Resource Type

CHAPTER 7. BERYLLIUM ANALYSIS BY NON-PLASMA BASED METHODS (open access)

CHAPTER 7. BERYLLIUM ANALYSIS BY NON-PLASMA BASED METHODS

The most common method of analysis for beryllium is inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES). This method, along with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), is discussed in Chapter 6. However, other methods exist and have been used for different applications. These methods include spectroscopic, chromatographic, colorimetric, and electrochemical. This chapter provides an overview of beryllium analysis methods other than plasma spectrometry (inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry or mass spectrometry). The basic methods, detection limits and interferences are described. Specific applications from the literature are also presented.
Date: April 20, 2009
Creator: Ekechukwu, A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap: Fiscal Years 2009-2034 (open access)

Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap: Fiscal Years 2009-2034

Biennial report describing progress and changes in unmanned systems technology used by the military, with a 25-year strategic plan to describe goals for the continued development, production, testing, training, operation, and sustainment of the technologies. "This is the second edition of the integrated Office of the Secretary of Defense Unmanned Systems Roadmap (2009-2034) that includes Unmanned Aircraft systems, Unmanned Ground systems and Unmanned Maritime Systems. This Roadmap provides Defense-wide vision for unmanned systems and related technologies" (p. iii).
Date: April 20, 2009
Creator: United States. Department of Defense.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chapter 10: BlueGene/Q Sequoia and Mira (open access)

Chapter 10: BlueGene/Q Sequoia and Mira

None
Date: April 20, 2012
Creator: Vranas, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogen Outgassing from Lithium Hydride (open access)

Hydrogen Outgassing from Lithium Hydride

Lithium hydride is a nuclear material with a great affinity for moisture. As a result of exposure to water vapor during machining, transportation, storage and assembly, a corrosion layer (oxide and/or hydroxide) always forms on the surface of lithium hydride resulting in the release of hydrogen gas. Thermodynamically, lithium hydride, lithium oxide and lithium hydroxide are all stable. However, lithium hydroxides formed near the lithium hydride substrate (interface hydroxide) and near the sample/vacuum interface (surface hydroxide) are much less thermally stable than their bulk counterpart. In a dry environment, the interface/surface hydroxides slowly degenerate over many years/decades at room temperature into lithium oxide, releasing water vapor and ultimately hydrogen gas through reaction of the water vapor with the lithium hydride substrate. This outgassing can potentially cause metal hydriding and/or compatibility issues elsewhere in the device. In this chapter, the morphology and the chemistry of the corrosion layer grown on lithium hydride (and in some cases, its isotopic cousin, lithium deuteride) as a result of exposure to moisture are investigated. The hydrogen outgassing processes associated with the formation and subsequent degeneration of this corrosion layer are described. Experimental techniques to measure the hydrogen outgassing kinetics from lithium hydride and methods employing …
Date: April 20, 2006
Creator: Dinh, L. N.; Schildbach, M. A.; Smith, R. A.; Balazs, B. & McLean, W., II
System: The UNT Digital Library