Burst testing of low pressure MKS Baratron{reg_sign} sensors (open access)

Burst testing of low pressure MKS Baratron{reg_sign} sensors

Pressure sensors from ten MKS series 390 and 690 Baratron{reg_sign} capacitance manometers were hydrostatically burst tested by the Engineering and Materials Technology Department (E&MT). Four MKS series 390 Baratron{reg_sign} 0{minus}10 torr sensors had an average case burst pressure of 915 psig. Five MKS series 690 Baratron{reg_sign} 0{minus}1 torr sensors had an average case burst pressure of 1301 psig, and one MKS series 690 Baratron{reg_sign} 0{minus}1000 torr sensor had a case burst pressure of 938 psig.
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: Wermer, J. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cost and quality of fuels for electric utility plants, 1992 (open access)

Cost and quality of fuels for electric utility plants, 1992

This publication presents an annual summary of statistics at the national, Census division, State, electric utility, and plant levels regarding the quantity, quality, and cost of fossil fuels used to produce electricity. The purpose of this publication is to provide energy decision-makers with accurate and timely information that may be used in forming various perspectives on issues regarding electric power.
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
D0 Solenoid Upgrade Project: Vacuum Pumping Calculations for the D0 Solenoid (open access)

D0 Solenoid Upgrade Project: Vacuum Pumping Calculations for the D0 Solenoid

This engineering note documents the calculations done to determine the vacuum pumping speed for the D-Zero solenoid. The raw calculations are attached. A summary of the results are listed. The vacuum pumping speed of the solenoid is determined by the conductance of the pumping path. At higher pressure ranges during initial pumpdown, the conductances will be rather high. Calculations were not done for the transient pumpdown period, only the steady state type pumping situation. The pressure is assumed to be on the order of 10E-7 torr. This is the free molecular flow regime based on Knudsen number. This pressure regime is also where the pumping speed would be least. The conductances were calculated based on pumping helium gas at a temperature of 300 Kelvin. The total conductance of the pumping path from the solenoid to the inlet of the turbomolecular pump is 11.8 L/s. The effective pumping speed of a 1000 L/s turbo pump attached to this pumping path is 11.7 L/s. The minimum required pumping speed for design purposes was set at 4.3 L/s. This value was arrived at by assuming a warm leak size (10E-8 atm-cc/sec) was not detected during fabrication of the solenoid. It is then assumed …
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: Rucinski, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dealing with the chlorinated solvent situation at the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant (open access)

Dealing with the chlorinated solvent situation at the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant

Recent events regarding health and environmental problems associated with the use of chlorinated solvents have prompted the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant to investigate substitutes for these materials. Since 1987, the purchase of chlorinated solvents at the Y-12 Plant has been reduced by 92%. This has been accomplished by substituting chlorinated solvent degreasing with ultrasonic aqueous detergent cleaning and by substituting chlorinated solvents with less toxic, environmentally friendly solvents for hand-wiping applications. Extensive studies of cleaning ability, compabitility, and effects on welding, bonding, and painting have been conducted to gain approval for use of these solvents. Toxicity and waste disposal were also assessed for the solvents.
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: Thompson, L. M. & Simandl, R. F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Economics of electron beam and electrical discharge processing for post-combustion NO{sub x} control in internal combustion engines (open access)

Economics of electron beam and electrical discharge processing for post-combustion NO{sub x} control in internal combustion engines

This paper discusses the physics and chemistry of non-thermal plasma processing for post-combustion NO{sub x} control in internal combustion engines. A comparison of electron beam and electrical discharge processing is made regarding their power consumption, radical production, NO{sub x} removal mechanisms, and by-product formation. Pollution control applications present a good opportunity for transferring pulsed power techniques to the commercial sector. However, unless advances are made to drastically reduce the price and power consumption of electron beam sources and pulsed power systems, these plasma techniques will not become commercially competitive with conventional thermal or surface-catalytic methods.
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: Penetrante, B. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental assessment for the recycling of slightly activated copper coil windings from the 184-Inch Cyclotron at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California (open access)

Environmental assessment for the recycling of slightly activated copper coil windings from the 184-Inch Cyclotron at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California

The proposed action is to recycle slightly activated copper that is currently stored in a warehouse leased by Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL) to a scrap metal dealer. Subsequent reutilization of the copper would be unrestricted. This document addresses the potential environmental effects of recycling and reutilizing the activated copper. In addition, the potential environmental effects of possible future uses by the dealer are addressed. Direct environmental effects from the proposed action are assessed, such as air emissions from reprocessing the activated copper, as well as indirect beneficial effects, such as averting air emissions that would result from mining and smelting an equivalent quantity of copper ore. Evaluation of the human health impacts of the proposed action focuses on the pertinent issues of radiological doses and protection of workers and the public. Five alternatives to the proposed action are considered, and their associated potential impacts are addressed. The no-action alternative is the continued storage of the activated copper at the LBL warehouse. Two recycling alternatives are considered: recycling the activated copper at the Scientific Ecology Group (SEG) facility for re-use at a DOE facility and selling or giving the activated copper to a foreign government. In addition, two disposal alternatives evaluate …
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improved measurement accuracy in a Long Trace Profiler: Compensation for laser pointing instability (open access)

Improved measurement accuracy in a Long Trace Profiler: Compensation for laser pointing instability

Laser pointing instability adds to the error of slope measurements taken with the Long Trace Profiler (LTP). As with carriage pitch error, this laser pointing error must be accounted for and subtracted from the surface under test (SUT) slope measurement. In the past, a separate reference beam (REF) allowed characterization of the component of slope error from carriage pitch. However, the component of slope error from laser pointing manifests itself differently in the SUT measured slope. An analysis of angle error propagation is given, and the effect of these errors on measured slope is determined. Then a method is proposed for identifying these errors and subtracting them from the measured SUT slope function. Separate measurements of carriage pitch and laser pointing instability isolate these effects, so that the effectiveness of the error identification algorithm may be demonstrated.
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: Irick, S. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Research at the Notre Dame Radiation Laboratory]. Quarterly report, April 1--June 30, 1993 (open access)

[Research at the Notre Dame Radiation Laboratory]. Quarterly report, April 1--June 30, 1993

Forty-four abstracts are presented of research projects in radiation chemistry, photochemistry, and related topics.
Date: August 2, 1993
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library