Analysis of trapped gas in 1E34 detonators by gas chromatography (open access)

Analysis of trapped gas in 1E34 detonators by gas chromatography

A method was developed to extract and then analyze gas trapped in thermally aged 1E34 detonators. This gas was extracted into an evacuated volume and injected into a gas chromatograph for separation and quantitative analysis. To effect this gas extraction, a device was designed for puncturing the detonator cup and capturing the effused gas. Limited testing of five detonators in this device shows amounts of gas ranging from about 0.5 X 10 {sup -7} to 12 X 10 {sup - 7} moles.
Date: May 14, 1980
Creator: Warner, David K.; Back, Paul S. & Barnhart, Brady V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design change documentation for the National Coal Model. [Mathematical model modifications] (open access)

Design change documentation for the National Coal Model. [Mathematical model modifications]

Several modifications are to be made to the National Coal Model (NCM) under contract number DE-AC01-79EI-10578. The model will be expanded to include two additional demand regions (increasing the total number of demand regions to 41) and one additional supply region (increasing the total number of supply regions to 31). Implementing this change in the NCM will be very simple. The relevant tables and lists will be expanded to include the new regions, and the dimensionality of all relevant arrays will be increased to 31 or 41, as required. A more difficult task will be to appropriately modify the various input data files to reflect the new regions. This task will be the responsibility of the Coal and Electric Power Analysis Division staff. The model will be modified to use externally-specified transportation rates for each origin/destination pair, rather than the linear transportation cost equations (based on mileage) that are used presently. Thus, an input file of transportation rates (prepared externally to the NCM, as are the coal supply curves) will be used directly to provide transportation rates ($/ton) for each coal type/origin/destination activity (i.e., column) generated in the transportation portion of the matrix generator. Other modifications under consideration relate to …
Date: May 14, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy deposition by high energy protons: comparison of theory and experiment. [HETC computer code] (open access)

Energy deposition by high energy protons: comparison of theory and experiment. [HETC computer code]

The ability of the HETC computer code to calculate energy deposited by proton beams of 0.8 to 28.5 GeV in composite targets was evaluated by comparing calculated results with experimental data. The experimental assembly consisted of /sup 238/U shower plates separated by an air gap from a CH/sub 2///sup 238/U detector plate. For protons in the range 0.8 to 5 GeV, HETC data on energy deposited can be considered accurate to a few tens of percent or better for the shower-plate part of the assembly and to better than fifty percent for the moderator/detector plate. At higher energies, HETC data must be used with caution, but not suspicion. Because these assemblies provide a severe test of the calculational model, and in view of the overall quality of the comparisons, the agreement between measured and calculated values may be judged excellent, and serves as an absolute validation of the values quoted here for energy deposited in such physical configurations.
Date: May 14, 1980
Creator: Loewe, W. E. & Pollock, C. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Parks & Wildlife News, May 14, 1980 (open access)

Texas Parks & Wildlife News, May 14, 1980

Weekly newsletter discussing natural resources, parks, hunting and fishing, and other information related to the outdoors in Texas.
Date: May 14, 1980
Creator: Texas. Parks and Wildlife Department.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Weld evaluation on spherical pressure vessels using holographic interferometry (open access)

Weld evaluation on spherical pressure vessels using holographic interferometry

Waist welds on spherical experimental pressure vessels have been evaluated under pressure using holographic interferometry. A coincident viewing and illumination optical configuration coupled with a parabolic mirror was used so that the entire weld region could be examined with a single hologram. Positioning the pressure vessel at the focal point of the parabolic mirror provides a relatively undistorted 360 degree view of the waist weld. Double exposure and real time holography were used to obtain displacement information on the weld region. Results are compared with radiographic and ultrasonic inspections.
Date: May 14, 1980
Creator: Boyd, D.M. & Wilcox, W.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library