2012 Annual Progress Report: DOE Hydrogen and Fuel Cells Program (open access)

2012 Annual Progress Report: DOE Hydrogen and Fuel Cells Program

In the past year, the DOE Hydrogen Program (the Program) made substantial progress toward its goals and objectives. The Program has conducted comprehensive and focused efforts to enable the widespread commercialization of hydrogen and fuel cell technologies in diverse sectors of the economy. With emphasis on applications that will effectively strengthen our nation's energy security and improve our stewardship of the environment, the Program engages in research, development, and demonstration of critical improvements in the technologies. Highlights of the Program's accomplishments can be found in the sub-program chapters of this report.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2012 Status Report on Efforts to Enhance Instrume (open access)

2012 Status Report on Efforts to Enhance Instrume

The Department of Energy (DOE) designated the Adva
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Rempe, J.; Knudson, D.; Daw, J.; Unruh, T. & Chase, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Abiotic degradation rates for carbon tetrachloride and chloroform: Final report. (open access)

Abiotic degradation rates for carbon tetrachloride and chloroform: Final report.

This report documents the objectives, technical approach, and progress made through FY 2012 on a project initiated in FY 2006 to help address uncertainties related to the rates of hydrolysis in groundwater for carbon tetrachloride (CT) and chloroform (CF). The project also sought to explore the possible effects of contact with minerals and sediment (i.e., heterogeneous hydrolysis) on these rates. We conducted 114 hydrolysis rate experiments in sealed vessels across a temperature range of 20-93 °C for periods as long as 6 years, and used the Arrhenius equation to estimate activation energies and calculate half-lives for typical Hanford groundwater conditions (temperature of 16 °C and pH of 7.75). We calculated a half-life of 630 years for hydrolysis for CT under these conditions and found that CT hydrolysis was unaffected by contact with sterilized, oxidized minerals or Hanford sediment within the sensitivity of our experiments. In contrast to CT, hydrolysis of CF was generally slower and very sensitive to pH due to the presence of both neutral and base-catalyzed hydrolysis pathways. We calculated a half-life of 3400 years for hydrolysis of CF in homogeneous solution at 16 °C and pH 7.75. Experiments in suspensions of Hanford sediment or smectite, the dominant …
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Amonette, James E.; Jeffers, Peter M.; Qafoku, Odeta; Russell, Colleen K.; Humphrys, Daniel R.; Wietsma, Thomas W. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

Accelerating Development of EV Batteries Through Computer-Aided Engineering

The Department of Energy's Vehicle Technology Program has launched the Computer-Aided Engineering for Automotive Batteries (CAEBAT) project to work with national labs, industry and software venders to develop sophisticated software. As coordinator, NREL has teamed with a number of companies to help improve and accelerate battery design and production. This presentation provides an overview of CAEBAT, including its predictive computer simulation of Li-ion batteries known as the Multi-Scale Multi-Dimensional (MSMD) model framework. MSMD's modular, flexible architecture connects the physics of battery charge/discharge processes, thermal control, safety and reliability in a computationally efficient manner. This allows independent development of submodels at the cell and pack levels.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Pesaran, A.; Kim, G. H.; Smith, K. & Santhanagopalan, S.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator System Design, Injection, Extraction and Beam-Material Interaction: Working Group C Summary Report (open access)

Accelerator System Design, Injection, Extraction and Beam-Material Interaction: Working Group C Summary Report

None
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Mokhov, N. V. & Li, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addendum to the Building America House Simulation Protocols (open access)

Addendum to the Building America House Simulation Protocols

As Building America (BA) has grown to include a large and diverse cross-section of the home building and retrofit industries, it has become more important to develop accurate, consistent analysis techniques to measure progress towards the program's goals. The House Simulation Protocols (HSP) provides guidance to program partners and managers so that energy savings for new construction and retrofit projects can be compared alongside each other. The HSP provides the program with analysis methods that are proven to be effective and reliable in investigating the energy use of advanced energy systems and of entire houses.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Engebrecht-Metzger, C.; Wilson, E. & Horowitz, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Design Studies. Final report (open access)

Advanced Design Studies. Final report

The ARIES-CS project was a multi-year multi-institutional project to assess the feasibility of a compact stellarator as a fusion power plant. The work herein describes efforts to help design one aspect of the device, the divertor, which is responsible for the removal of particle and heat flux from the system, acting as the first point of contact between the magnetically confined hot plasma and the outside world. Specifically, its location and topology are explored, extending previous work on the sub ject. An optimized design is determined for the thermal particle flux using a suite of 3D stellarator design codes which trace magnetic field lines from just inside the confined plasma edge to their strike points on divertor plates. These divertor plates are specified with a newly developed plate design code. It is found that a satisfactory thermal design exists which maintains the plate temperature and heat load distribution below tolerable engineering limits. The design is unique, including a toroidal taper on the outboard plates which was found to be important to our results. The maximum thermal heat flux for the final design was 3.61 M W/m2 and the maximum peaking factor was 10.3, below prescribed limits of 10 M W/m2 …
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Steiner, Don
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Post-Irradiation Examination Capabilities Alternatives Analysis Report (open access)

Advanced Post-Irradiation Examination Capabilities Alternatives Analysis Report

An alternatives analysis was performed for the Advanced Post-Irradiation Capabilities (APIEC) project in accordance with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Order DOE O 413.3B, “Program and Project Management for the Acquisition of Capital Assets”. The Alternatives Analysis considered six major alternatives: ? No Action ? Modify Existing DOE Facilities – capabilities distributed among multiple locations ? Modify Existing DOE Facilities – capabilities consolidated at a few locations ? Construct New Facility ? Commercial Partnership ? International Partnerships Based on the alternatives analysis documented herein, it is recommended to DOE that the advanced post-irradiation examination capabilities be provided by a new facility constructed at the Materials and Fuels Complex at the Idaho National Laboratory.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Bryan, Jeff; Landman, Bill & Hill, Porter
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Wear-resistant Nanocomposites for Increased Energy Efficiency (open access)

Advanced Wear-resistant Nanocomposites for Increased Energy Efficiency

This report summarizes the work performed by an Ames-led project team under a 4-year DOE-ITP sponsored project titled, 'Advanced Wear-resistant Nanocomposites for Increased Energy Efficiency.' The Report serves as the project deliverable for the CPS agreement number 15015. The purpose of this project was to develop and commercialize a family of lightweight, bulk composite materials that are highly resistant to degradation by erosive and abrasive wear. These materials, based on AlMgB{sub 14}, are projected to save over 30 TBtu of energy per year when fully implemented in industrial applications, with the associated environmental benefits of eliminating the burning of 1.5 M tons/yr of coal and averting the release of 4.2 M tons/yr of CO{sub 2} into the air. This program targeted applications in the mining, drilling, machining, and dry erosion applications as key platforms for initial commercialization, which includes some of the most severe wear conditions in industry. Production-scale manufacturing of this technology has begun through a start-up company, NewTech Ceramics (NTC). This project included providing technical support to NTC in order to facilitate cost-effective mass production of the wear-resistant boride components. Resolution of issues related to processing scale-up, reduction in energy intensity during processing, and improving the quality and …
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Cook, B. A.; Harringa, J. L. & Russel, A. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
AGR-1 Fuel Compact 6-3-2 Post-Irradiation Examination Results (open access)

AGR-1 Fuel Compact 6-3-2 Post-Irradiation Examination Results

Destructive post-irradiation examination was performed on fuel Compact 6-3-2, which was irradiated in the AGR-1 experiment to a final compact average burnup of 11.3% FIMA and a time-average, volume-average temperature of 1070°C. The analysis of this compact was focused on characterizing the extent of fission product release from the particles and examining particles to determine the condition of the kernels and coating layers. The work included deconsolidation of the compact and leach-burn-leach analysis, visual inspection and gamma counting of individual particles, measurement of fuel burnup by several methods, metallurgical preparation of selected particles, and examination of particle cross-sections with optical microscopy. A single particle with a defective SiC layer was identified during deconsolidation-leach-burn-leach analysis, which is in agreement with previous measurements showing elevated cesium in the Capsule 6 graphite fuel holder associated with this fuel compact. The fraction of the compact europium inventory released from the particles and retained in the matrix was relatively high (approximately 6E-3), indicating release from intact particle coatings. The Ag-110m inventory in individual particles exhibited a very broad distribution, with some particles retaining =80% of the predicted inventory and others retaining less than 25%. The average degree of Ag-110m retention in 60 gamma counted particles …
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: demkowicz, Paul; Harp, jason & Ploger, Scott
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air Force Achieves Fuel Efficiency through Industry Best Practices (Brochure) (open access)

Air Force Achieves Fuel Efficiency through Industry Best Practices (Brochure)

This brochure is an overview of the U.S. Air Force's fuel efficiency program.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the Russian Market for Building Energy Efficiency (open access)

Analysis of the Russian Market for Building Energy Efficiency

This report provides analysis of the Russian energy efficiency market for the building sector from the perspective of U.S. businesses interested in exporting relevant technologies, products and experience to Russia. We aim to help U.S. energy efficiency and environmental technologies businesses to better understand the Russian building market to plan their market strategy.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Lychuk, Taras; Evans, Meredydd; Halverson, Mark A. & Roshchanka, Volha
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Assessment of Geological Carbon Storage Options in the Illinois Basin: Validation Phase (open access)

An Assessment of Geological Carbon Storage Options in the Illinois Basin: Validation Phase

The Midwest Geological Sequestration Consortium (MGSC) assessed the options for geological carbon dioxide (CO{sub 2}) storage in the 155,400 km{sup 2} (60,000 mi{sup 2}) Illinois Basin, which underlies most of Illinois, western Indiana, and western Kentucky. The region has annual CO{sub 2} emissions of about 265 million metric tonnes (292 million tons), primarily from 122 coal-fired electric generation facilities, some of which burn almost 4.5 million tonnes (5 million tons) of coal per year (U.S. Department of Energy, 2010). Validation Phase (Phase II) field tests gathered pilot data to update the Characterization Phase (Phase I) assessment of options for capture, transportation, and storage of CO{sub 2} emissions in three geological sink types: coal seams, oil fields, and saline reservoirs. Four small-scale field tests were conducted to determine the properties of rock units that control injectivity of CO{sub 2}, assess the total storage resources, examine the security of the overlying rock units that act as seals for the reservoirs, and develop ways to control and measure the safety of injection and storage processes. The MGSC designed field test operational plans for pilot sites based on the site screening process, MVA program needs, the selection of equipment related to CO{sub 2} injection, …
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Finley, Robert
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Battery Technology Life Verification Test Manual Revision 1 (open access)

Battery Technology Life Verification Test Manual Revision 1

The purpose of this Technology Life Verification Test (TLVT) Manual is to help guide developers in their effort to successfully commercialize advanced energy storage devices such as battery and ultracapacitor technologies. The experimental design and data analysis discussed herein are focused on automotive applications based on the United States Advanced Battery Consortium (USABC) electric vehicle, hybrid electric vehicle, and plug-in hybrid electric vehicle (EV, HEV, and PHEV, respectively) performance targets. However, the methodology can be equally applied to other applications as well. This manual supersedes the February 2005 version of the TLVT Manual (Reference 1). It includes criteria for statistically-based life test matrix designs as well as requirements for test data analysis and reporting. Calendar life modeling and estimation techniques, including a user’s guide to the corresponding software tool is now provided in the Battery Life Estimator (BLE) Manual (Reference 2).
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Christophersen, Jon P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam Spoiling a Reflector Antenna with Conducting Shim (open access)

Beam Spoiling a Reflector Antenna with Conducting Shim

A horn-fed dish reflector antenna has characteristics including beam pattern that are a function of its mechanical form. The beam pattern can be altered by changing the mechanical configuration of the antenna. One way to do this is with a reflecting insert or shim added to the face of the original dish.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Doerry, Armin Walter
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Boron-10 ABUNCL Prototype Initial Testing (open access)

Boron-10 ABUNCL Prototype Initial Testing

The Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Safeguards and Security (NA-241) is supporting the project Coincidence Counting With Boron-Based Alternative Neutron Detection Technology at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) for the development of a 3He proportional counter alternative neutron coincidence counter. The goal of this project is to design, build and demonstrate a system based upon 10B-lined proportional tubes in a configuration typical for 3He-based coincidence counter applications. This report provides results of initial testing of an Alternative Boron-Based Uranium Neutron Coincidence Collar (ABUNCL) design built by General Electric Reuter-Stokes. Several configurations of the ABUNCL models, which use 10B-lined proportional counters in place of 3He proportional counters for the neutron detection elements, were previously reported. The ABUNCL tested is of a different design than previously modeled. Initial experimental testing of the as-delivered passive ABUNCL was performed, and modeling will be conducted. Testing of the system reconfigured for active testing will be performed in the near future, followed by testing with nuclear fuel.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Kouzes, Richard T.; Ely, James H.; Lintereur, Azaree T. & Siciliano, Edward R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calendar Year 2011 Groundwater Monitoring Report, U.S. Department of Energy Y-12 National Security Complex, Oak Ridge, Tennessee (open access)

Calendar Year 2011 Groundwater Monitoring Report, U.S. Department of Energy Y-12 National Security Complex, Oak Ridge, Tennessee

This report contains the groundwater and surface water monitoring data that were obtained during calendar year (CY) 2011 at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Y-12 National Security Complex (Y-12) on the DOE Oak Ridge Reservation (ORR) in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The CY 2011 monitoring data were obtained from wells, springs, and surface water sampling locations in three hydrogeologic regimes at Y-12. The Bear Creek Hydrogeologic Regime (Bear Creek Regime) encompasses a section of Bear Creek Valley (BCV) between the west end of Y-12 and the west end of the Bear Creek Watershed (directions are in reference to the Y-12 grid system). The Upper East Fork Poplar Creek Hydrogeologic Regime (East Fork Regime) encompasses the Y-12 industrial facilities and support structures in BCV. The Chestnut Ridge Hydrogeologic Regime (Chestnut Ridge Regime) encompasses a section of Chestnut Ridge directly south of Y-12. This report provides background information pertinent to groundwater and surface water quality monitoring in each hydrogeologic regime, including the topography and bedrock geology, surface water drainage, groundwater system, and known extent of groundwater contamination. The CY 2011 groundwater and surface water monitoring data in this report were obtained from sampling and analysis activities implemented under the Y-12 Groundwater Protection …
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Elvado Environmental LLC,
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Case Study of the Maplewood Park Multifamily Retrofit for Energy Efficiency (open access)

Case Study of the Maplewood Park Multifamily Retrofit for Energy Efficiency

This is a case study that focuses on the renovation of Maplewood market apartments in Georgia.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Im, Piljae; Euy-Jin, Kim; Malhotra, Mini; Roberts, Sydney & Stephenson, Robert
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Categorization of Used Nuclear Fuel Inventory in Support of a Comprehensive National Nuclear Fuel Cycle Strategy (open access)

Categorization of Used Nuclear Fuel Inventory in Support of a Comprehensive National Nuclear Fuel Cycle Strategy

None
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Wagner, John C; Peterson, Joshua L; Mueller, Don; Gehin, Jess C; Worrall, Andrew; Taiwo, Temitope et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clean Cities 2011 Annual Metrics Report (open access)

Clean Cities 2011 Annual Metrics Report

This report details the petroleum savings and vehicle emissions reductions achieved by the U.S. Department of Energy's Clean Cities program in 2011. The report also details other performance metrics, including the number of stakeholders in Clean Cities coalitions, outreach activities by coalitions and national laboratories, and alternative fuel vehicles deployed.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Johnson, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clean Technology Evaluation & Workforce Development Program (open access)

Clean Technology Evaluation & Workforce Development Program

The overall objective of the Clean Technology Evaluation portion of the award was to design a process to speed up the identification of new clean energy technologies and match organizations to testing and early adoption partners. The project was successful in identifying new technologies targeted to utilities and utility technology integrators, in developing a process to review and rank the new technologies, and in facilitating new partnerships for technology testing and adoption. The purpose of the Workforce Development portion of the award was to create an education outreach program for middle & high-school students focused on clean technology science and engineering. While originally targeting San Diego, California and Cambridge, Massachusetts, the scope of the program was expanded to include a major clean technology speaking series and expo as part of the USA Science & Engineering Festival on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Glaza, Patricia
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Closed Cell Foam Insulation: A Review of Long Term Thermal Performance Research (open access)

Closed Cell Foam Insulation: A Review of Long Term Thermal Performance Research

This report talks about Closed Cell Foam Insulation: A Review of Long Term Thermal Performance Research
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Stovall, Therese K
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compact X-ray Light Source Workshop Report (open access)

Compact X-ray Light Source Workshop Report

This report, produced jointly by EMSL and FCSD, is the result of a workshop held in September 2011 that examined the utility of a compact x-ray light source (CXLS) in addressing many scientific challenges critical to advancing energy science and technology.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Thevuthasan, Suntharampillai; Evans, James E.; Terminello, Louis J.; Koppenaal, David W.; Manke, Kristin L. & Plata, Charity
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A comparative critical analysis of modern task-parallel runtimes. (open access)

A comparative critical analysis of modern task-parallel runtimes.

The rise in node-level parallelism has increased interest in task-based parallel runtimes for a wide array of application areas. Applications have a wide variety of task spawning patterns which frequently change during the course of application execution, based on the algorithm or solver kernel in use. Task scheduling and load balance regimes, however, are often highly optimized for specific patterns. This paper uses four basic task spawning patterns to quantify the impact of specific scheduling policy decisions on execution time. We compare the behavior of six publicly available tasking runtimes: Intel Cilk, Intel Threading Building Blocks (TBB), Intel OpenMP, GCC OpenMP, Qthreads, and High Performance ParalleX (HPX). With the exception of Qthreads, the runtimes prove to have schedulers that are highly sensitive to application structure. No runtime is able to provide the best performance in all cases, and those that do provide the best performance in some cases, unfortunately, provide extremely poor performance when application structure does not match the scheduler's assumptions.
Date: December 1, 2012
Creator: Wheeler, Kyle Bruce; Stark, Dylan & Murphy, Richard C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library