States

Regional Issue Identification and Assessment program (RIIA). Environmental impacts and issues of the EIA MID-MID scenario: Federal Region I (New England) (open access)

Regional Issue Identification and Assessment program (RIIA). Environmental impacts and issues of the EIA MID-MID scenario: Federal Region I (New England)

The impacts described here for 1985 and 1990 are based on a national energy projection which assumes medium energy demand and fuel supply through 1990 but does not incorporate the policies of the National Energy Act (NEA). This scenario, referred to as the Projection Series C or the TRENDLONG MID-MID scenario, is one of six possible energy futures developed by the DOE Energy Information Administration for the Department's 1977 Annual Report to Congress. It was chosen as representative of the official DOE national energy projections when this project was initiated, prior to the passage of the National Energy Act. Since the RIIA program is part of an ongoing review of the regional impact of energy policies, the next phase will examine the National Energy Act (NEA) and initiatives suggested by the President's second National Energy Plan. However, since coal utilization increases under the NEA, in general, impacts identified in the TRENDLONG Series C Scenario should provide a framework for the discussion of impacts by NEA. The environmental impacts discussed in this volume are for Federal Region I (Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut). However, there are nine companion volumes, one for each of the other Federal Regions.
Date: April 15, 1979
Creator: Brainard, J. & Munson, J.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interim implementation structure for development of performance criteria and test standards for photovoltaic systems (open access)

Interim implementation structure for development of performance criteria and test standards for photovoltaic systems

This document presents an implementation structure for the near-term development of performance criteria and test methods for photovoltaic (PV) materials, components, subsystems, and systems. The approach is designed to be responsive to the Photovoltaic Research, Development and Demonstration Act of 1978 (PL-95-590). The project is organized into four tasks: (1) establishment of performance criteria and the development of test methods; (2) development of laboratory accreditation/product certification guidelines; (3) development of validation methodologies; and (4) coordination of the quality assurance effort with consensus standards and code organizations. A schedule and milestones are presented for each task. The appendices provide a brief overview of standards and the standards development process. The philosophy behind this project is to develop industry- and user-established performance criteria, test methods, and accreditation procedures which may then be referred to independent consensus standards organizations for the preparation of consensus standards. The emphasis in execution of this approach will be to develop uniform, fair performance criteria and tests and to avoid rigid, prescriptive criteria. Photovoltaics is an emerging technology; criteria written now must be able to accommodate devices and techniques not yet developed.
Date: November 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
District heating and cooling systems for communities through power plant retrofit and distribution network. Final report. Volume II. Appendices (open access)

District heating and cooling systems for communities through power plant retrofit and distribution network. Final report. Volume II. Appendices

This appendix presents tabulated data used for evaluating the feasibility of retrofitting thermal power plants in the Detroit area so as to provide heat for a district heating system. (LCL)
Date: September 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Silicon preparation and purity from the reaction of sodium with silicon tetrafluoride and silicon tetrachloride: a thermochemical study (open access)

Silicon preparation and purity from the reaction of sodium with silicon tetrafluoride and silicon tetrachloride: a thermochemical study

Thermochemical equilibrium computations for the preparation of silicon (Si) by the reaction between sodium (Na), either liquid or vapor, with silicon tetrafluoride (SiF/sub 4/) and silicon tetrachloride (SiCl/sub 4/) are presented. Computations indicate that SiF/sub 4/ reacts with either liquid or gaseous Na to produce temperatures sufficiently high to form molten Si. Liquid Na reacts with SiF/sub 4/ to produce substantially higher Si yields than does the free combustion reaction with Na vapor; however, the Na vapor/SiF/sub 4/ reaction, if temperature-constrained at the Si melting point, produces an expected Si yield close to 100%. A stoichiometric mixture of liquid Na and SiCl/sub 4/ vapor reacts to produce liquid Si, gaseous sodium chloride (NaCl), and a small concentration of Si subhalides. Gaseous Na, however, reacts with SiCl/sub 4/ to form entirely gaseous reaction products and a high yield of Si (liquid) but subhalide concentrations are greater than when liquid Na is used. The reactions of a number of impurity elements in Na, during the course of the Na-Si halide reaction, have been described. Of those considered, only calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg), phosphorus (P), and strontium (Sr) are expected to co-exist to any extent in Na vapor and none is expected to …
Date: April 15, 1979
Creator: Rhein, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Purification of silicon by the silicon fluoride transport process. Thermochemical study (open access)

Purification of silicon by the silicon fluoride transport process. Thermochemical study

A computer-assisted thermochemical equilibrium analysis was conducted for the silicon transport reaction: Si(s) + SiF/sub 4/(g) = (intermediates) = Si(s) + SiF/sub 4/(g). The calculations indicated that a substantial transport rate should be possible at temperatures of 1700/sup 0/K and one atmosphere pressure. Computations were made to determine whether the elemental impurities present in metallurgical-grade silicon would transfer in this process. It was concluded that aluminum, chromium, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, vanadium, and zirconium would not transfer, but that boron, magnesium, phosphorus, and titanium would transfer.
Date: April 15, 1979
Creator: Rhein, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Passive solar calculation methods. Interim report (open access)

Passive solar calculation methods. Interim report

This report is the first in a series and details the results accomplished under the following tasks: (1) evaluation of existing passive solar calculation methods, (2) BLAST/DOE-1 program interface and comparison with BR-202, and (3) development of analytic relationships between the thermal balance and weighting factor techniques. The various methods available for use in thermal load analysis are presented with detailed informaton on algorithms used in the thermal balance and weighting factor techniques. (MOW)
Date: April 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary designs for OTEC Stationkeeping Subsystems (SKSS). Summary report (open access)

Preliminary designs for OTEC Stationkeeping Subsystems (SKSS). Summary report

This summary report presents a condensation of the designs as developed from requirements and concept selection to preliminary design. The study consists of the following six tasks: (1) Design requirements: establish design environmental conditions and criteria. Develop methodology to both assess SKSS reliability and performance, and minimize life cycle costs. (2) Conceptual design: develop at least two SKSS conceptual designs for both barge and spar platform (eight in all). Consider commercial plant SKSS, verify feasibility, define problem areas, estimate life cycle cost. Develop deployment, operation and maintenance scenarios. Recommend an SKSS concept for each platform. (3) Preliminary design; prepare preliminary designs for two SKSS concepts selected by NOAA/DOE. Optimize the designs, provide deployment and retrieval procedures, support requirements, evaute reliability and performance. Assess effects of watch circle and water depth variation. (4) Development and testing recommendations: recommend programs required to confirm design assumptions and performance predictions, including material and component development, and soils investigation. Estimate cost and schedule required to perform these programs. (5) Cost-time analysis: develop a detailed cost and schedule for the acquisition, transportation, deployment, inspection, maintenance, spares, replacement and salvage for the SKSS designs. (6) Commercial plant SKSS recommendations: assess applicability of designs to commercial plant SKSS. …
Date: February 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Passive solar calculation methods. Final report (open access)

Passive solar calculation methods. Final report

An analytical treatment related to the generation of space specific weighting factors is presented using a recursion relationship which employs a heat balance of both the outside and inside surface. After which the multizone problem is discussed, the analysis of which is facilitated through the use of the calculated weighting factors. The use of frequency domain methods is detailed such that the amplitude ratio and phase shift characteristics for a sinusoidal excitation are derived for the thermal load resulting from radiation heat gain/loss and space air temperature fluctuations. The results of a parametric study related to variable floor properties, radiation distributions and space sizes are presented. The weighting factors generated for each perturbation were used to define the expected differences in space response characteristics. Additional studies made using methods available for use in calculating thermal loads without the program peculiar aspects inherent in the first comparison. The Appendix, in addition to containing the tabulated results of the parametric study, also includes a specific discussion for each of the tasks outlined within the statement of work.
Date: June 15, 1979
Creator: Cumali, Z. O.; Sezgen, A. O. & Sullivan, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron Transfer Reactions of Excited Dyes With Metal Complexes. Progress Report, March 1, 1978-February 28, 1979. [Iron-Methylene Blue] (open access)

Electron Transfer Reactions of Excited Dyes With Metal Complexes. Progress Report, March 1, 1978-February 28, 1979. [Iron-Methylene Blue]

An intense absorption band of /sup 3/MBH/sup 2 +/ at 700nm was characterized in several media and its pK/sub A/ was measured to be 7.17 +- .1 in water. Flash photolysis show that semiethylene blue, MBH/sup +/, formed by quenching /sup 3/MBH/sup 2 +/ with Fe/sub II/(H/sub 2/O)/sub 6//sup 2 +/, decays by disproportionation at a diffusion-controlled rate. Rates of decay of the photostationary state of solutions of MB/sup +/ and Fe/sup II/(H/sub 2/O)/sub 6//sup 2 +/ in acidic media were measured using crossed beams to yield specific rates of oxidation of leucomethylene blue (MBH/sub 3//sup 2 +/) by MB/sup +/ (synproportionation) and by Fe(III). Laser flash-photolysis shows that quenching of MB/sup +/(S/sub 1/) by Fe(H/sub 2/O)/sub 6//sup 2 +/ can result in electron transfer to give MBH/sup +/. Profound differences between processes initiated by quenching triplet methylene blue with Fe(H/sub 2/O)/sub 6//sup 2 +/ and with stable coordination complexes of Fe(II) were found. Quenchers included (Fe/sup II/(CN)/sub 6/)/sup 4 -/, (Fe/sup II/(CN)/sub 4/(bpy)/sub 2/)/sup 2 -/, (Fe/sup II/(CN)/sub 2/(bpy))/sup 0/, and (Fe/sup II/(bpy)/sub 3/)/sup 2 +/. Measurements were made in aqueous and aqueous-alcoholic solutions at pH 2, 4.4, and 8.2. Quenching of /sup 3/MBH/sup 2 +/ or /sup 3/MB/sup …
Date: March 15, 1979
Creator: Lichtin, N. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Large area silicon sheet by EFG. Second quarterly report, April 1-June 30, 1979 (open access)

Large area silicon sheet by EFG. Second quarterly report, April 1-June 30, 1979

In Furnace No. 1 during this quarter, experiments were conducted in which the total argon purge rate in this furnace was decreased. A number of extremely significant changes in the crystallographic structure and electronic quality of the ribbons were observed in these experiments. Ribbon segments were grown in which the equilibrium defect structure was no longer present and the electrical properties improved to the extent that cells of 50 cm/sup 2/ area having AM1 efficiencies over 11% could be prepared. In Furnace No. 3A, the final five-ribbon demonstration run was performed. The furnace performed nearly flawlessly over the 15 hour run during which approx. 30 meters of 5 cm wide ribbon were grown at a rate of approx. 3.3 cm/min from each of the five cartridges. Initial evaluation of a small lot of 45 cm/sup 2/ solar cells of approx. 9% (AM1) efficiency. Subsequent to this final multiple demonstration run, the furnace was converted to be operated with three 10 cm width cartridges, plus a melt replenishment unit. This conversion is now complete, and the first growth runs using one cartridge and the melt replenisher have produced approx. 4 meters of 10 cm wide ribbon at a growth rate of …
Date: July 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
User's guide for MCFRM, a Monte Carlo particle code for FRM studies (open access)

User's guide for MCFRM, a Monte Carlo particle code for FRM studies

The Monte Carlo particle code MCFRM described in this work is also written in the FORTRAN language and is available on either the MFE-7600 or the CRAY-1 computers. The discussion presented here deals only with the steps required to execute the code on the CRAY, since the majority of its use should be on that machine.
Date: October 15, 1979
Creator: Driemeyer, D. & Miley, G.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
User's guide for FRMOD, a zero dimensional FRM burn code (open access)

User's guide for FRMOD, a zero dimensional FRM burn code

The zero-dimensional FRM plasma burn code, FRMOD is written in the FORTRAN language and is currently available on the Control Data Corporation (CDC) 7600 computer at the Magnetic Fusion Energy Computer Center (MFECC), sponsored by the US Department of Energy, in Livermore, CA. This guide assumes that the user is familiar with the system architecture and some of the utility programs available on the MFE-7600 machine, since online documentation is available for system routines through the use of the DOCUMENT utility. Users may therefore refer to it for answers to system related questions.
Date: October 15, 1979
Creator: Driemeryer, D. & Miley, G.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the spurious pressures generated by certain GFEM solutions of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations (open access)

On the spurious pressures generated by certain GFEM solutions of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations

The spurious pressures and acceptable velocities generated when using certain combinations of velocity and pressure approximations in a Galerkin finite element discretization of the primitive variable form of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations are analyzed both theoretically and numerically for grids composed of quadrilateral finite elements. Schemes for obtaining usable pressure fields from the spurious numerical results are presented for certain cases.
Date: October 15, 1979
Creator: Sani, R. L.; Gresho, P. M. & Lee, R. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of solar-geothermal hybrid system concepts (open access)

Assessment of solar-geothermal hybrid system concepts

Studies were conducted to assess the technical and economic merits and limitations of advanced solar-geothermal hybrid electric power plant concepts. Geothermal resource characteristics and technologies were reviewed to determine the best possible ways of combining solar and geothermal technologies into a hybrid operation. Potential hybrid system concepts are defined and their performance, resource usage, and economics are assessed relative to the individual solar and geothermal resource development techniques. Key results are presented.
Date: March 15, 1979
Creator: Mathur, P. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cool pool development. Quarterly technical report No. 1, April-June 1979 (open access)

Cool pool development. Quarterly technical report No. 1, April-June 1979

The Cool Pool is a passive cooling system consisting of a shaded, evaporating roof pond which thermosiphons cool water into water-filled, metal columns (culvert pipes) located within the building living space. The water in the roof pond is cooled by evaporation, convection and radiation. Because the water in the pool and downcomer is colder and denser than the water in the column a pressure difference is created and the cold water flows from the pool, through the downcomer and into the bottom of the column. The warm column water rises and flows through a connecting pipe into the pool. It is then cooled and the cycle repeats itself. The system requires no pumps. The water column absorbs heat from the building interior primarily by convection and radiation. Since the column is radiating at a significantly lower temperature than the interior walls it plays a double role in human comfort. Not only does it cool the air by convection but it provides a heat sink to which people can radiate. Since thermal radiation is important to the cooling of people, the cold water column contributes substantially to their feelings of comfort. Research on the Cool Pool system includes the following major …
Date: October 15, 1979
Creator: Crowther, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Demonstration of the Environmental Data Corporation Spectral Fuel Conservation System program plan (open access)

Demonstration of the Environmental Data Corporation Spectral Fuel Conservation System program plan

The purpose of this program is to demonstrate and quantify the amount of fuel that can be saved if the Spectral Fuel Conservation System (SFCS) developed by the Environmental Data Corporation (EDC) is installed in coal-fired industrial boilers. Of central importance to the program are the selection of an appropriate test site and the preparation and methodical application of a comprehensive test strategy. Consequently, the sections dealing with these topics in the proposal have been considerably expanded in this program plan to include as much preparatory thinking as is possible at this early stage. The remainder of this document is essentially an update version of the technical portion of the proposal. No change in the schedule is anticipated.
Date: November 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microprocessor controlled solar collector system. Technical progress report No. 3 (open access)

Microprocessor controlled solar collector system. Technical progress report No. 3

The strategy and initial results of a microprocessor control system for a solar water heating system are described. Two hot water storage tanks are utilized. (WHK)
Date: November 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Limits for the burial of the Department of Energy transuranic wastes (open access)

Limits for the burial of the Department of Energy transuranic wastes

Potential limits for the shallow earth burial of transuranic elements were examined by simplified models of the individual pathways to man. Pathways examined included transport to surface steams, transport to ground water, intrusion, and people living on the burial ground area after the wastes have surfaced. Limits are derived for each pathway and operational limits are suggested based upon a dose to the organ receiving the maximum dose rate of 0.5 rem/y after 70 years of exposure for the maximum exposed individual.
Date: January 15, 1979
Creator: Healy, J. W. & Rodgers, J. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrologic properties of shale and related argillaceous rocks (open access)

Hydrologic properties of shale and related argillaceous rocks

This report is the result of a bibliographic study designed primarily to collect hydrologic data on American clay-rich rocks. The following information was also sought: stratigraphy, environment of deposition, mineralogic composition, and diagenetic changes. The collected numerical data are presented in tables which contain densities, porosities, and/or hydraulic conductivities of approximately 360 samples. Additional data include hydraulic diffusivities, resistivities, flow rates, and rock strengths. Geologic information suggests that large deposits of shale which may be suited for waste repository belong to all ages and were formed in both marine and continental environments. Of the studied units, the most promising are Paleozoic in the eastern half of the country, Mesozoic in the central part, and Cenozoic in the Gulf Coast area and the West. Less widespread units locally present some additional possibilities. Mineralogic investigations suggest that the smectite content in rocks shows a decrease in time (70% in Recent rocks; 35% in pre-Mesozoic rocks). Because of this predominance of smectite in younger rocks, the modeling of repositories in post-Paleozoic formations might require knowledge of additional and poorly known parameters. Results of investigations into the mathematical relationships between porosity and permeability (or hydralic conductivity) suggest that in situ permeabilities could be estimated …
Date: November 15, 1979
Creator: Moiseyev, A. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fracture strength of silicon solar cells. JPL Publication 79-102 (open access)

Fracture strength of silicon solar cells. JPL Publication 79-102

In an effort to improve the reliability and lower the cost of solar cells, a test program has been developed to determine the nature and source of the flaw controlling the fracture of silicon solar cells and to provide information regarding the mechanical strength of cells. Results obtained in the first phase of a test program to develop improved methods for testing the mechanical strength of cells and to evaluate the fracture strength of typical Czochralski silicon solar cells 76 mm (3 in.) in diameter are presented. Significant changes in fracture strengths were found in seven selected in-process wafer-to-cell products from a manufacturer's production line. The fracture stength data were described by Weibull statistical analysis and can be interpreted in light of the exterior flaw distribution of the samples.
Date: October 15, 1979
Creator: Chen, C. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental investigation of the Trombe wall. Final report, October 1977-March 1979 (open access)

Experimental investigation of the Trombe wall. Final report, October 1977-March 1979

A variable geometry test facility was constructed and an experimental program conducted to investigate the performance characteristics of the Trombe wall, passive solar heating system. The principal objective met in the research project was the determination of representative values of wall gap thermocirculation parameters for various wall geometries. Velocity and temperature profiles in the wall gap were obtained for 2, 4, and 6-inch gap widths. Maximum values for the Grashof number under measured flow conditions ranged approximately from 6 x 10/sup 5/ for the 2-inch gap to 1.5 x 10/sup 7/ for the 6-inch gap, indicating laminar flow and possibly the initiation of transitional flow regimes at the higher Grashof numbers. Turbulent flow behavior was not exhibited within the relatively broad range of test conditions studied in this research, conditions typical of one-story Trombe walls employing practical geometries. A second objective accomplished in this research was the characterization of the Trombe wall thermal efficiency for a variety of operating conditions and wall geometries. Using data collected under essentially clear-sky conditions, collector efficiency curves similar to those commonly used to describe the performance of flat-plate solar collectors were developed for the Trombe wall. The efficiency plots were determined for 2, 4, …
Date: May 15, 1979
Creator: Casperson, Richard L. & Hocevar, Carl J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Power Systems, Small Power Systems Applications Project. Annual technical report. Volume I. Executive summary, Fiscal Year 1978 (open access)

Thermal Power Systems, Small Power Systems Applications Project. Annual technical report. Volume I. Executive summary, Fiscal Year 1978

This report is a summary of the SPSA Annual Technical Report. It covers Small Power Systems Applications activities for FY 1978. Studies were conducted to address current small power system technology as applied to power plants up to 10 MWe in size. Markets for small power systems were characterized and cost goals were established for the project. Candidate power plant system design concepts were selected for evaluation and preliminary performance and cost assessments were made. Economic studies were conducted at JPL and under contract to Burns and McDonnell. Breakeven capital costs were determined for leading contenders among the candidate systems. An applications study was made of the potential use of small power systems in providing part of the demand for pumping power by the extensive aqueduct system of California, estimated to be 1000 MWe by 1985. Criteria and methodologies were developed for application to the ranking of candidate power plant system design concepts. Experimental power plants concepts of 1 MWe rating were studied by three contractors as a Phase I effort leading toward the definition of a power plant configuration for subsequent detail design, construction, testing, and evaluation as Engineering Experiment No. 1 (EE No. 1). Site selection criteria and …
Date: January 15, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetic shielding of neutral beam sources in mirror fusion test facility (open access)

Magnetic shielding of neutral beam sources in mirror fusion test facility

The magnetic shields of the Mirror Fusion Test Facility neutral beam sources must keep the inner magnetic field below 0.15 mT inside an unsymmetrical ambient magnetic field of 0.05 to 1.5 T. Numerical computations and 1/10th-scale experiments were used to arrive at a three-layer shield design consisting of two thin nickel-iron alloy shells inside a thick mild steel shell. A 1/10th-scale prototype test confirmed the final design.
Date: August 15, 1979
Creator: Shearer, J. W.; Cutler, T. A.; Dilgard, L. W.; Fabyan, J.; Holl, P. M.; Porter, G. D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supplementary analysis of nuclear waste management options (open access)

Supplementary analysis of nuclear waste management options

This report describes studies pertaining to long-term risks from the disposal of high-level nuclear waste in deep mined cavities. The results presented supplement peviously reported work. Previously studied scenarios are examined in greater depth, and the analysis is extended to deal with alternative fuel cycles.
Date: June 15, 1979
Creator: Koplik, C.M.; Pollak, G.D. & Ross, B.I.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library