Resource Type

Proof of concept testing of an integrated dry injection system for SO sub x /NO sub x control (open access)

Proof of concept testing of an integrated dry injection system for SO sub x /NO sub x control

The objectives of the subscale test program were designed to provide sorbent and additive selection guidance, and, in so doing, supply answers to the questions posed in the preceding section. The objectives are: Identify the best commercial hydrate sorbent and the best enhanced hydrate sorbent from a list of nine types, based upon S0{sub 2} removal at Ca/S=2. Determine the relative effectiveness of sodium sesquicarbonate versus sodium bicarbonate for S0{sub 2} and NO{sub x} control over the temperature range of 200{degrees}F--400{degrees}F. Identify the best NO{sub 2} suppressing additive among the group of ammonia, urea, and activated carbon.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Helfritch, D.J.; Bortz, S.J. (Research-Cottrell, Inc., Somerville, NJ (United States). Environmental Services and Technologies Div.) & Beittel, R. (Riley Stoker Corp., Worcester, MA (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
(The fate of nuclides in natural water systems) (open access)

(The fate of nuclides in natural water systems)

Our research at Yale on the fate of nuclides in natural water systems has three components to it: the study of the atmospheric precipitation of radionuclides and other chemical species; the study of the behavior of natural radionuclides in groundwater and hydrothermal systems; and understanding the controls on the distribution of radionuclides and stable nuclides in the marine realm. In this section a review of our progress in each of these areas is presented.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Turekian, K.K. (Yale Univ., New Haven, CT (USA). Dept. of Geology and Geophysics)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of mild gasification process (open access)

Development of mild gasification process

Under a previous contract with Morgantown Energy Technology Center (METC), Department of Energy (DOE) Contract No. AC21-84MC21108, UCC Research Corporation (UCCRC) built and tested a 1500 lb/day Mild Gasification Process Development Unit (MGU). The MGU, as tested under the previous contract, is shown in Figure 1. Testing completed under the previous contract showed that good quality hydrocarbon liquids and good quality char can be produced in the MGU. However, the MGU is not optimized. The primary objectives of the current project are to optimize the MGU and determine the suitability of char for several commercial applications. The program consists of four tasks; Task 1 -- Test Plan; Task 2 -- Optimization of Mild Gasification Process; Task 3 -- Evaluation of Char and Char/Coal Blends as a Boiler/Blast Furnace Fuel; and Task 4 -- Analysis of Data and Preparation of Final Report. Task 1 has been completed while work continued on Task 2.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Chu, C.I.C. & Williams, S.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fire and explosion hazards of oil shale (open access)

Fire and explosion hazards of oil shale

The US Bureau of Mines publication presents the results of investigations into the fire and explosion hazards of oil shale rocks and dust. Three areas have been examined: the explosibility and ignitability of oil shale dust clouds, the fire hazards of oil shale dust layers on hot surfaces, and the ignitability and extinguishment of oil shale rubble piles. 10 refs., 54 figs., 29 tabs.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
High accuracy electron-impact photoemission cross section measurements for the EUV radiometric standard (open access)

High accuracy electron-impact photoemission cross section measurements for the EUV radiometric standard

This project was concerned with high-accuracy measurements of electron-impact photoemission cross sections for transitions of atoms and molecules in the EUV spectral region (30 nm to 200 nm). The spectrometer-detector system that was employed in the measurements was calibrated using well-parameterized synchrotron radiation. The 58.4 resonance line of He was chosen to establish the overall accuracy of the apparatus and data collection procedures. The measurement of this line can be compared to accurate theoretical calculations and to one other experimental cross section measurement in which a different excitation channel was observed.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Risley, J. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development and process evaluation of improved Fischer-Tropsch slurry catalysts (open access)

Development and process evaluation of improved Fischer-Tropsch slurry catalysts

The objective of this contract is to develop a consistent technical data base on the use of iron-based catalysts in Fischer-Tropsch (FT) synthesis reactions. This data base will be developed to allow the unambiguous comparison of the performance of these catalysts with each other and with state-of-the-art iron catalyst compositions. Particular attention will be devoted to generating reproducible kinetic and selectivity data and to developing reproducible improved catalyst compositions.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Withers, H.P. (Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., Allentown, PA (United States)); Bukur, D.B. & Rosynek, M.P. (Texas A and M Univ., College Station, TX (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aromatics oxidation and soot formation in flames (open access)

Aromatics oxidation and soot formation in flames

Work during this contract period has been concerned with the mechanisms through which aromatics are formed and destroyed in flames, and the processes responsible for soot formation. Recent progress has been primarily in two areas: experiments and modeling of the soot nucleation process in low pressure benzene flames and preparation for experiments on the destruction mechanisms of benzene. In addition, we have incorporated weak collision'' formalisms into a fall-off computer code.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Howard, J. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling of Integrated Environmental Control Systems for Coal-Fired Power Plants: Conventional Froth Flotation for the IEC Coal Cleaning Plant Model (open access)

Modeling of Integrated Environmental Control Systems for Coal-Fired Power Plants: Conventional Froth Flotation for the IEC Coal Cleaning Plant Model

This report describes the addition of a conventional froth flotation circuit into the FORTRAN coal cleaning module of the Integrated Environmental Control (IEC) model. The purpose of this modification is to include froth flotation as an option to clean the coal fines. The current model has three beneficiation: levels (2, 3, and 4) in which different streams are washed by specific gravity equipment. Level 2 washes only the coarse stream. Level 3 washes the coarse and medium streams. Level 4 washes the coarse, medium, and fine streams. This modification adds a fifth level, which uses specific gravity equipment to wash the coarse and medium streams and froth flotation equipment for the fine stream. The specific size fractions in each stream are specified by the model user. As before, the model optimizes the yield of each circuit in order to achieve a target coal quality for the cleaned coal product.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Rubin, E. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Surface electrochemical control for the fine coal and pyrite separation (open access)

Surface electrochemical control for the fine coal and pyrite separation

Ongoing work includes the characterization of coal pyrites, the floatability evaluation of typical US coal samples, the flotation behavior of coal pyrites, the electrochemical measurement of the surface properties of coal pyrites, and the characterization of species produced at pyrite surfaces.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Chen, Wanxiong; Hu, Weibai; Wann, Jyi-Perng; Zhu, Ximeng & Wadsworth, M. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Yttria-stabilized zirconia solid oxide electrolyte fuel cells, monolithic solid oxide fuel cells (open access)

Yttria-stabilized zirconia solid oxide electrolyte fuel cells, monolithic solid oxide fuel cells

Small cell size, thin ceramic components, and high operating temperature are the key features of the MSOFC. The small size of individual cells in the monolithic structure increases the active surface area. For example, an MSOFC with channels about 1 mm in diameter has a ratio of active surface area to volume of about 9.4 sq cm/cu cm. This is about seven times the ratio for conventional fuel cells. On this basis alone, an MSOFC with a channel diameter of 1 mm should produce the same power as a conventional fuel cell seven times as large. The high current density of the MSOFC results from the small cell size and ensuing low internal resistance. The current density is high at the fuel inlet end of the fuel channel where the thermodynamic driving force (Nernst potential) is highest. Similarly, the current density is low at the outlet end of the fuel channel where the Nernst potential is lowest. Because of the high operating temperature of the MSOFC (1000{degrees}C),hydrocarbon fuels can be reformed in the fuel channels. The reform reaction produces hydrogen which is consumed by the fuel cell. Catalytic reforming of methane and natural gas within a solid oxide fuel cell …
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
(In vivo mutagenicity and clastogenicity of ionizing radiation in nuclear medicine) (open access)

(In vivo mutagenicity and clastogenicity of ionizing radiation in nuclear medicine)

The overall goals of our research remains to investigate the mutagenic and clastogenic effects of exposure to low levels of ionizing radiation in human lymphocytes. We are studying hospital patients referred to a nuclear medicine department for diagnostic cardiac imaging and nuclear medicine technologists who administer radionuclides.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of general circulation model results and comparison with regional climatic data, Task 3 (open access)

Analysis of general circulation model results and comparison with regional climatic data, Task 3

On time scales of greater than one year the variability of weather and climate on a large path of the Earth is dominated by the Southern Oscillation. While current theories of this phenomenon have clarified the role of the interaction between the ocean and the atmosphere in maintaining this oscillation it has so far been unclear whether the Southern Oscillation originates in the ocean, in the atmosphere or during the interaction between the ocean and the atmosphere. In this study we compared simulations of climate in two global circulation models: the coupled OSU GCM in which the atmosphere and ocean interact dynamically and the slab OSU GCM in which the ocean is represented by a static layer.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Cess, R.D. & Hameed, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
(Radiopharmacokinetics: Utilization of nuclear medicine) (open access)

(Radiopharmacokinetics: Utilization of nuclear medicine)

The work performed in the 1986/1989 period can be characterized as one of testing and documenting that the Radiopharmacokinetic technique is both feasible and applicable to human studies, as well as developing spectroscopic methods for undertaking noninvasive human studies. Main accomplishments include studies which: show that drug targeting can be monitored noninvasively using radiolabeled drugs. The study that documented this finding involved an analysis of the comparative kinetics of biodistribution of {sup 195m}Pt-cisplatin to brain tumors, when administered intravenously and intra-arterially; show that such differential targeting of Platinum represents a differential quantity of drug and a differential amount of the active component reaching the target site; show that in vivo NMRS studies of drugs are possible, as documented by our studies of 5-fluorouracil; show that 5-fluorouracil can be trapped in tumors, and that such trapping may be directly correlatable to patient response; show that the radiopharmacokinetic technique can also be used effectively for the study of radiopharmaceuticals used for imaging, as documented in our studies with {sup 99m}T{sub c}-DMSA.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Wolf, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a current collection loss management system for SDI homopolar power supplies (open access)

Development of a current collection loss management system for SDI homopolar power supplies

High speed, high power density current collection systems have been identified as an enabling technology required to construct homopolar power supplies to meet SDI missions. This work is part of a three-year effort directed towards the analysis, experimental verification, and prototype construction of a current collection system designed to operate continuously at 2 kA/cm{sup 2}, at a rubbing speed of 200 m/s, and with acceptable losses in a space environment. To data, no system has achieved these conditions simultaneously. This is the annual report covering the second year period of performance on DOE contract DE-AC03-86SF16518. Major areas covered include design, construction and operation of a cryogenically cooled brush test rig, design and construction of a high speed brush test rig, optimization study for homopolar machines, loss analysis of the current collection system, and an application study which defines the air-core homopolar construction necessary to achieve the goal of 80--90 kW/kg generator power density. 17 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Brown, D. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of pressure ransient response in intensely and sparsely fractured reservoirs (open access)

Comparison of pressure ransient response in intensely and sparsely fractured reservoirs

A comprehensive analytical model is presented to study the pressure transient behavior of a naturally fractured reservoir with a continuous matrix block size distribution. Geologically realistic probability density functions of matrix block size are used to represent reservoirs of varying fracture intensity and uniformity. Transient interporosity flow is assumed and interporosity skin is incorporated. Drawdown and interference pressure transient tests are investigated. The results show distinctions in the pressure response from intensely and sparsely fractured reservoirs in the absence of interporosity skin. Also, uniformly and nonuniformly fractured reservoirs exhibit distinct responses, irrespective of the degree of fracture intensity. The pressure response in a nonuniformly fractured reservoir with large block size variability, approaches a nonfractured (homogeneous) reservoir response. Type curves are developed to estimate matrix block size variability and the degree of fracture intensity from drawdown and interference well tests.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Johns, R. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mathematical software for ODEs (open access)

Mathematical software for ODEs

None
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Shampine, L. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Non-local kinetic transport studies of a field-reversed configuration (open access)

Non-local kinetic transport studies of a field-reversed configuration

One of the positive results that came from the work in this period was the development of a series of codes for solving the 2-D equilibrium FRC problem under various basic physics assumptions. The derivation of the models used to determine an FRC equilibrium was presented in the previous annual report, which is to be submitted to Physics of Fluids. The derivation is not repeated in this section; rather, some examples of what has been learned using these codes are presented. To date, the codes have been useful in four essential areas. First, it was shown that passive mirrors present in the early operation of the LSM device were interacting strongly with the plasma. This caused the inference of some key quantities to be inaccurate. Second, profiles have been found that can exist in the plasma and could cause the present inference of the field null resistivity to be significantly in error. Third, it has become possible to examine rotational effects in the FRC equilibrium from the standpoint of modification of both equilibrium and stability properties. Fourth, it has made possible a realistic study of the MHD stability of the system.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Choi, Chan K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Predicting the performance of ceramic filters by the use of silt density index (open access)

Predicting the performance of ceramic filters by the use of silt density index

A series of experiments were conducted to study the rate of filter fouling of several simulants. These solutions contained hydroxides of iron, aluminum, silica, and zinc, using a range of concentration of each under various conditions. Total Solids (TS), Total Suspended Solids (TSS), Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), Silt Density Index (SDI), and conductivity were measured in the studies. The purpose of these experiments was to find out whether or not SDI could be used to accurately predict the performance of ceramic filters. The preliminary results show that SDI alone cannot be used, but can be used in conjunction with the total filtration time. The procedure is limited and can only be used for preliminary screening. 4 refs., 3 figs.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Cain, S.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron scatter studies of chromatin structure related to functions (open access)

Neutron scatter studies of chromatin structure related to functions

Neutron scatter studies have been performed at LANSCE, LANL and at the Institute Laue Langevin, Grenoble, France. In the previous progress report (April 1, 1988--July 1, 1988) the following objectives were listed: shape of the histone octamer; location of the N-terminal domains of histone in the nucleosome core particle (specific aim 1 of original grant proposal); effect of acetylation on nucleosome structure (specific aim 2); location of the globular domain of histone H1 (specific aim 6); and complexes of the transcription factor 3A with its DNA binding site. Progress is briefly discussed.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Bradbury, E.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carolina bays of the Savannah River Plant (open access)

Carolina bays of the Savannah River Plant

Much of the research to date on the Carolina bays of the Savannah River Plant and elsewhere has focused on certain species or on environmental features. Different levels of detail exist for different groups of organisms and reflect the diverse interests of previous investigators. This report summarizes aspects of research to date and presents data from numerous studies. 70 refs., 14 figs., 12 tabs.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Schalles, J. F.; Sharitz, R. R.; Gibbons, J. W.; Leversee, G. J. & Knox, J. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contracting practices for the underground construction of the Superconducting Super Collider (open access)

Contracting practices for the underground construction of the Superconducting Super Collider

This report was prepared by a specially appointed committee under the auspices of the National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council to address contracting and associated management issues essential to the successful execution of underground construction for the Superconducting Super Collider.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biological Production of Ethanol From Coal (open access)

Biological Production of Ethanol From Coal

Two batch and one continuous reactor study involving Clostridium ljungdahlii were carried out. First, the effects of H{sub 2} partial pressure on growth, CO and H{sub 2} uptake and product formation by C. ljungdahlii were investigated in batch culture. Over the concentration range studied, it was observed that CO was preferentially utilized in favor of H{sub 2}. It was also seen that increasing H{sub 2} partial pressures increased the ratio of ethanol to acetate. Finally, a two-stage CSTR system was successfully operated with C. ljungdahlii in which growth occurred in the first stage and ethanol production occurred in the second stage.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ceriodaphnia survival/reproduction test (open access)

Ceriodaphnia survival/reproduction test

This toxicity test was conducted to determine if the effluent causes death (acute toxicity) or reduction in the reproduction of the test organisms (chronic toxicity) during a seven day period. A series of dilutions of the effluent are set to determine how much the effluent must be diluted before toxic effects are not longer noted. Acute toxicity is checked by statistically analyzing whether significantly more organisms die in the effluent dilutions than in the control treatment. Chronic toxicity is checked by statistically analyzing whether significantly fewer are produced by test organisms exposed to the effluent dilutions. Results indicate the lowest effluent concentration which shows a toxic effect (the LOEC) and the highest effluent concentration which does not demonstrate an effect (NOEC).
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Arctic hydrology and meteorology (open access)

Arctic hydrology and meteorology

To date, five years of hydrologic and meteorologic data have been collected at Imnavait Creek near Toolik Lake, Alaska. This is the most complete set of field data of this type collected in the Arctic of North America. These data have been used in process-oriented research to increase our understanding of atmosphere/hydrosphere/biosphere/lithosphere interactions. Basically, we are monitoring heat and mass transfer between various spheres to quantify rates. These could be rates of mass movement such as hillslope flow or rates of heat transfer for active layer thawing or combined heat and mass processes such as evapotranspiration. We have utilized a conceptual model to predict hydrologic processes. To test the success of this model, we are comparing our predicted rates of runoff and snowmelt to measured valves. We have also used a surface energy model to simulate active layer temperatures. The final step in this modeling effort to date was to predict what impact climatic warming would have on active layer thicknesses and how this will influence the hydrology of our research watershed by examining several streambeds.
Date: January 1, 1989
Creator: Kane, D.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library