Building America Best Practices Series: Volume 7.1: Guide to Determining Climate Regions by County (open access)

Building America Best Practices Series: Volume 7.1: Guide to Determining Climate Regions by County

This report for DOE's Building America program helps builders identify which Building America climate region they are building in. The guide includes maps comparing the Building America regions with climate designations used in the International Energy Conservation Code for Residential Buildings and lists all U.S. counties by climate zone. A very brief history of the development of the Building America climate map and descriptions of each climate zone are provided. This report is available on the Building America website www.buildingamerica.gov.
Date: August 30, 2010
Creator: Baechler, Michael C.; Williamson, Jennifer L.; Gilbride, Theresa L.; Cole, Pamala C.; Hefty, Marye G. & Love, Pat M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
EBIS/T charge breeding for intense rare isotope beams at MSU (open access)

EBIS/T charge breeding for intense rare isotope beams at MSU

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Date: August 30, 2010
Creator: Schwarz, S; Bollen, G; Kester, O; Kittimanapuna, K; Lapierre, A; Crespo Lopez-Uruttia, J R et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial and Final State Interaction Effects in Small-x Quark Distributions (open access)

Initial and Final State Interaction Effects in Small-x Quark Distributions

We study the initial and final state interaction effects in the transverse momentum dependent parton distributions in the small-x saturation region. In particular, we discuss the quark distributions in the semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering, Drell-Yan lepton pair production and dijet-correlation processes in pA collisions. We calculate the quark distributions in the scalar-QED model and then extend to the color glass condensate formalism in QCD. The quark distributions are found universal between the DIS and Drell-Yan processes. On the other hand, the quark distribution from the qq'-->qq' channel contribution to the dijet-correlation process is not universal. However, we find that it can be related to the quark distribution in DIS process by a convolution with the normalized unintegrated gluon distribution in the CGC formalism in the large Nc limit.
Date: August 30, 2010
Creator: Xiao, Bo-Wen & Yuan, Feng
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recovery Act: A Low Cost Spray Deposited Solar PV Anti-Reflection Coating  Final Technical Report (open access)

Recovery Act: A Low Cost Spray Deposited Solar PV Anti-Reflection Coating Final Technical Report

PV module glass is typically low iron glass which exhibits extremely low absorption of light at solar wavelengths. However, reflection losses from typical high quality solar glass are about 4.5% of the input solar energy. By applying an antireflection coating to the cover glass of their modules, a PV module maker will gain at least a 3% increase in the light passing through the glass and being converted to electricity. Thus achieving an increase of >3% in electricity output from the modules. This Project focussed on developing a process that deposits a layer of porous silica (SiO2) on glass or plastic components, and testing the necessary subcomponents and subsystems required to demonstrate the commercial technology. This porous layer acts as a broadband single layer AR coating for glass and plastics, with the added benefit of being a hydrophilic surface for low surface soiling.
Date: August 30, 2010
Creator: Harvey, Michael D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Renewable Energy Assessment Methodology for Japanese OCONUS Army Installations (open access)

Renewable Energy Assessment Methodology for Japanese OCONUS Army Installations

Since 2005, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) has been asked by Installation Management Command (IMCOM) to conduct strategic assessments at selected US Army installations of the potential use of renewable energy resources, including solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, waste, and ground source heat pumps (GSHPs). IMCOM has the same economic, security, and legal drivers to develop alternative, renewable energy resources overseas as it has for installations located in the US. The approach for continental US (CONUS) studies has been to use known, US-based renewable resource characterizations and information sources coupled with local, site-specific sources and interviews. However, the extent to which this sort of data might be available for outside the continental US (OCONUS) sites was unknown. An assessment at Camp Zama, Japan was completed as a trial to test the applicability of the CONUS methodology at OCONUS installations. It was found that, with some help from Camp Zama personnel in translating and locating a few Japanese sources, there was relatively little difficulty in finding sources that should provide a solid basis for conducting an assessment of comparable depth to those conducted for US installations. Project implementation will likely be more of a challenge, but the feasibility analysis will be able …
Date: August 30, 2010
Creator: Solana, Amy E.; Horner, Jacob A.; Russo, Bryan J.; Gorrissen, Willy J.; Kora, Angela R.; Weimar, Mark R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Silica Molecular Dynamic Force Fields- A Practical Assessment (open access)

Silica Molecular Dynamic Force Fields- A Practical Assessment

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Date: August 30, 2010
Creator: Soules, T; Gilmer, G H; Matthews, M J; Stolken, J S & Feit, M D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Synergistic Combination of Advanced Separation and Chemical Scale Inhibitor Technologies for Efficient Use of Imparied Water As Cooling Water in Coal-based Power Plants (open access)

A Synergistic Combination of Advanced Separation and Chemical Scale Inhibitor Technologies for Efficient Use of Imparied Water As Cooling Water in Coal-based Power Plants

Nalco Company is partnering with Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) in this project to jointly develop advanced scale control technologies that will provide cost-effective solutions for coal-based power plants to operate recirculating cooling water systems at high cycles using impaired waters. The overall approach is to use combinations of novel membrane separations and scale inhibitor technologies that will work synergistically, with membrane separations reducing the scaling potential of the cooling water and scale inhibitors extending the safe operating range of the cooling water system. The project started on March 31, 2006 and ended in August 30, 2010. The project was a multiyear, multi-phase project with laboratory research and development as well as a small pilot-scale field demonstration. In Phase 1 (Technical Targets and Proof of Concept), the objectives were to establish quantitative technical targets and develop calcite and silica scale inhibitor chemistries for high stress conditions. Additional Phase I work included bench-scale testing to determine the feasibility of two membrane separation technologies (electrodialysis ED and electrode-ionization EDI) for scale minimization. In Phase 2 (Technology Development and Integration), the objectives were to develop additional novel scale inhibitor chemistries, develop selected separation processes, and optimize the integration of the technology components at the …
Date: August 30, 2010
Creator: Gill, Jasbir
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library