Internal magnetic field measurements in a translating field-reversed configuration (open access)

Internal magnetic field measurements in a translating field-reversed configuration

Magnetic field probes have been employed to study the internal field structure of Field-Reversed Configurations (FRCs) translating past the probes in the FRX-C/T device. Internal closed flux surfaces can be studied in this manner with minimal perturbation because of the rapid transit of the plasma (translational velocity v/sub z/ approx. 10 cm/..mu..s). Data have been taken using a low-field (5 kG), 5-mtorr-D/sub 2/ gas-puff mode of operation in the FRC source coil which yields an initial plasma density of approx. 1 x 10/sup 15/ cm/sup -3/ and x/sub s/ approx. 0.04. FRCs translate from the approx. 25 cm radius source coil into a 20 cm radius metal translation vessel. Two translation conditions are studied: (1) translation into a 4 kG guide field (matched guide-field case), resulting in similar plasma parameters but with x/sub s/ approx. .45, and (2) translation into a 1 kG guide field (reduced guide-field case), resulting in expansion of the FRC to conditions of density approx. 3 x 10/sup 14/, external field B/sub 0/ approx. 2 kG and x/sub s/ approx. 0.7. The expected reversed B/sub z/ structure is observed in both cases. However, the field measurements indicate a possible sideways offset of the FRC from the …
Date: February 23, 1984
Creator: Armstrong, W. T.; Chrien, R. E.; McKenna, K. F.; Rej, D. J.; Sherwood, E. G.; Siemon, R. E. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electric filter with movable belt electrode (open access)

Electric filter with movable belt electrode

A method and apparatus are disclosed for removing airborne contaminants entrained in a gas or airstream. The apparatus includes an electric filter characterized by a movable endless belt electrode, a grounded electrode, and a filter medium sandwiched therebetween. Inclusion of the movable, endless belt electrode provides the driving force for advancing the filter medium through the filter, and reduces frictional drag on the filter medium, thereby permitting a wide choice of filter medium materials. Additionally, the belt electrode includes a plurality of pleats in order to provide maximum surface area on which to collect airborne contaminants.
Date: February 23, 1982
Creator: Bergman, W.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method of forming a thin unbacked metal foil (open access)

Method of forming a thin unbacked metal foil

The present invention relates generally to metal foils and methods of making the same. More particularly, this invention pertains to the fabrication of very thin, unbacked metal foils.
Date: February 23, 1983
Creator: Duchane, D. V. & Barthell, B. L.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Leaching study of nuclear melt glass: Part I (open access)

Leaching study of nuclear melt glass: Part I

Ground samples of three nuclear melt glasses from underground nuclear explosions at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) were leached at 25/sup 0/C with natural ground water from NTS. Using our dynamic single-pass flow-through leaching system we monitored the release of radionuclides from the glasses during 420 days of leaching. We continually flowed the ground water over the melt glass at flow rates of 185 ml/day for half of the samples and 34 ml/day for the rest. Leachate solutions were collected continuously, and composite samples, collected on days 1, 2, 3, 6, 11, 32, 38, 70, 120, 230 and 420, were analyzed using low-background Ge(Li) gamma spectrometers. For most of the radionuclides the leach rate decreased smoothly throughout the experiment. Except for /sup 95/Zr, /sup 144/Ce, and /sup 155/Eu, there was no difference between the fast (185 ml/day) and slow (34 ml/day) flow-rate leach rates. The measurable leach rates ranged from a high of 1 x 10/sup -2/ g-glass/m/sup 2/ day for /sup 22/Na (slow flow-rate, day 1 in glass No. 2) to a low of 1 x 6/sup -6/ g-glass/m/sup 2/ day for /sup 54/Mn (slow flow-rate, day 420 in glass No. 2). Most of the leach-rate values were about …
Date: February 23, 1983
Creator: Failor, R. A.; Coles, D. G. & Rego, J. A. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced durability and reactivity for zinc ferrite desulfurization sorbent (open access)

Enhanced durability and reactivity for zinc ferrite desulfurization sorbent

AMAX Research Development Center (AMAX R D) has been investigating methods for enhancing the reactivity and durability of the zinc ferrite desulfurization sorbent. Zinc ferrite sorbents are intended for use in desulfurization of hot coal gas in integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) or molten carbonate fuel cell (MCFC) applications. For the present program, the reactivity of the sorbent may be defined as its sulfur sorption capacity at the breakthrough point and at saturation in a bench-scale, fixed-bed reactor. Durability may be defined as the ability of the sorbent to maintain important physical characteristics such As size, strength, and specific surface area during 10 cycles of sulfidation and oxidation.
Date: February 23, 1987
Creator: Jha, M. C. & Baltich, L. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced durability and reactivity for zinc ferrite desulfurization sorbent. Quarterly technical progress report No. 1, October--December 1986 (open access)

Enhanced durability and reactivity for zinc ferrite desulfurization sorbent. Quarterly technical progress report No. 1, October--December 1986

AMAX Research & Development Center (AMAX R&D) has been investigating methods for enhancing the reactivity and durability of the zinc ferrite desulfurization sorbent. Zinc ferrite sorbents are intended for use in desulfurization of hot coal gas in integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) or molten carbonate fuel cell (MCFC) applications. For the present program, the reactivity of the sorbent may be defined as its sulfur sorption capacity at the breakthrough point and at saturation in a bench-scale, fixed-bed reactor. Durability may be defined as the ability of the sorbent to maintain important physical characteristics such As size, strength, and specific surface area during 10 cycles of sulfidation and oxidation.
Date: February 23, 1987
Creator: Jha, M. C. & Baltich, L. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photomultiplier characteristics considerations for the deep underwater muon and neutrino detection system (open access)

Photomultiplier characteristics considerations for the deep underwater muon and neutrino detection system

The results of an investigation of the characteristics of photomultipliers for the Deep Underwater Muon and Neutrino Detection (DUMAND) System are discussed. The pulse-height resolution, the afterpulsing phenomena and the gain sensitivity to the ambient magnetic field have been determined for large photocathode area photomultipliers. Furthermore, the transient time difference, the single photoelectron time spread, and the collection and photocathode quantum efficiency uniformity as a function of the position of the photocathode sensing area have been reviewed. Finally, an attempt has been made to estimate the photomultiplier reliability and its lifetime.
Date: February 23, 1980
Creator: Leskovar, B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data report for the Southwest Residential Experiment Station, January 1982 (open access)

Data report for the Southwest Residential Experiment Station, January 1982

Physical performance data obtained from the photovoltaic energy systems under test at the Southwest Residential Experiment Station in Las Cruces, New Mexico are tabulated and graphed for the month of January, 1982. Data drawn from the Residential Data System (RDS) appears in several formats. A one-page summary is provided as well as a more detailed hour-by-hour tabulation for an average day of the month. Energy histograms are provided, based on RDS data and recording kilowatt hour meters. The histograms also present horizontal and plane-of-array insolation data as well as comments that explain data and/or energy production anomalies. (LEW)
Date: February 23, 1982
Creator: Lieberman, M.; Hai, O. Y.; Hocking, G. & Whitaker, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Grooved impactor and inertial trap for sampling inhalable particulate matter. [Patents] (open access)

Grooved impactor and inertial trap for sampling inhalable particulate matter. [Patents]

An inertial trap and grooved impactor for providing a sharp cutoff for particles over 15 microns from entering an inhalable particulate sampler is disclosed. The impactor head has a tapered surface and is provided with V-shaped grooves. The tapered surface functions for reducing particle blow-off or reentrainment while the grooves prevent particle bounce. Water droplets and any resuspended material over the 15 micron size are collected by the inertial trap and deposited in a reservoir associated with the impactor.
Date: February 23, 1982
Creator: Loo, B.W.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transport in compact tori (open access)

Transport in compact tori

The parameter B/sub e//nr/sub p/ (here, B/sub e/ is applied magnetic field strength, nr/sub p/ is the plasma density-radius product) is proposed as a key parameter for spheromak heating studies. If B/sub e//nr/sub p/ is too large, increased magnetic fluctuations limit heating; low B/sub e//nr/sub p/ value results in excessive radiation losses. An optimum range appears to be B/sub e//nr/sub p/ approx. 1 to 5 x 10/sup -20/ Wb.
Date: February 23, 1983
Creator: Miley, G. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Far-infrared studies of superconducting V/sub 3/Si, Nb/sub 3/Ge, and Nb (open access)

Far-infrared studies of superconducting V/sub 3/Si, Nb/sub 3/Ge, and Nb

Optical techniques in the far infrared region (10 to 200 cm/sup -1/) are to explore the basic superconducting behavior of the high temperature superconductors V/sub 3/Si, Nb/sub 3/Ge, Nb, and granular NbN. Such spectroscopy yields accurate gap values, information about the temperature dependence of superconducting properties, values of the electron-phonon spectral function, and insight into grain-to-grain coupling in inhomogeneous geometries. These results are used to calculate basic superconducting parameters such as the coupling constant and the transition temperature with the aim of explaining the underlying physics of superconductors.
Date: February 23, 1981
Creator: Perkowitz, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multiple Coulomb Scattering a) Tandem Exit b) Booster Exit (open access)

Multiple Coulomb Scattering a) Tandem Exit b) Booster Exit

None
Date: February 23, 1984
Creator: R., Young G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The analysis of decontaminated defense waste salt supernate for I-129 (open access)

The analysis of decontaminated defense waste salt supernate for I-129

A method is reported here for the analysis of I-129 in decontaminated defense waste salt solution at concentrations as low as 0.14 pCi/ml. Repeated analyses have been unable to confirm the presence of I-129 in decontaminated samples of Tank 24 supernate.
Date: February 23, 1983
Creator: Ryan, J. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Noisy time-dependent spectra (open access)

Noisy time-dependent spectra

The definition of a time-dependent spectrum registered by an idealized spectrometer responding to a time-varying electromagnetic field as proposed by Eberly and Wodkiewicz and subsequently applied to the spectrum of laser-induced fluorescence by Eberly, Kunasz, and Wodkiewicz is here extended to allow a stochastically fluctuating (interruption model) environment: we provide an algorithm for numerical determination of the time-dependent fluorescence spectrum of an atom subject to excitation by an intense noisy laser and interruptive relaxation.
Date: February 23, 1983
Creator: Shore, B. W. & Eberly, J. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct catalytic conversion of methane and light hydrocarbon gases. Quarterly report No. 1, October 16, 1986--January 15, 1987 (open access)

Direct catalytic conversion of methane and light hydrocarbon gases. Quarterly report No. 1, October 16, 1986--January 15, 1987

The United States will need to be able to convert coal to liquid fuels should current supplies be interrupted. The indirect method for producing fuel liquids is the gasification of the coal to synthesis gas (syngas) followed by Fischer-Tropsch synthesis to convert syngas to hydrocarbons. However, both the gasifier and the FTS processes result in the production of methane and/or light hydrocarbon by-product that negatively affect the economics of the production of liquid fuel from coal. The goal of SRI`s research is thus to develop catalysts that directly convert methane and light hydrocarbons to intermediates that can, as economics dictate, be subsequently converted either to liquid fuels or value-added chemicals. SRI project 2678 is exploring two approaches to achieving the stated goal. The first approach consists of developing advanced catalysts for reforming methane. We will prepare the catalysts by reacting organometallic complexes of transition metals (Fe, Ru, Rh, and Re) with zeolitic and rare earth exchanged zeolitic supports to produce surfaceconfined metal complexes in the zeolite pores. We will then decompose the organometallic complexes to obtain very stable, highly dispersed catalysts. Our second approach entails synthesizing the porphyrin and phthalocyanine complexes of Cr, Mn, Ru, Fe, and/or Co within the …
Date: February 23, 1987
Creator: Wilson, R. B., Jr. & Chan, Yee Wai
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library