Fluidized-Bed Waste-Heat Recovery System development. Semiannual report, 1 August 1982-31 January 1983 (open access)

Fluidized-Bed Waste-Heat Recovery System development. Semiannual report, 1 August 1982-31 January 1983

The Fluidized-Bed Waste-Heat Recovery (FBWHR) System is designed to preheat this combustion air using the heat available in dirty flue gas streams. In this system, a recirculating medium is heated by the flue gas in a fluidized bed. The hot medium is then removed from the bed and placed in a second fluidized bed where it is fluidized by the combustion air. Through this process, the combustion air is heated. The cooled medium is then returned to the first bed. Initial development of this concept is for the aluminum smelting industry.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Cole, W.E.; DeSaro, R. & Joshi, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zircaloy-oxidation and hydrogen-generation rates in degraded-core accident situations (open access)

Zircaloy-oxidation and hydrogen-generation rates in degraded-core accident situations

Oxidation of Zircaloy cladding is the primary source of hydrogen generated during a degraded-core accident. In this paper, reported Zircaloy oxidation rates, either measured at 1500 to 1850/sup 0/C or extrapolated from the low-temperature data obtained at <1500/sup 0/C, are critically reviewed with respect to their applicability to a degraded-core accident situation in which the high-temperature fuel cladding is likely to be exposed to and oxidized in mixtures of hydrogen and depleted steam, rather than in an unlimited flux of pure steam. New results of Zircaloy oxidation measurements in various mixtures of hydrogen and steam are reported for >1500/sup 0/C. The results show significantly smaller oxidation and, hence, hydrogen-generation rates in the mixture, compared with those obtained in pure steam. It is also shown that a significant fraction of hydrogen, generated as a result of Zircaloy oxidation, is dissolved in the cladding material itself, which prevents that portion of hydrogen from reaching the containment building space. Implications of these findings are discussed in relation to a more realistic method of quantifying the hydrogen source term for a degraded-core accident analysis.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Chung, H. M. & Thomas, G. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Light-scattering studies of silica aerogels (open access)

Light-scattering studies of silica aerogels

Due to its combination of transparency and low thermal conductivity, aerogel holds considerable promise for use as insulating window materials for residential and commercial applications. This paper reports on the preliminary investigation of the optical and scattering properties of silica aerogels. It briefly describes the properties of aerogels important for window glazing applications. The optical properties are then described, followed by a discussion of the scattering measurements and their interpretation.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Hunt, A.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Passive-solar-cooling system concepts for small office buildings. Final report (open access)

Passive-solar-cooling system concepts for small office buildings. Final report

This report summarizes the efforts of a small group of building design professionals and energy analysis experts to develop passive solar cooling concepts including first cost estimates for small office buildings. Two design teams were brought together at each of two workshops held in the fall of 1982. Each team included an architect, mechanical engineer, structural engineer, and energy analysis expert. This report presents the passive cooling system concepts resulting from the workshops. It summarizes the design problems, solutions and first-cost estimates relating to each technology considered, and documents the research needs identified by the participants in attempting to implement the various technologies in an actual building design. Each design problem presented at the workshops was based on the reference (base case) small office building analyzed as part of LBL's Cooling Assessment. Chapter II summarizes the thermal performance, physical specifications and estimated first-costs of the base case design developed for this work. Chapters III - VI describe the passive cooling system concepts developed for each technology: beam daylighting; mass with night ventilation; evaporative cooling; and integrated passive cooling systems. The final Chapters, VII and VIII present the preliminary implications for economics of passive cooling technologies (based on review of the …
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Whiddon, W. I. & Hart, G. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiation transport in numerical astrophysics (open access)

Radiation transport in numerical astrophysics

In this article, we discuss some of the numerical techniques developed by Jim Wilson and co-workers for the calculation of time-dependent radiation flow. Difference equations for multifrequency transport are given for both a discrete-angle representation of radiation transport and a Fick's law-like representation. These methods have the important property that they correctly describe both the streaming and diffusion limits of transport theory in problems where the mean free path divided by characteristic distances varies from much less than one to much greater than one. They are also stable for timesteps comparable to the changes in physical variables, rather than being limited by stability requirements.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Lund, C.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Upper Sand Mountain Parish Solar Construction Workshops. Final performance report (open access)

Upper Sand Mountain Parish Solar Construction Workshops. Final performance report

The Upper Sand Mountain Parish continues to employ its initial strategy for involving high school vocational students with the pre cutting and instructional assembly aid to area families. The parish project works with high school vocational classes in pre fabbing solar devices into kit form. Then, students are employed to serve as instructors for Saturday construction workshops at the local electric cooperative. Trained teams of older and unemployed adults work with youth in building solar greenhouses for those able to pay labor. Over three years, the project has assisted and built 50 to 60 attached solar greenhouses with construction teams realizing in excess of $26,000 in labor for newly developed skills. The project continues to assist owners in monitoring and developing horticulturally as well as energy producing greenhouses. During the spring of 1982, the parish assisted greenhouse owners in marketing over 60,000 bedding plants worth over $3000. Monthly Greenhouse Owner Fellowship meetings have been a helpful setting for sharing of ideas and exchange of insights. A low interest solar loan fund, offering 5% loans for three years, has assisted over 30 families in going solar. The principle for this revolving fund has almost reached the $15,000 mark. The track record …
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Core-debris quenching-heat-transfer rates under top- and bottom-reflood conditions. [PWR; BWR] (open access)

Core-debris quenching-heat-transfer rates under top- and bottom-reflood conditions. [PWR; BWR]

This paper presents recent experimental data for the quench-heat-transfer characteristics of superheated packed beds of spheres which were cooled, in separate experiments, by top- and bottom-flooding modes. Experiments were carried out with beds of 3-mm steel spheres of 330-mm height. The initial bed temperature was 810 K. The observed heat-transfer rates are strongly dependent on the mode of water injection. The results suggest that top-flood bed quench heat transfer is limited by the rate at which water can penetrate the bed under two-phase countercurrent-flow conditions. With bottom-reflood the heat-transfer rate is an order-of-magnitude greater than under top-flood conditions and appears to be limited by particle-to-fluid film boiling heat transfer.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Ginsberg, T.; Tutu, N.; Klages, J.; Schwarz, C. E. & Sanborn, Y.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tube vibration in industrial-size test heat exchanger (90/sup 0/ square layout) (open access)

Tube vibration in industrial-size test heat exchanger (90/sup 0/ square layout)

Tube vibrations in heat exchangers are being systematically investigated in a series of tests performed with an industrial-size test exchanger. Results from waterflow tests of eleven different tube bundles, in six- and eight-crosspass configurations on a 90/sup 0/ square layout with a pitch-to-diameter ratio of 1.25 are reported. The test cases include full tube bundles, no-tubes-in-window bundles, finned tube bundles, and proposed field and design fixes. The testing focused on identification of the lowest critical flowrate to initiate fluidelastic instability (large amplitude tube motion) and the location within the bundle of the tubes which first experience instability. The test results are tabulated to permit comparison with results obtained from previous tests with a 30/sup 0/ triangular layout tube bundle. Instability criteria are evaluated preliminarily. Pressure drop data are also generated and reported.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Halle, H. & Wambsganss, M.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effective Lagrangian for supersymmetric QCD (open access)

Effective Lagrangian for supersymmetric QCD

I present a Lagrangian which describes the spontaneous breaking of chiral symmetries in strongly interacting supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory with matter fields. This Lagrangian predicts that supersymmetry is spontaneously broken if the matter fields have precisely zero mass.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Peskin, M.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Eikonal theory of the transition to phase incoherence (open access)

Eikonal theory of the transition to phase incoherence

When a monochromatic electromagnetic wave propagates through a nonuniform plasma (of n dimensions), its refraction may be studied in terms of its family of rays in 2n-dimensional phase space (k,x). These rays generate and n-dimensional surface. Imbedded in the phase space. The wave amplitude and phase are defined on this surface. As the rays twist and separate (from the dynamics of the ray Hamiltonian), the surface develops pleats and becomes convoluted. Projection of the surface onto x-space then yields a multivalued k(x). The local spectral density, as a function of k for given x, exhibits sharp spikes at these k(x), in the ray-optics limit. The next correction yields a finite width to these spikes. As the surface becomes more and more pppleated, these spectral peaks overlap; the spectrum changes qualitatively from a line spectrum to a continuous spectrum. Correspondingly, the two-point spatial correlation function loses its long-range order, as the correlation volume contracts. This phenomenon is what we call the transition to incoherence.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Kaufman, A. N. & Rosengaus, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam-shape distortion caused by transverse wake fields (open access)

Beam-shape distortion caused by transverse wake fields

As a particle bunch in a storage ring passes through a region with a transverse impedance, it generates a transverse wake electromagnetic field that is proportional to the transverse displacement of the bunch in the region. The field acts back on the bunch, causing various effects (such as instabilities) in the motion of the bunch. We study one such effect in which a transverse impedance causes the beam to be distorted in its shape. Observed at a fixed location in the storage ring, this distortion does not change from turn to turn; rather, the distortion is static in time. To describe the distortion, the bunch is considered to be divided longitudinally into many slices and the centers of change of the slices are connected into a curve. In the absence of transverse impedance, this curve is a straight line parallel to the direction of motion of the bunch. Perturbed by the transverse wake field, the curve becomes distorted. What we find in this paper is the shape of such a curve. The results obtained are applied to the PEP storage ring. The impedance is assumed to come solely from the rf cavities. We find that the beam shape is sufficiently …
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Chao, A.W. & Kheifets, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat-transfer characteristics of flowing and stationary particle-bed-type fusion-reactor blankets (open access)

Heat-transfer characteristics of flowing and stationary particle-bed-type fusion-reactor blankets

The heat-transfer characteristics of flowing and stationary packed-particle beds have recently become of interest in connection with conceptual designs of fusion reactor blankets. A detailed literature survey has shown that the processes taking place in such beds are not fully understood despite their widespread use in the chemical industry and other engineering disciplines for more than five decades. In this study, two experimental investigations were pursued. In the first, a heat-transfer loop was constructed through which glass microspheres were allowed to flow by rgravity at controlled rates through an electrically heated stainless steel tubular test section. In the second, an annular packed bed was constructed in which heat was applied through the outer wall by electric heating of a stainless steel tube. Cooling occurred at the inner wall of the annular bed by flowing air through the central tube. A second air stream was allowed to flow through the voids of the packed bed. An error-minimization technique was utilized in order to obtain the two-dimensional one-parameter effective conductivity for the bed by comparing the experimental and theoretically predicted temperature profiles. Experiments were conducted for various modified Reynolds numbers less than ten.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Nietert, R.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic photoelectron-spectroscopy studies using synchrotron radiation (open access)

Atomic photoelectron-spectroscopy studies using synchrotron radiation

Photoelectron spectroscopy combined with tunable synchrotron radiation has been used to study the photoionization process in several atomic systems. The time structure of the synchrotron radiation source at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory (SSRL) was used to record time-of-flight (TOF) photoelectron spectra of gaseous Cd, Hg, Ne, Ar, Ba, and Mn. The use of two TOF analyzers made possible the measurement of photoelectron angular distributions as well as branching ratios and partial cross sections.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Kobrin, P.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fabrication of tungsten wire needles (open access)

Fabrication of tungsten wire needles

Fine point needles for field emissoin are conventionally produced by electrolytically or chemically etching tungsten wire. Points formed in this manner have a typical tip radius of about 0.5 microns and a cone angle of some 30 degrees. The construction of needle matrix detector chambers has created a need for tungsten needles whose specifications are: 20 mil tungsten wire, 1.5 inch total length, 3 mm-long taper (resulting in a cone angle of about 5 degrees), and 25 micron-radius point (similar to that found on sewing needles). In the process described here for producing such needles, tungsten wire, immersed in a NaOH solution and in the presence of an electrode, is connected first to an ac voltage and then to a dc supply, to form a taper and a point on the end of the wire immersed in the solution. The process parameters described here are for needles that will meet the above specifications. Possible variations will be discussed under each approprite heading.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Roder, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
17th DOE nuclear air cleaning conference: proceedings. Volume 2 (open access)

17th DOE nuclear air cleaning conference: proceedings. Volume 2

Volume 2 contains papers presented at the following sessions: adsorption; noble gas treatment; personnel education and training; filtration and filter testing; measurement and instrumentation; air cleaning equipment response to accident related stress; containment venting air cleaning; and an open end session. Twenty-eight papers were indexed separately for inclusion in the Energy Data Base. Ten papers had been entered earlier.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: First, M.W. (ed.)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Behavior of Spent Nuclear Fuel and Storage System Components in Dry Interim Storage. Revision 1 (open access)

Behavior of Spent Nuclear Fuel and Storage System Components in Dry Interim Storage. Revision 1

Irradiated nuclear fuel has been handled under dry conditions since the early days of nuclear reactor operation, and use of dry storage facilities for extended management of irradiated fuel began in 1964. Irradiated fuel is currently being stored dry in four types of facilities: dry wells, vaults, silos, and metal casks. Essentially all types of irradiated nuclear fuel are currently stored under dry conditions. Gas-cooled reactor (GCR) and liquid metal fast breeder reactor (LMFBR) fuels are stored in vaults and dry wells. Certain types of fuel are being stored in licensed dry storage facilities: Magnox fuel in vaults in the United Kingdom; organic-cooled reactor (OCR) fuel (clad with a zirconium alloy) in silos in Canada; and boiling water reactor (BWR) fuel (clad with Zircaloy) in a metal storage cask in Germany. Dry storage demonstrations are under way for Zircaloy-clad fuel from BWRs, pressurized heavy-water reactors (PHWRs), and pressurized water reactors (PWRs) in all four types of dry storage facilities. The demonstrations and related hot cell and laboratory tests are directed toward expanding the data base and establishing a licensing basis for dry storage of water reactor fuel. This report reviews the scope of dry interim storage technology, the performance of …
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Johnson, A. B., (Jr.); Gilbert, E. R. & Guenther, R. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
West Hackberry Strategic Petroleum Reserve site brine-disposal monitoring, Year I report. Volume 3. Biological oceanography. Final report (open access)

West Hackberry Strategic Petroleum Reserve site brine-disposal monitoring, Year I report. Volume 3. Biological oceanography. Final report

The Department of Energy's Strategic Petroleum Reserve Program began discharging brine into the Gulf of Mexico from its West Hackberry site near Cameron, Louisiana in May 1981. The brine originates from underground salt domes being leached with water from the Intracoastal Waterway, making available vast underground storage caverns for crude oil. The effects of brine discharge on aquatic organisms are presented in this volume. The topics covered are: benthos; nekton; phytoplankton; zooplankton; and data management.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: DeRouen, L. R.; Hann, R. W.; Casserly, D. M.; Giammona, C. & Lascara, V. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal and structural limitations for impurity-control components in FED/INTOR (open access)

Thermal and structural limitations for impurity-control components in FED/INTOR

The successful operation of the impurity-control system of the FED/INTOR will depend to a large extent on the ability of its various components to withstand the imposed thermal and mechanical loads. The present paper explores the thermal and stress analyses aspects of the limiter and divertor operation of the FED/INTOR in its reference configuration. Three basic limitations governing the design of the limiter and the divertor are the maximum allowable metal temperature, the maximum allowable stress intensity and the allowable fatigue life of the structural material. Other important design limitations stemming from sputtering, evaporation, melting during disruptions, etc. are not considered in the present paper. The materials considered in the present analysis are a copper and a vanadium alloy for the structural material and graphite, beryllium, beryllium oxide, tungsten and silicon carbide for the coating or tile material.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Majumdar, S.; Cha, Y.; Mattas, R.; Abdou, M.; Cramer, B. & Haines, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
International fuel cycle and waste management technology exchange activities sponsored by the United States Department of Energy: FY 1982 evaluation report (open access)

International fuel cycle and waste management technology exchange activities sponsored by the United States Department of Energy: FY 1982 evaluation report

In FY 1982, DOE and DOE contractor personnel attended 40 international symposia and conferences on fuel reprocessing and waste management subjects. The treatment of high-level waste was the topic most often covered in the visits, with geologic disposal and general waste management also being covered in numerous visits. Topics discussed less frequently inlcude TRU/LLW treatment, airborne waste treatment, D and D, spent fuel handling, and transportation. The benefits accuring to the US from technology exchange activities with other countries are both tangible, e.g., design of equipment, and intangible, e.g., improved foreign relations. New concepts initiated in other countries, particularly those with sizable nuclear programs, are beginning to appear in US efforts in growing numbers. The spent fuel dry storage concept originating in the FRG is being considered at numerous sites. Similarly, the German handling and draining concepts for the joule-heated ceramic melter used to vitrify wastes are being incorporated in US designs. Other foreigh technologies applicable in the US include the slagging incinerator (Belgium), the SYNROC waste form (Australia), the decontamination experience gained in decommissioning the Eurochemic reprocessing plant (Belgium), the engineered surface storage of low- and intermediate-level waste (Belgium, FRG, France), the air-cooled storage of vitrified high-level waste (France, …
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Lakey, L.T. & Harmon, K.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
500-watt commercialized concentrator system (open access)

500-watt commercialized concentrator system

A passively cooled, single-axis tracking, polar-axis mounted photovoltaic concentrator system has been designed, fabricated, installed, and tested. System description, design considerations, system performance and a production cost estimate are detailed.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Ronney, K. & Aerni, E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solar hot water systems for the southeastern United States: principles and construction of breadbox water heaters (open access)

Solar hot water systems for the southeastern United States: principles and construction of breadbox water heaters

The use of solar energy to provide hot water is among the easier solar technologies for homeowners to utilize. In the Southeastern United States, because of the mild climate and abundant sunshine, solar energy can be harnessed to provide a household&#x27;s hot water needs during the non-freezing weather period mid-April and mid-October. This workbook contains detailed plans for building breadbox solar water heaters that can provide up to 65% of your hot water needs during warm weather. If fuel costs continue to rise, the annual savings obtained from a solar water heater will grow dramatically. The designs in this workbook use readily available materials and the construction costs are low. Although these designs may not be as efficient as some commercially available systems, most of a household&#x27;s hot water needs can be met with them. The description of the breadbox water heater and other types of solar systems will help you make an informed decision between constructing a solar water heater or purchasing one. This workbook is intended for use in the southeastern United States and the designs may not be suitable for use in colder climates.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermo-Structural and Thermal-Hydraulic Aspects of the STARFIRE/DEMO Tritium Breeding Blanket (open access)

Thermo-Structural and Thermal-Hydraulic Aspects of the STARFIRE/DEMO Tritium Breeding Blanket

The STARFIRE/DEMO Project has performed a conceptual design study of the demonstration fusion power reactor to follow the FED/INTOR class of experimental tokamaks. This paper discusses thermo-structural and thermal-hydraulic aspects of two fundamentally different first wall and tritium breeding blanket concepts for STARFIRE/DEMO. The first concept uses solid lithium oxide (Li/sub 2/O) as the tritium breeder in a modular blanket. The first wall is a flat corrugated panel. Both first wall and blanket are constructed of titanium-modified austenitic stainless steel and are cooled with pressurized high-temperature water. The second concept features a liquid metal, 17Li-83Pb, as tritium breeder and coolant. The blanket module's two semi-cylindrical front walls form the first wall, the back faces of which are cooled by flowing liquid metal. Ferritic steel and vanadium alloy are the candidate structural materials.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Liu, Y. Y.; Majumdar, S.; Misra, B.; Burk, R. & Morgan, G. D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron-transmutation-doped germanium bolometers (open access)

Neutron-transmutation-doped germanium bolometers

Six slices of ultra-pure germanium were irradiated with thermal neutron fluences between 7.5 x 10/sup 16/ and 1.88 x 10/sup 18/ cm/sup -2/. After thermal annealing the resistivity was measured down to low temperatures (< 4.2 K) and found to follow the relationship rho - rho/sub 0/exp(..delta../T) in the hopping conduction regime. Also, several junction FETs were tested for noise performance at room temperature and in an insulating housing in a 4.2K cryostat. These FETs will be used as first stage amplifiers for neutron-transmutation-doped germanium bolometers.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Palaio, N. P.; Rodder, M.; Haller, E. E. & Kreysa, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetoresistance, electrical conductivity, and Hall effect of glassy carbon (open access)

Magnetoresistance, electrical conductivity, and Hall effect of glassy carbon

These properties of glassy carbon heat treated for three hours between 1200 and 2700/sup 0/C were measured from 3 to 300/sup 0/K in magnetic fields up to 5 tesla. The magnetoresistance was generally negative and saturated with reciprocal temperature, but still increased as a function of magnetic field. The maximum negative magnetoresistance measured was 2.2% for 2700/sup 0/C material. Several models based on the negative magnetoresistance being proportional to the square of the magnetic moment were attempted; the best fit was obtained for the simplest model combining Curie and Pauli paramagnetism for heat treatments above 1600/sup 0/C. Positive magnetoresistance was found only in less than 1600/sup 0/C treated glassy carbon. The electrical conductivity, of the order of 200 (ohm-cm)/sup -1/ at room temperature, can be empirically written as sigma = A + Bexp(-CT/sup -1/4) - DT/sup -1/2. The Hall coefficient was independent of magnetic field, insensitive to temperature, but was a strong function of heat treatment temperature, crossing over from negative to positive at about 1700/sup 0/C and ranging from -0.048 to 0.126 cm/sup 3//coul. The idea of one-dimensional filaments in glassy carbon suggested by the electrical conductivity is compatible with the present consensus view of the microstructure.
Date: February 1, 1983
Creator: Baker, D.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library