control measures, and chemical analysis results for samples obtained from the tank.
Date: October 4, 1994
Creator: Miller, G. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test plan for evaluation of plasma melter technology for vitrification of high-sodium content low-level radioactive liquid wastes (open access)

Test plan for evaluation of plasma melter technology for vitrification of high-sodium content low-level radioactive liquid wastes

This document provides a test plan for the conduct of plasma arc vitrification testing by a vendor in support of the Hanford Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) Low-Level Waste (LLW) Vitrification Program. The vendor providing this test plan and conducting the work detailed within it [one of seven selected for glass melter testing under Purchase Order MMI-SVV-384212] is the Westinghouse Science and Technology Center (WSTC) in Pittsburgh, PA. WSTC authors of the test plan are D. F. McLaughlin, E. J. Lahoda, W. R. Gass, and N. D`Amico. The WSTC Program Manager for this test is D. F. McLaughlin. This test plan is for Phase I activities described in the above Purchase Order. Test conduct includes melting of glass frit with Hanford LLW Double-Shell Slurry Feed waste simulant in a plasma arc fired furnace.
Date: October 20, 1994
Creator: McLaughlin, D. F.; Lahoda, E. J.; Gass, W. R. & D`Amico, N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cryogenic monochromator as a solution to undulator heat loads at third generation synchrotron sources (open access)

Cryogenic monochromator as a solution to undulator heat loads at third generation synchrotron sources

We have developed a new design for a cryogenically cooled monochromator employing a thin-crystal strategy which is capable of handling the central-cone power of the Advanced Photon Source`s Undulator A at closed gap and at the full design current of 300 mA. We have designed and fabricated a Si (111) crystal which has a thin section where the x-rays hit and has internal cooling channels. A invar manifold has also been designed and it will be attached to the Si via In gaskets. We have done detailed modeling, both with approximate analytical and with finite element calculations. The results shown that our design has negligible thermal strain even for closed gap operation.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Knapp, G. S.; Rogers, C. S.; Beno, M. A.; Jennings, G. & Cowan, P. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transport simulation of negative magnetic shear discharges (open access)

Transport simulation of negative magnetic shear discharges

In the present work the authors present simulations which show that the hollow current profile can be maintained in quasi-steady state through a self-consistently determined combination of bootstrap current and neutral beam and rf current drive. Controllability of the q profile is demonstrated by eliminating low m/n mode number instabilities from these discharges by maintaining q > 1.5 at all times, starting from appropriate initial conditions. At moderately high {beta}{sub p}, the bootstrap current can be a substantial fraction of the total current and the ability to maintain the proper total current density profile depends on the bootstrap current profile and the availability of suitable localized heating and current drive. In these simulations, they use electron cyclotron heating, ion cyclotron heating, and electron cyclotron and fast wave current drive. The ability to maintain the profiles is demonstrated using several energy transport models. Self-consistent transport simulations are used to model the SSC discharges using the ONETWO transport code coupled to rf heating and current drive packages FASTWAVE and TORAY. To accurately model inductive and driven current profile evolution, the additional source terms that arise in Faraday`s law due to internal flux surface motion are included by coupling the transport calculations to …
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: St. John, H.; Taylor, T. S.; Lin-Liu, Y. R. & Turnbull, A. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer code input for thermal hydraulic analysis of Multi-Function Waste Tank Facility Title II design (open access)

Computer code input for thermal hydraulic analysis of Multi-Function Waste Tank Facility Title II design

The input files to the P/Thermal computer code are documented for the thermal hydraulic analysis of the Multi-Function Waste Tank Facility Title II design analysis.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Cramer, E. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Practical superconductor development for electrical power applications, annual report for FY 1994 (open access)

Practical superconductor development for electrical power applications, annual report for FY 1994

Development of useful high-critical-temperature superconductors requires synthesis of superconducting compounds; fabrication of wires, tapes, and films from these compounds; production of composite structures that incorporate stabilizers or insulators; and design and testing of efficient components. This report describes technical progress of research and development efforts aimed at producing superconducting components in the Y-Ba-Cu, (Bi,Pb)-Sr-Ca-Cu, (Tl,Pb,Bt)-(Ba,Sr)-Ca-Cu. and Hg-Ba-Ca-Cu-0 oxide systems. Topics discussed are synthesis and heat treatment of high-Tc superconductors, formation of monolithic and composite conductors. characterization of structures and superconducting and mechanical properties, and fabrication and testing of prototype components. Collaborations with industry and academia are documented.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Balachandran, U.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CsI(Tl) with photodiodes for identifying subsurface radionuclide contamination (open access)

CsI(Tl) with photodiodes for identifying subsurface radionuclide contamination

At the US Department of Energy`s Hanford Site near Richland, Washington, underground radioactive contamination exists as the result of leaks, spills, and intentional disposal of waste products from plutonium-production operations. Characterizing these contaminants in preparation for environmental remediation is a major effort now in progress. In this paper, a cylindrical (15 {times} 61 mm) CsI(Tl) scintillation detector with two side-mounted photodiodes has been developed to collect spectral gamma-ray data in subsurface contaminated formations at the U.S. Department of Energy`s Hanford Site. It operates inside small-diameter, thick-wall steel pipes pushed into the ground to depths up to 20 m by a cone penetrometer. The detector provides a rugged, efficient, magnetic-field-insensitive means for identifying gamma-ray-emitting contaminants (mainly {sup 137}Cs and {sup 60}Co). Mounting two 3 x 30-mm photodiodes end-to-end on a flat area along the detector`s side provides efficient light collection over the length of the detector.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Stromswold, D. C.; Meisner, J. E. & Nicaise, W. F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear criticality safety evaluation -- DWPF Late Wash Facility, Salt Process Cell and Chemical Process Cell (open access)

Nuclear criticality safety evaluation -- DWPF Late Wash Facility, Salt Process Cell and Chemical Process Cell

The Savannah River Site (SRS) High Level Nuclear Waste will be vitrified in the Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF) for long term storage and disposal. This is a nuclear criticality safety evaluation for the Late Wash Facility (LWF), the Salt Processing Cell (SPC) and the Chemical Processing Cell (CPC). of the DWPF. Waste salt solution is processed in the Tank Farm In-Tank Precipitation (ITP) process and is then further washed in the DWPF Late Wash Facility (LWF) before it is fed to the DWPF Salt Processing Cell. In the Salt Processing Cell the precipitate slurry is processed in the Precipitate Reactor (PR) and the resultant Precipitate Hydrolysis Aqueous (PHA) produce is combined with the sludge feed and frit in the DWPF Chemical Process Cell to produce a melter feed. The waste is finally immobilized in the Melt Cell. Material in the Tank Farm and the ITP and Extended Sludge processes have been shown to be safe against a nuclear criticality by others. The precipitate slurry feed from ITP and the first six batches of sludge feed are safe against a nuclear criticality and this evaluation demonstrates that the processes in the LWF, the SPC and the CPC do not alter …
Date: October 17, 1994
Creator: Williamson, T. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Generation of fast electrons in reversed field pinches by the equilibrium grad {vert_bar}B{vert_bar} force (open access)

Generation of fast electrons in reversed field pinches by the equilibrium grad {vert_bar}B{vert_bar} force

It is shown that a decreasing magnetic field profile in reversed-field pinch plasmas leads to formation of an anisotropic electron distribution function at the plasma edge. The mechanism is the conservation of the magnetic moment and the energy of electrons that collisionlessly travel outward in a stochastic magnetic field. As a result, the electrons have high parallel energies and low perpendicular energies at the edge. The details of the distribution function correspond well to experimental results.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Fiksel, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
300 Area treated effluent disposal facility sampling schedule (open access)

300 Area treated effluent disposal facility sampling schedule

This document is the interface between the 300 Area Liquid Effluent Process Engineering (LEPE) group and the Waste Sampling and Characterization Facility (WSCF), concerning process control samples. It contains a schedule for process control samples at the 300 Area TEDF which describes the parameters to be measured, the frequency of sampling and analysis, the sampling point, and the purpose for each parameter.
Date: October 11, 1994
Creator: Loll, C. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
K West basin isolation barrier leak rate test (open access)

K West basin isolation barrier leak rate test

This document establishes the procedure for performing the acceptance test on the two isolation barriers being installed in K West basin. This acceptance test procedure shall be used to: First establish a basin water loss rate prior to installation of the two isolation barriers between the main basin and the discharge chute in K-Basin West. Second, perform an acceptance test to verify an acceptable leakage rate through the barrier seals.
Date: October 31, 1994
Creator: Whitehurst, R.; McCracken, K. & Papenfuss, J. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extraction and detection of pesticide residues from air filter inserts using supercritical carbon dioxide (open access)

Extraction and detection of pesticide residues from air filter inserts using supercritical carbon dioxide

Trace quantities of airborne herbicide residues were collected on adsorbent bed cartridges and were subsequently extracted from the adsorbent using supercritical carbon dioxide. An apparatus was constructed to facilitate the extraction and recovery of the desired analytes. The resulting extracts were analyzed using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) or high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) techniques. Results are presented for a series of analytes representative of common commercial pesticides or herbicides.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Zemanian, T. S.; Robins, W. H.; Lee, R. N. & Wright, B. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library