Sodium ionization detector and sensor (open access)

Sodium ionization detector and sensor

Work conducted on a basic technology development effort with the Westinghouse Sodium Ionization Detector (SID) sensor is reported. Included are results obtained for three task areas: (1) On-line operational response testing - in-situ calibration techniques; (2) Performance-reliability characteristics of aged filaments; and (3) Evaluation of chemical interference effects. The results showed that a calibrator filament coated with a sodium compound, when activated, does supply the necessary sodium atoms to provide a valid operational in-situ test. The life time of new Cr/sub 2/0/sub 3/-protected SID sensor filaments can be extended by operating at a reduced temperature. However, there also is a reduction in the sensitivity. Non-sodium species, such as products from a smoldering fire and organic aerosols, produce an interference response from the sensor comparable to a typical sodium response.
Date: May 8, 1979
Creator: Hrizo, J. & Bauerle, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data handbook for the National Solar Energy Demonstration Program (open access)

Data handbook for the National Solar Energy Demonstration Program

This preliminary document provides information in a matrix format which lists technical and programmatic data concerning the various project sites selected for the National Solar Energy Demonstration Program. It incorporates into one handbook the commercial, residential, and other demonstration projects which are now a part of the national program. It can be used as a reference source for technical and research purposes on a state-by-state basis.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Christensen, D.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of polycrystal GaAs solar cells. Quarterly technical progress report No. 1, January 15-April 30, 1979 (open access)

Development of polycrystal GaAs solar cells. Quarterly technical progress report No. 1, January 15-April 30, 1979

The objective of this program is to develop a thin film GaAs solar cell technology with the potential of yielding cells with 12 to 15% efficiency and to develop thin film growth techniques which are compatible with the low cost production goal of $500/kW-peak. Progress is reported on a study of junction formation in large grain polycrystal GaAs; characterization of the electronic properties of polycrystal GaAs grown by MBE on low cost foreign substrates; optimizing the structure of AlGaAs-GaAs heterojunction Schottky barrier solar cells; and a variety of grain boundary measurements, including Scanning Light Microscopy (SLM), Deep Level Transient Spectroscopy (DLTS), SIMS, and temperature dependent resistivity.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Miller, D. L.; Cohen, M. J.; Harris, Jr., J. S.; Ballantyne, J.; Hoyte, A. & Stefanakos, E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Regional Issue Identification and Assessment program (RIIA). Environmental impacts and issues of the EIA MID-MID scenario: Federal Region III (mid-Atlantic) (open access)

Regional Issue Identification and Assessment program (RIIA). Environmental impacts and issues of the EIA MID-MID scenario: Federal Region III (mid-Atlantic)

The EIA MID-MID scenario generally reinforces existing environmental concerns in the mid-Atlantic region. This results in part from the emphasis on existing rather than new energy technologies. The widespread public opposition to nuclear power in the region is likely to impede realization of the nuclear goals of the scenario. About 50% improvement in sulfur oxides air quality is projected for the region (all states), based on emissions reductions both within the region and in neighboring regions. Even though strip mine production is projected to decrease by 1990, coal production levels hypothesized by the scenario may be significantly constrained by the impact of new Federal regulations on reclamation (Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia). In the event that offshore oil and gas exploration becomes successful, development may be constrained by continuing opposition on environmental grounds in Maryland and Delaware, relating to protection of coastal environmental resources. Given the abandonment of several recent dam projects in the Delaware, water availability constraints may be important for inland sites where low flow augmentation is required. The health and safety impacts of the scenario are dominated by the coal fuel cycle. By 1990, mining related injuries and deaths are projected to increase by about 25% over …
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Brainard, J. & Lipfert, F.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of Open-Cycle, Coal-Fired MHD Generators. Ninth-Tenth Quarterly Technical Progress Report, July 1, 1978-April 30, 1979 (open access)

Characterization of Open-Cycle, Coal-Fired MHD Generators. Ninth-Tenth Quarterly Technical Progress Report, July 1, 1978-April 30, 1979

The successful design of full-scale open-cycle, coal-fired MHD generators for baseload electrical production requires a detailed understanding of the plasma chemical and plasma dynamic characteristics of anticipated combustor and channel fluids. This report documents progress in efforts to model negative ion formation and slag condensation effects on core flow conductivity, to improve the ability to sample and characterize laboratory produced coal combustion plasmas, and to measure mechanisms and rates of slag oxide condensation. A set of parametric calculations showing the influence of various input parameters on a nominal full-scale, supersonic generator system is also presented.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Kolb, C. E.; Wormhoudt, J.; Yousefian, V.; Cheng, W.; Bien, F.; Martinez-Sanchez, M. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Powerplant Productivity Improvement Study: historic performance of Illinois investor-owned electrical-generating units. Final report, Project 2, Task 1 (open access)

Powerplant Productivity Improvement Study: historic performance of Illinois investor-owned electrical-generating units. Final report, Project 2, Task 1

In this task the historical performance of powerplants in Illinois was examined and the opportunities for improved powerplant productivity in Illinois was determined. The four utilities considered were the major investor-owned electric generating utilities in Illinois, i.e., Central Illinois Light Co., (CILCO), Central Illinois Public Service (CIPS), Commonwealth Edison (CECO), and Illinois Power (IP). The major findings are: (1) for evaluation purposes, the equivalent availability was judged to be the most-appropriate measure; (2) in terms of powerplant productivity, IP is among the best in the nation and, in terms of productivity from large coal units, it ranks in the top five nationally; (3) in general, the performance of coal-fired units of CILCO and CECO have been below national averages and in some cases, significantly below; (4) a review of the trends in production of all Illinois units reveals that Illinois units as a group have been generally below national averages for the respective unit classes; (5) as noted in this and other studies, productivities of the nuclear plants in Illinois have been below the national average for all comparable nuclear plants; and (6) this analysis should be updated when national 1977 and 1978 Edison Electric Institute data become publicly available.
Date: May 4, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Regional Issue Identification and Assessment program (RIIA). Environmental impacts and issues of the EIA MID-MID scenario: Federal Region II (New York and New Jersey) (open access)

Regional Issue Identification and Assessment program (RIIA). Environmental impacts and issues of the EIA MID-MID scenario: Federal Region II (New York and New Jersey)

The impacts described for 1985 and 1990 are based on a national energy projection (scenario) which assumes medium energy demand and fuel supply through 1990 but does not incorporate the policies of the National Energy Act (NEA). This scenario, referred to as the Projection Series C or the TRENDLONG MID-MID scenario, is one of six possible energy futures developed by the DOE Energy Information Administration for the Department's 1977 Annual Report to Congress. It was chosen as representative of the official DOE national energy projections when this project was initiated, prior to the passage of the National Energy Act. The environmental impacts discussed in this volume are for Federal Region II, comprising New York and New Jersey.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Brainard, J. & Munson, J.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cross classification of census data for use in estimating residential heating demands (open access)

Cross classification of census data for use in estimating residential heating demands

This report documents the procedures and assumptions used to cross classify 1970 census data for use in estimating residential heating demands on a small areal basis. The major results for all census tracts and minor civil divisions in the US comprise (1) counts of occupied dwelling units by building size, by type of space heat equipment, and by space heat fuel type; (2) counts of occupied dwelling units by building size and by water heat fuel type; and (3) the percentage distribution of occupied dwelling units in each building size category across four dwelling unit size categories. These reduced data, both at the tract/minor civil division level and aggregated county and state levels, are sufficiently accurate for systems and economic analysis of district heating and other residential energy conservation programs.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Tessmer, R.G. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
DART II documentation. Volume III. Appendices (open access)

DART II documentation. Volume III. Appendices

The DART II is a data acquisition system that can be used with air pollution monitoring equipment. This volume contains appendices that deal with the following topics: adjustment and calibration procedures (power supply adjustment procedure, ADC calibration procedure, analog multiplexer calibration procedure); mother board signature list; schematic diagrams; device specification sheets (microprocessor, asynchronous receiver/transmitter, analog-to-digital converter, arithmetic processing unit, 5-volt power supply, +- 15-volt power supply, 24-volt power supply, floppy disk formater/controller, random access static memory); ROM program listing; 6800 microprocessor instruction set, octal listing; and cable lists. (RR)
Date: May 23, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gasification in pulverized coal flames. Final report (Part I). Pulverized coal combustion and gasification in a cyclone reactor: experiment and model (open access)

Gasification in pulverized coal flames. Final report (Part I). Pulverized coal combustion and gasification in a cyclone reactor: experiment and model

A unified experimental and analytical study of pulverized coal combustion and low-BTU gasification in an atmospheric cyclone reactor was performed. Experimental results include several series of coal combustion tests and a coal gasification test carried out via fuel-rich combustion without steam addition. Reactor stability was excellent over a range of equivalence ratios from .67 to 2.4 and air flowrates from 60 to 220 lb/hr. Typical carbon efficiencies were 95% for air-rich and stoichiometric tests and 80% for gasification tests. The best gasification results were achieved at an equivalence ratio of 2.0, where the carbon, cold gas and hot gas efficiencies were 83, 45 and 75%, respectively. The corresponding product gas heating value was 70 BTU/scf. A macroscopic model of coal combustion in the cyclone has been developed. Fuel-rich gasification can also be modeled through a gas-phase equilibrium treatment. Fluid mechanics are modeled by a particle force balance and a series combination of a perfectly stirred reactor and a plug flow reactor. Kinetic treatments of coal pyrolysis, char oxidation and carbon monoxide oxidation are included. Gas composition and temperature are checked against equilibrium values. The model predicts carbon efficiency, gas composition and temperature and reactor heat loss; gasification parameters, such as …
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Barnhart, J. S. & Laurendeau, N. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quark model and high-energy nuclear experiments (open access)

Quark model and high-energy nuclear experiments

Theoretical aspects of the measurements of production of low transverse momentum secondaries in high-energy hadron-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus collisions are discussed. Applications of the quark model to those processes are discussed in some detail. 58 references.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Bialas, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Large scale copper vapor laser computer control system (open access)

Large scale copper vapor laser computer control system

High power pulse copper vapor laser systems consist of a master oscillator and numerous power amplifiers. Large systems used in laser isotope separation experiments require several automatic control systems. The rapid development of compact mini computers over the past several years has enabled the implementation of sophisticated computer controlled copper vapor laser systems. Present systems provide automatic time synchronization and input power stabilization. Future systems will incorporate semi-automatic start-up capabilities.
Date: May 15, 1979
Creator: LaChapell, M. J.; Spencer, L. W. & Coutts, G. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of Compton recoil gamma-ray spectroscopy (open access)

Status of Compton recoil gamma-ray spectroscopy

The gamma-ray component of the reactor radiation field can produce effects which impact strongly upon reactor design, shielding, and safety. Radiation effects arising from the gamma-ray component are induced by interaction of the absolute gamma-ray energy spectrum in the reactor environment. Hence, the most fundamental quantity underlying effects produced by the reactor gamma-ray field is the absolute gamma-ray energy continuum. To this end, the current status of Compton recoil gamma-ray spectrometry in Light Water Reactors (LWR) and Fast Breeder Reactors (FBR) environments is described. Particular emphasis is given to continuous gamma spectometry experiments in a LWR pressure vessel mockup at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Poolside Critical Assembly (PCA). Gamma spectrometry plans for FBR environments are outlined with special attention placed on start-up experiments in the Fast Test Reactor (FTR). Improvements in Compton recoil gamma-ray spectroscopy are presented.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Gold, R. & Kaiser, B. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addition of inexpensive solar air-heaters to a pre-engineered metal building. Final report (open access)

Addition of inexpensive solar air-heaters to a pre-engineered metal building. Final report

At Mississippi State University a research project was begun in 1976 to investigate the use of site-built solar collectors for heating air in poultry houses. The purpose of this work was to design and test a functional air heater solar collector which would be inexpensive to construct and acceptable to poultry producers. The results reported are an extension of the original concept. The basic concept is to use a pre-engineered metal building for the structure and incorporate the solar air heaters as an integral part of the south facing wall of the building. The outer skin of the building is used as the absorber plate for the collctors. Construction and testing of the solar collectors and heat storage systems are discussed, and the performance characteristics of the site-built solar collectors are described. (WHK)
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Forbes, R E & McClendon, R W
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical summary of experimental data from two years of hourly sequential precipitation samples at Brookhaven National Laboratory (open access)

Analytical summary of experimental data from two years of hourly sequential precipitation samples at Brookhaven National Laboratory

Hourly precipitation samples were collected at Brookhaven National Laboratory from June 1976 through May 1978 with the Brookhaven Automatic Sequential Precipitation Sampler. Conventional meteorological data were recorded for each sample period. The samples were analyzed for pH, conductivity, and concentrations of sulfate, nitrogen, ammonium, sodium, and chloride ions. Ratios of selected ions, excess conductivity above the H/sup +/ contribution, and excess sulfate and chloride above the seawater ratio were calculated and treated as additional variables. Statistical analyses were performed of the relationships between selected chemical variables and between them and meteorological conditions. Rainfall rate was also analyzed in terms of other meteorological variables. Because a number of units were changed after publication of an earlier report (BNL 50826), the results (presented in a series of tables) are given for each year separately and for both years jointly.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Raynor, G. S. & Hayes, J. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metabolism and biological effects of alpha-emitting radionuclides (open access)

Metabolism and biological effects of alpha-emitting radionuclides

The emphasis of much of the current and planned research on the toxicity of alpha-emitting radionuclides is directed toward the complexities of actual and potential conditions of occupational environmental exposures of human beings. These, as well as the more limited studies on mechanisms of biological transport and effects, should increase our ability to predict health risks more accurately and to deal more confidently with human exposures, if and when they occur.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Bair, W. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental investigation of the chemistry of excited states of rare gases. Second quarterly progress report, January 15, 1978-April 15, 1979 (open access)

Experimental investigation of the chemistry of excited states of rare gases. Second quarterly progress report, January 15, 1978-April 15, 1979

The reactions of Kr(/sup 3/P/sub 1/) and Xe(/sup 3/P/sub 1/) with halogen compounds, producing rare gas halides, was studied. Abstracts of two papers on excited rare gas states are included. (DLC)
Date: May 1979
Creator: Setser, D. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste isolation safety assessment program (open access)

Waste isolation safety assessment program

Associated with commercial nuclear power production in the United States is the generation of potentially hazardous radioactive wastes. The Department of Energy (DOE), through the National Waste Terminal Storage (NWTS) Program, is seeking to develop nuclear waste isolation systems in geologic formations that will preclude contact with the biosphere of waste radionuclides in concentrations which are sufficient to cause deleterious impact on humans or their environments. Comprehensive analyses of specific isolation systems are needed to assess the expectations of meeting that objective. The Waste Isolation Safety Assessment Program (WISAP) has been established at the Pacific Northwest Laboratory (operated by Battelle Memorial Institute) for developing the capability of making those analyses. Among the analyses required for isolation system evaluation is the detailed assessment of the post-closure performance of nuclear waste repositories in geologic formations. This assessment is essential, since it is concerned with aspects of the nuclear power program which previously have not been addressed. Specifically, the nature of the isolation systems (e.g., involving breach scenarios and transport through the geosphere), and the time-scales necessary for isolation, dictate the development, demonstration and application of novel assessment capabilities. The assessment methodology needs to be thorough, flexible, objective, and scientifically defensible. Further, the …
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Brandstetter, A. & Harwell, M. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Devices for launching 0. 1-g projectiles to 150 km/s or more to initiate fusion. Part 1. Magnetic-gradient and electrostatic accelerators (open access)

Devices for launching 0. 1-g projectiles to 150 km/s or more to initiate fusion. Part 1. Magnetic-gradient and electrostatic accelerators

The feasibility of using magnetic-gradient and electrostatic accelerators to launch a 0.1-g projectile to hypervelocities (150 km/s or more) is studied. Such hypervelocity projectiles could be used to ignite deuterium-tritium fuel pellets in a fusion reactor. For the magnetic-gradient accelerator, several types of projectile were studied: shielded and unshielded copper, ferromagnetic, and superconducting. The calculations revealed the superconducting projectile to be the best of those materials. It would require a 3.2-km-long magnetic-gradient accelerator and achieve a 92% efficiency. This accelerator-projectile combination would be the one most likely to launch a 0.1-g projectile to 150 km/s or more. Its components would cost $58.9 million. The electrostatic accelerator was found to be impractical because of its excessive length of 23 km.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Brittingham, J.N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Perspective on relativistic nuclear collisions (open access)

Perspective on relativistic nuclear collisions

The importance of experiments detecting more than one particle is pointed out. The production of nuclei far from stability in peripheral collisions and the expectations for the explosive disassembly of dense nuclear matter (nuclear fireball) and some evidence for it are related. Pion interferometry concerns the measurement of correlations in the momentum and energy of two identical pions; the subject is discussed in relation to incoherent production, coherent production, partially coherent production, final-state interactions, impact parameter average, and outlook. Much of the paper deals with an assessment of the possibility of determining the form of the hadronic spectrum in the high-mass region through nuclear collisions at ultrarelativistic energies. The subject is developed under the following topics: perspective, the initial fireball, isoergic equilibrium expansion of the fireball, quasi-dynamical expansion, quark matter, and the mass degree of freedom. The quasi-dynamical model obtained indicates that certain parameters, such as the ..pi../N and K/N ratios at high kinetic energy, will survive the collision; therefore, a determination of the asymptotic form of the hadron spectrum probably can be made by studying nuclear collisions at very high energies (10 GeV/nucleon in the center of mass). 16 figures. (RWR)
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Glendenning, N.K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Charmed meson production and decay properties at the psi(3770) (open access)

Charmed meson production and decay properties at the psi(3770)

A remeasurement of the resonance near E/sub cm/ = 3.77 GeV in the e/sup +/e/sup -/ annihilation is presented. The properties of the resonance are used to deduce branching fractions of charmed mesons into hadronic final states. Several previously unseen decay modes are reported. Decays into Cabibbo suppressed final states are observed. The inclusive properties of D meson decays are studied, including strangeness and charged particle multiplicity. The semileptonic branching fractions for D/sup 0/ and D/sup -+/ are measured, providing a determination of the relative lifetimes of these particles.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal ground-water discharge and associated convective heat flux, Bruneau-Grand View area, southwest Idaho (open access)

Thermal ground-water discharge and associated convective heat flux, Bruneau-Grand View area, southwest Idaho

The Bruneau-Grand View area occupies about 1100 square miles in southwest Idaho. The area has a rural population dependent on ground-water irrigation. Temperature of the ground water ranges from 15/sup 0/C to more than 80/sup 0/C. Ground water for irrigation is obtained from flowing and pumped wells. Discharge of thermal ground water from 104 irrigation wells and 5 hot springs in 1978 was about 50,500 acre-feet. Convective heat flux from the geothermal system associated with this discharge was 4.97x10/sup 7/ calories per second.
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: Young, H. W.; Lewis, R. E. & Backsen, R. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multielement spark-gap switch system. Final report (open access)

Multielement spark-gap switch system. Final report

An engineering study was made to formulate a conceptual design for a multielement arc-type electrical switch system for switching 50,000-amp, 100-nsec or less pulses from a 50,000-v source at up to 1000 ppS. The switch is to have a lifetime of at least 5 x 10/sup 8/ pulse MTBF, litter time less than 10 nsec, closure time of less than 20 nsec, and 10 nh or less inductance. An offset midplane triggered spark gap (TSG) with ultraviolet (uv) preionization and forced air was selected as the most suitable switch for this application. Many but not all of the requirements of a full scale switch system were demonstrated in a 2-TSG subsystem. The requirements of current, pulse duration, frequency, lifetime, jitter, and inductance were equal to or better than needed; however, the TSG's were not operated above 36,000 v, mainly because of voltage limitations in the trigger switch. The TSG's were rated at only 35,000 v and were not holding off enough voltage in relation to their total gap spacing due to E-field distortions. Because the voltag-to-gap ratio was lower than optimum, the closure time was excessive to about 33 nsec, or 13 nsec in excess of the specification value.
Date: May 2, 1979
Creator: Watson, H.; Gibson, R. A.; Sun, Y. H. & Wickson, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supplementary material on passive solar heating concepts. A compilation of published articles (open access)

Supplementary material on passive solar heating concepts. A compilation of published articles

A compilation of published articles and reports dealing with passive solar energy concepts for heating and cooling buildings is presented. The following are included: fundamental of passive systems, applications and technical analysis, graphic tools, and information sources. (MHR)
Date: May 1, 1979
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library