Survey of Magnetic Fields Near BPA 230-kV and 500-kV Transmission Lines. (open access)

Survey of Magnetic Fields Near BPA 230-kV and 500-kV Transmission Lines.

The purpose of this study was to characterize typical levels and variability of 60Hz magnetic fields at the centerline and edge of right-of-way of Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) 230-kV and 500-kV transmission lines. This was accomplished by taking magnetic field measurements at over 800 spans in Oregon and Washington. The spans were sampled using a stratified random sampling procedure with region (East vs. West), voltage (230-kV vs 500-kV), and circuit configuration as strata. There were five different circuit configuration groups for each region/voltage category requiring a total of 200 strata. Magnetic field measurements were taken at 13 locations under each span using an EMDEX-C as a survey meter. Additional information recorded for each span included conductor height (at 10 locations), right-of-way width, longitudinal and lateral slope, time of day, vegetation, terrain, weather conditions, temperature, wind speed, span length and presence of other lines in the corridor. 9 refs., 17 figs., 26 tabs.
Date: May 20, 1991
Creator: Perrin, Nancy; Aggarwal, Rajinder Pal & Bracken, T. Daniel
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol (open access)

The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol

The objective of this research is to elucidate the role of various chemical additives on ethanol synthesis over Rh- and Ni-based catalysts. Chemical additives used for this study will include S, P, Ag, Cu, Mn, and Na which have different electronegativities. The effect of additives on the surface state of the catalysts, heat of adsorption of reactant molecules, reaction intermediates, reaction pathways, reaction kinetics, and product distributions is/will be investigated by a series of experimental studies of NO adsorption, reaction probing, study state rate measurement, and transient kinetic study. A better understanding of the role of additives on the synthesis reaction may allow us to use chemical additives to manipulate the catalytic properties of Rh- and Ni-based catalysts for producing high yields of ethanol from syngas. 27 refs. 7 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: September 20, 1991
Creator: Chuang, S. S. C. & Balakos, M. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser produced plasma soft x-ray generation (open access)

Laser produced plasma soft x-ray generation

The efficiency of soft x-ray production from laser-irradiated plasmas is simulated for two different spectral regions. These two regions, 14{Angstrom} {plus minus} 15% and 130{Angstrom} {plus minus} 1%, were chosen for proximity mask or point-projection technological applications. Relatively large conversion efficiencies were obtained from irradiation of a stainless steel target using the conditions suggested by recent Hampshire Instruments' experiments for proximity masking. Pulse-width and laser frequency parameter studies were performed for point-projection applications which suggest that the conversion applications which suggest that the conversion efficiency is sensitive to pulse-width but not to laser frequency. One of the critical components of any x-ray lithographic scheme is of course the x-ray laser source. There are two primary contenders for a reliable, efficient source currently: synchrotron radiation and spectral emission from laser produced plasma. The dominant issue for laser-plasma emission is the conversion efficiency -- output in the intended operating spectral region relative the required incident laser energy. Simulations are described in the following for both high and low energy spectral regions which have been suggested by either the proximity masking or point-projection technology.
Date: May 20, 1991
Creator: Cerjan, C. & Rosen, M.D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol (open access)

The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol

The objective of this research is to elucidate the role of various chemical additives on ethanol synthesis over Rh- and Ni-based catalysts. Chemical additives used for this study will include S, P, Ag, Cu, Mn, and Na which have different electronegativities. The effect of additives on the surface state of the catalysts, heat of adsorption of reactant molecules, reaction intermediates, reaction pathways, reaction kinetics, and product distributions is/will be investigated by a series of experimental studies of NO adsorption, reaction probing, study state rate measurement, and transient kinetic study. A better understanding of the role of additives on the synthesis reaction may allow us to use chemical additives to manipulate the catalytic properties of Rh- and Ni-based catalysts for producing high yields of ethanol from snygas. 27 refs., 2 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: September 20, 1991
Creator: Chuang, S. C. & Balakos, M. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Site environmental report for calendar year 1990 (open access)

Hanford Site environmental report for calendar year 1990

The Hanford Site Environmental Report is prepared annually to summarize environmental data and information, describe environmental management performance, and demonstrate the status of compliance with environmental regulations. The report also highlights major environmental programs and efforts. The following sections: describe the Hanford Site and its new mission; summarize the status in 1990 of compliance with environmental regulations; describe the environmental programs at the Hanford Site; present information on environmental surveillance and the ground-water protection and monitoring program; and discuss activities to ensure quality.
Date: December 20, 1991
Creator: Woodruff, R.K.; Hanf, R.W.; Hefty, M.G. & Lundgren, R.E. (eds.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photocathode transfer and storage techniques using alkali vapor feedback control (open access)

Photocathode transfer and storage techniques using alkali vapor feedback control

Photocathodes of quantum efficiency above 1% at the doubled YAG frequency of 532 nM are very sensitive to the local vacuum environment. These cathodes must have a band gap of less than 2.3 eV, and a work function that is also on the order of {approximately}2 volts or less. As such, these surfaces are very reactive as they provide many surface states for the residual gases that have positive electron affinities such as oxygen and omnipotent water. Attendant to this problem is that the optimal operating point for some of these cesium based cathodes is unstable. Three of the cesium series were tried, the Cs-Ag-Bi-O, the Cs{sub 3}Sb and the K{sub 2}CsSb. The most stable material found is the K{sub 2}CsSb. The vacuum conditions can be met by a variety of pumping schemes. The vacuum is achieved by using sputter ion diode pumps, and baking at 250{degrees}C or less for whatever time is required to reduce the pump currents to below 1 uA at room temperature. To obtain the required partial pressure of cesium, a simple very sensitive diagnostic gauge has been developed that can discriminate between free alkali and other gases present. This Pressure Alkali Monitor (PAM) can be …
Date: December 20, 1991
Creator: Springer, R.W. & Cameron, B.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scale-up circulating fluidized bed coal combustors (open access)

Scale-up circulating fluidized bed coal combustors

Circulating fluidization is a promising technology for designing efficient coal combustors with high solid feed rates. Unfortunately, limited understanding of circulating fluidized beds (CFB) has rendered design extrapolations from pilot reactors to full-scale plants both empirical and expensive. In CFBs, hydrodynamics and heat transfer are difficult to predict, and the behavior of the flow under scale-up is unclear. Thus the objectives of this research were to quantify the effect of scale-up on the hydrodynamics of CFB combustors, to carry out a rigorous analysis of the flow and heat transfer in vertical gas-solid risers, and to interact with industry at all stages of this work. The importance of this research resides in the great number of CFB coal-burning powerplants that may benefit from its results. At the completion of this work, the results have exceeded the expectations outlined in the original proposal. The present report summarizes these accomplishments, which have led to five archival publications, two reviewed conference papers, twelve presentations, various quarterly reports, and the award of five graduate degrees.
Date: November 20, 1991
Creator: Louge, M.Y.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Toxic organic compounds from energy production (open access)

Toxic organic compounds from energy production

The US Department of Energy's Office of Health and Environmental Research (OHER) has supported work in our laboratory since 1977. The general theme of this program has been the identification of potentially toxic organic compounds associated with various combustion effluents, following the fates of these compounds in the environment, and improving the analytical methodology for making these measurements. The projects currently investigation include: an improved sampler for semi-volatile compounds in the atmosphere; the wet and dry deposition of dioxins and furans from the atmosphere; the photodegradation and mobile sources of dioxins and furans; and the bioaccumulation of PAH by tree bark. These projects are all responsive to OHER's interest in the pathways and mechanisms by which energy-related agents move through and are modified by the atmosphere''. The projects on gas chromatographic and liquid chromatographic tandem mass spectrometry are both responsive to OHER's interest in new and more sensitive technologies for chemical measurements''. 35 refs., 9 figs.
Date: September 20, 1991
Creator: Hites, R.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhancing Sample Preparation Capabilities for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Radiocarbon and Radiocalcium Studies (open access)

Enhancing Sample Preparation Capabilities for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Radiocarbon and Radiocalcium Studies

With support provided by the LLNL Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, the UCR Radiocarbon Laboratory continued its studies involving sample pretreatment and target preparation for both AMS radiocarbon ({sup 14}C) and radiocalcium ({sup 41}Ca) involving applications to archaeologically -- and paleoanthropologically- related samples. With regard to AMS {sup 14}C-related studies, we have extended the development of a series of procedures which have, as their initial goal, the capability to combust several hundred microgram amounts of a chemically-pretreated organic sample and convert the resultant CO{sub 2} to graphitic carbon which will consistently yield relatively high {sup 13}C{sup {minus}} ion currents and blanks which will yield, on a consistent basis, {sup 14}C count rates at or below 0.20% modern, giving an 2 sigma age limit of >50,000 yr BP.
Date: August 20, 1991
Creator: Taylor, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering design and analysis of advanced physical fine coal cleaning technologies (open access)

Engineering design and analysis of advanced physical fine coal cleaning technologies

The major goal is to provide the simulation tools for modeling both conventional and advanced coal cleaning technologies. This DOE project is part of a major research initiative by the Pittsburgh Energy Technology Center (PETC) aimed at advancing three advanced coal cleaning technologies- heavy-liquid cylconing, selective agglomeration, and advanced froth flotation through the proof-of- concept (POC) level. The commercially available ASPEN PLUS process simulation package will be extended to handle coal applications. Algorithms for predicting the process performance, equipment size, and flowsheet economics of commercial coal cleaning devices and related ancillary equipment will be incorporated into the coal cleaning simulator. This report is submitted to document the progress of Aspen Technology, Inc. (ApsenTech), its contractor, ICF Kaiser Engineers, Inc., (ICF KE) and CQ Inc., a subcontractor to ICF KE, for the seventh quarterly reporting period, April through June 1991. ICF KE is providing coal preparation consulting and processing engineering services in this work and they are responsible for recommending the design of models to represent conventional coal cleaning equipment and costing of these models.
Date: October 20, 1991
Creator: Gallier, P.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implications of TAE modes for the design of ITER (open access)

Implications of TAE modes for the design of ITER

A simple mixing-length estimate of diffusion of alphas particles by toroidicity-induced shear Alfven eigenmodes (TAE) is used, in zero and one-dimensional models, to evaluate the importance of diffusion of meeting ignition requirements for ITER and other next-generation burning plasma experiments. It is found that, depending on a number of assumptions, diffusion could reduce that effectiveness of alpha heating in the core as much as an order of magnitude. However, the effect would be less if only alphas resonant with the Alfven waves diffuse. Also, in the Appendix it is argued that the mixing length diffusion formula, though qualitatively reasonable, may be an over estimate. 12 refs., 7 figs., 1 tab.
Date: May 20, 1991
Creator: Fowler, T.K. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)) & Finkenthal, D. (California Univ., Berkeley, CA (USA))
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol (open access)

The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol

The objective of this research is to elucidate the role of various chemical additives on ethanol synthesis over Rh- and Ni-based catalysts. Chemical additives used for this study will include S, P, Ag, Cu, Mn, and Na which have different electronegativities. The effects of additives on the surface state of the catalysts, heat of adsorption of reactant molecules, reaction intermediates, reaction pathways, reaction kinetics, and product distributions is/will be investigated by a series of experimental studies of NO adsorption, reaction probing, study state rate measurement, and transient kinetic study. A better understanding of the role of additives on the synthesis reaction may allow us to use chemical additives to manipulate the catalytic properties of Rh- and Ni-based catalysts for producing high yields of ethanol from syngas.
Date: December 20, 1991
Creator: Chuang, S. S. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The status of fuel cell technology (open access)

The status of fuel cell technology

This brief status report provides an introduction to what fuel cells are, why they are important, what uses have been made of them to date, the goals and timetables of current programs, and who the players are in this vital technology. Copies of most of the slides presented and additional diagrams are appended to this paper. Further details can be obtained from the comprehensive texts cited in the bibliography. 11 refs., 44 figs.
Date: February 20, 1991
Creator: O'Sullivan, J.B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Moessbauer spectroscopy at pressures up to 40 GPa (open access)

Moessbauer spectroscopy at pressures up to 40 GPa

Mossbauer spectroscopy (MS) is a viable non-contact'' technique applicable to high-pressure, diamond anvil cells (DAC) with samples containing a wide variety of the elements suitable for MS. The convenience and simplicity of diamond anvil cells as a means to obtain static high pressures even into the megabar regime has resulted in a renewed interest in pressure as a complement to the usual physical measurements. However, the required small sample size and the difficulty of communicating with the sample leave only x-ray and optical spectroscopy as the readily available tools. Mossbauer spectroscopy which involves recoil-free, low-energy {gamma} rays, provides a powerful additional technique to study a myriad of physical properties in a DAC. MS concerns a particular isotope and can provide local information on phase changes and hysteresis, isomer shifts, valence, bonding, magnetic and quadrupolar interactions, lattice dynamics, and multiple sites. The Mossbauer effect has been seen in about a hundred isotopic transitions in about forty different elements; many are suitable for DAC-MS, most notably {sup 57}Fe, {sup 119}Sn, {sup 121}Sb, {sup 125}Te, {sup 129}I, {sup 149}Sn, {sup 151}Eu, {sup 161}Dy, {sup 1976}Au, and {sup 237}Np. Since the information available from MS is obtained from analyzing the precise energy profile of …
Date: November 20, 1991
Creator: Taylor, R. D. & Pasternak, M. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impact of a reduced nuclear weapons stockpile on strategic stability (open access)

Impact of a reduced nuclear weapons stockpile on strategic stability

This presentation is to discuss the impact of a reduced nuclear weapons stockpile on the strategic stability. Methodologies used to study strategic stability issues include what are basically strategic-force exchange models. These models are used to simulate a massive nuclear exchange in which one side attacks and the other side retaliates. These models have been of interest to the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) program. Researchers have been looking at issues concerning the stability of the transition period, during which some defenses have been deployed and during which deterrence and war-fighting capability reply partly on defense and partly on offense. Also, more recently, with interest in the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) and force reductions beyond START, the same calculation engines have been used to examine the impact of reduced forces on strategic stability. For both the SDI and the START reduction cases, exchange models are able to address only a rather narrow class of strategic stability issues. Other broader stability questions that are unrelated to nuclear weapons or that relate to nuclear weapons but are not addressed by the calculational tools which are not included in this discussion. 6 refs., 1 fig., 1 tab. (BN)
Date: March 20, 1991
Creator: Chrzanowski, P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A theory of deterrence (open access)

A theory of deterrence

The purpose of this monograph is to start a theory of deterrence which has the capability of quantitatively answering the question of what is required to deter a nation or alliance from certain acts. Despite the existence of voluminous writing on deterrence, from the beginning of the nuclear age and even before, none of it attempts a theoretical discussion of how to calculate what it takes to deter a country from committing some acts which are objectionable to another country. Many theories of deterrence have already been created. They have exclusively been of two separate forms -- those of the social scientists, which deal with political questions, and how the concept of mass destruction psychological deters the initiation of war; and those of the mathematicians, who model the quantities of one country`s arsenal of strategic systems needed to destroy a certain portion of another country`s. Only the latter is quantitative, but they lack an essential element added to answer the question ``How much is enough?`` In order to use the techniques of operations research on the questions of what type and amount of weapons are adequate for deterrence, the definitions of quantities occurring in the calculations need to be made …
Date: March 20, 1991
Creator: Erickson, S. A. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol. Technical Progress Report 17, September 16, 1991--December 15, 1991 (open access)

The Effect of Chemical Additives on the Synthesis of Ethanol. Technical Progress Report 17, September 16, 1991--December 15, 1991

The objective of this research is to elucidate the role of various chemical additives on ethanol synthesis over Rh- and Ni-based catalysts. Chemical additives used for this study will include S, P, Ag, Cu, Mn, and Na which have different electronegativities. The effects of additives on the surface state of the catalysts, heat of adsorption of reactant molecules, reaction intermediates, reaction pathways, reaction kinetics, and product distributions is/will be investigated by a series of experimental studies of NO adsorption, reaction probing, study state rate measurement, and transient kinetic study. A better understanding of the role of additives on the synthesis reaction may allow us to use chemical additives to manipulate the catalytic properties of Rh- and Ni-based catalysts for producing high yields of ethanol from syngas.
Date: December 20, 1991
Creator: Chuang, S. S. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scale-up circulating fluidized bed coal combustors. Final report (open access)

Scale-up circulating fluidized bed coal combustors. Final report

Circulating fluidization is a promising technology for designing efficient coal combustors with high solid feed rates. Unfortunately, limited understanding of circulating fluidized beds (CFB) has rendered design extrapolations from pilot reactors to full-scale plants both empirical and expensive. In CFBs, hydrodynamics and heat transfer are difficult to predict, and the behavior of the flow under scale-up is unclear. Thus the objectives of this research were to quantify the effect of scale-up on the hydrodynamics of CFB combustors, to carry out a rigorous analysis of the flow and heat transfer in vertical gas-solid risers, and to interact with industry at all stages of this work. The importance of this research resides in the great number of CFB coal-burning powerplants that may benefit from its results. At the completion of this work, the results have exceeded the expectations outlined in the original proposal. The present report summarizes these accomplishments, which have led to five archival publications, two reviewed conference papers, twelve presentations, various quarterly reports, and the award of five graduate degrees.
Date: November 20, 1991
Creator: Louge, M. Y.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Moessbauer spectroscopy at pressures up to 40 GPa (open access)

Moessbauer spectroscopy at pressures up to 40 GPa

Mossbauer spectroscopy (MS) is a viable ``non-contact`` technique applicable to high-pressure, diamond anvil cells (DAC) with samples containing a wide variety of the elements suitable for MS. The convenience and simplicity of diamond anvil cells as a means to obtain static high pressures even into the megabar regime has resulted in a renewed interest in pressure as a complement to the usual physical measurements. However, the required small sample size and the difficulty of communicating with the sample leave only x-ray and optical spectroscopy as the readily available tools. Mossbauer spectroscopy which involves recoil-free, low-energy {gamma} rays, provides a powerful additional technique to study a myriad of physical properties in a DAC. MS concerns a particular isotope and can provide local information on phase changes and hysteresis, isomer shifts, valence, bonding, magnetic and quadrupolar interactions, lattice dynamics, and multiple sites. The Mossbauer effect has been seen in about a hundred isotopic transitions in about forty different elements; many are suitable for DAC-MS, most notably {sup 57}Fe, {sup 119}Sn, {sup 121}Sb, {sup 125}Te, {sup 129}I, {sup 149}Sn, {sup 151}Eu, {sup 161}Dy, {sup 1976}Au, and {sup 237}Np. Since the information available from MS is obtained from analyzing the precise energy profile of …
Date: November 20, 1991
Creator: Taylor, R. D. & Pasternak, M. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Site environmental report for calendar year 1990 (open access)

Hanford Site environmental report for calendar year 1990

The Hanford Site Environmental Report is prepared annually to summarize environmental data and information, describe environmental management performance, and demonstrate the status of compliance with environmental regulations. The report also highlights major environmental programs and efforts. The following sections: describe the Hanford Site and its new mission; summarize the status in 1990 of compliance with environmental regulations; describe the environmental programs at the Hanford Site; present information on environmental surveillance and the ground-water protection and monitoring program; and discuss activities to ensure quality.
Date: December 20, 1991
Creator: Woodruff, R. K.; Hanf, R. W.; Hefty, M. G. & Lundgren, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a Coal Quality Expert. Technical progress report No. 6, [July 1--September 30, 1991] (open access)

Development of a Coal Quality Expert. Technical progress report No. 6, [July 1--September 30, 1991]

This is the sixth Technical Progress Report, describing work performed under DOE Contract No. DE-FC22-90PC89663, ``Development of a Coal Quality Expert.`` The contract is a Cooperative Agreement between the US Department of Energy, CQ Inc., and Combustion Engineering, Inc. This report covers the period from July 1 through September 30, 1991. Four companies and seven host utilities have teamed with CQ Inc. and C-E to perform the work on this project. The work falls under DOE`s Clean Coal Technology Program category of ``Advanced Coal Cleaning.`` The 45-month project will provide the utility industry with a PC expert system to confidently and inexpensively evaluate the potential for coal cleaning, blending, and switching options to reduce emissions while producing lowest cost electricity. Specifically, this project will: Enhance the existing Coal Quality Information System (CQIS) database and Coal Quality Impact Model (CQIM) to allow confident assessment of the effects of cleaning on specific boiler cost and performance; and develop and validate a methodology, Coal Quality Expert (CQE) which allows accurate and detailed predictions of coal quality impacts on total power plant capital cost, operating cost, and performance based upon inputs from inexpensive bench-scale tests. The project consists of the following seven tasks: Project …
Date: November 20, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pelletizing/reslurrying as a means of distributing and firing clean coal (open access)

Pelletizing/reslurrying as a means of distributing and firing clean coal

The objective of this study is to develop technology that permits the practical and economic preparation, storage, handling, and transportation of coal pellets, which can be formulated into Coal-Water Fuels (CWFs) suitable for firing in small- and medium-size commercial and industrial boilers, furnaces, and engines.
Date: September 20, 1991
Creator: Conkle, H. N.; Raghavan, J. K.; Smit, F. J. & Jha, M. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
D0 Cryo-Corner Piping Flexibility Analysis (open access)

D0 Cryo-Corner Piping Flexibility Analysis

Table 1 indicates that the stiffest line is the cryogenic vent line while the most flexible line is the 6 inch insulating vacuum line. The table also shows that the four remaining lines are roughly of the same stiffness. This follows closely with the experience of installing the U-tubes in the assembly hall. The vent line was by far the stiffest, while the other lines are comparitively more flexible. However, the value for the LAr line is misleading. It is as flexible as the other 1 1/2 x 3 lines. Using this as a basis, the collision hall connections should be slightly more stiff, but not appreciably. The vent line represents the only anticipated 'difficulty'. Provided that the building piping is constructed to reasonable tolerances, there should be no need to modify the existing U-tubes for use in the Collision hall. The analysis makes many assumptions which are not completely valid. For example, the inner line is much more flexible than the table indicates. Thus the analysis should not be taken as an absolute measure of the amount of force necessary to deflect the lines. The analysis does provide a means of comparison between individual lines and between the assembly …
Date: August 20, 1991
Creator: Clark, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sterilization of fermentation vessels by ethanol/water mixtures (open access)

Sterilization of fermentation vessels by ethanol/water mixtures

This invention is comprised of a method for sterilizing process fermentation vessels with a concentrated alcohol and water mixture integrated in a fuel alcohol or other alcohol production facility. Hot, concentrated alcohol is drawn from a distillation or other purification stage and sprayed into the empty fermentation vessels. This sterilizing alcohol/water mixture should be of a sufficient concentration, preferably higher than 12% alcohol by volume, to be toxic to undesirable microorganisms. Following sterilization, this sterilizing alcohol/water mixture can be recovered back into the same distillation or other purification stage from which it was withdrawn. The process of this invention has its best application in, but is not limited to, batch fermentation processes, wherein the fermentation vessels must be emptied, cleaned, and sterilized following completion of each batch fermentation process.
Date: March 20, 1991
Creator: Wyman, C. E.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library