IEA steel R and D study. Final report (open access)

IEA steel R and D study. Final report

Following a recent IEA meeting of steel industry experts held in Stockholm in May 1979, a number of specific projects have been recommended as forming the basis for a cooperative program of R and D oriented to energy saving in the making of iron and steel. A timetable of work leading up to another meeting (October-November 1979) has been agreed, and this includes the development of detailed project descriptions, as well as the drafting of a proposed implementing agreement with its technical annexes. In summary, five working areas have been identified: surface inspection, surface conditioning, heat recovery, energy conversion and combustion, and material properties. A total of about 20 projects have been suggested, and it is hoped that sufficient detail will be provided on most of these to allow an acceptable implementing agreement to be developed within the next six months.
Date: May 31, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioisotope distribution program progress report for March 1979 (open access)

Radioisotope distribution program progress report for March 1979

None
Date: May 31, 1979
Creator: Lamb, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
MC3196 Detonator Shipping Package Hazard Classification Assessment (open access)

MC3196 Detonator Shipping Package Hazard Classification Assessment

An investigation was made to determine whether the MC3196 detonator should be assigned a DOT hazard classification of Detonating Fuze, Class C Explosives per 49 CFR 173.113. This study covers the Propagation Test and the External Heat Test as approved by DOE Albuquerque Operations Office. Test data led to the recommeded hazard classification of detonating fuze, Class C explosives.
Date: May 31, 1979
Creator: Jones & B., Robert
System: The UNT Digital Library
Phase a Report on Converting the Cresap Test Facility to a Two-Stage Coal Hydroliquefaction Process (open access)

Phase a Report on Converting the Cresap Test Facility to a Two-Stage Coal Hydroliquefaction Process

None
Date: May 31, 1979
Creator: Beskind, Martin M. & Hammersley, R. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiological Control Aspects of the Fabrication of the Light Water Breeder Reactor Core (open access)

Radiological Control Aspects of the Fabrication of the Light Water Breeder Reactor Core

None
Date: May 31, 1979
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feasibility study of residential and commercial heating using existing water supply systems. Phase I. Final technical report, November 1, 1978-May 31, 1979 (open access)

Feasibility study of residential and commercial heating using existing water supply systems. Phase I. Final technical report, November 1, 1978-May 31, 1979

A preliminary study of the feasibility of using existing drinking water supply systems to provide hot water for heating purposes to a typical 140-home subdivision has been undertaken. This preliminary study has centered on (i) types of municipal water system designs and effects of system design upon heating use; (ii) methods of using low-to-moderate temperature water for heating purposes and possible institutional barriers; (iii) identification and description of a typical residential community suitable for hot water heating; (iv) evaluation of thermal losses in the uninsulated main distribution system from the main pumping station having assumed geothermal heating to the subdivision; (v) evaluation of thermal losses in the uninsulated street mains in the subdivision; (vi) estimation of size and cost of the pumping station main heat exchanger to supply geothermal energy to the drinking water; (vii) sizing of individual house heat exchangers; (viii) pumping and power requirements to supply the increased water flow rate through the subdivision street water distribution lines; and (ix) pumping and piping requirements to provide heating water flow from the street lines to a typical residence. From the results obtained thus far, it would appear that the use of existing uninsulated water supply systems will be advantageous …
Date: May 31, 1979
Creator: Pitts, Donald R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rapid automated nuclear chemistry (open access)

Rapid automated nuclear chemistry

Rapid Automated Nuclear Chemistry (RANC) can be thought of as the Z-separation of Neutron-rich Isotopes by Automated Methods. The range of RANC studies of fission and its products is large. In a sense, the studies can be categorized into various energy ranges from the highest where the fission process and particle emission are considered, to low energies where nuclear dynamics are being explored. This paper presents a table which gives examples of current research using RANC on fission and fission products. The remainder of this text is divided into three parts. The first contains a discussion of the chemical methods available for the fission product elements, the second describes the major techniques, and in the last section, examples of recent results are discussed as illustrations of the use of RANC.
Date: May 31, 1979
Creator: Meyer, R. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library