Life Cycle Assessment of a Natural Gas Combined Cycle Power Generation System (open access)

Life Cycle Assessment of a Natural Gas Combined Cycle Power Generation System

Natural gas is used for steam and heat production in industrial processes, residential and commercial heating, and electric power generation. Because of its importance in the power mix, a life cycle assessment on electricity generation via a natural gas combined cycle system has been performed.
Date: December 27, 2000
Creator: Spath, P. L. & Mann, M.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
System Specification for Immobilized High-Level Waste Interim Storage (open access)

System Specification for Immobilized High-Level Waste Interim Storage

This specification establishes the system-level functional, performance, design, interface, and test requirements for Phase 1 of the IHLW Interim Storage System, located at the Hanford Site in Washington State. The IHLW canisters will be produced at the Hanford Site by a Selected DOE contractor. Subsequent to storage the canisters will be shipped to a federal geologic repository.
Date: December 27, 2000
Creator: CALMUS, R.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Using pseudo transient continuation and the finite element method to solve the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann equation (open access)

Using pseudo transient continuation and the finite element method to solve the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann equation

The nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) equation is solved using Pseudo Transient Continuation. The PB solver is constructed by modifying the nonlinear diffusion module of a 3D, massively parallel, unstructured-grid, finite element, radiation-hydrodynamics code. The solver also computes the electrostatic energy and evaluates the force on a user-specified contour. Either Dirichlet or mixed boundary conditions are allowed. The latter specifies surface charges, approximates far-field conditions, or linearizes conditions ''regulating'' the surface charge. The code may be run in either Cartesian, cylindrical, or spherical coordinates. The potential and force due to a conical probe interacting with a flat plate is computed and the result compared with direct force measurements by chemical force microscopy.
Date: December 27, 2000
Creator: Shestakov, A I; Milovich, J L & Noy, A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adaptive Optics Survey for Companions to stars with Extra-Solar Planets (open access)

Adaptive Optics Survey for Companions to stars with Extra-Solar Planets

We have undertaken an adaptive optics imaging survey of extrasolar planetary systems and stars showing interesting radial velocity trends from high precision radial velocity searches. Adaptive Optics increases the resolution and dynamic range of an image, substantially improving the detectability of faint close companions. This survey is sensitive to objects less luminous than the bottom of the main sequence at separations as close as 1 inch. We have detected stellar companions to the planet bearing stars HD 114762 and Tau Boo. We have also detected a companion to the non-planet bearing star 16 Cyg A.
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Lloyd, J. P.; Liu, M. C.; Graham, J. R.; Enoch, M.; Kalas, P.; Marcy, G. W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Adaptive Optics Survey for Companions to Stars with Extra-Solar Planets (open access)

An Adaptive Optics Survey for Companions to Stars with Extra-Solar Planets

We have undertaken an adaptive optics imaging survey of extrasolar planetary systems and stars showing interesting radial velocity trends from high precision radial velocity searches. Adaptive Optics increases the resolution and dynamic range of an image, substantially improving the detectability of faint close companions. This survey is sensitive to objects less luminous than the bottom of the main sequence at separations as close as 1 inch. We have detected stellar companions to the planet bearing stars HD 114762 and Tau Boo. We have also detected a companion to the non-planet bearing star 16 Cyg A.
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Lloyd, J. P.; Liu, M. C.; Graham, J. R.; Enoch, M.; Kalas, P.; Marcy, G. W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cell projection of meshes with non-planar faces (open access)

Cell projection of meshes with non-planar faces

Volume rendering converts a scalar function on a 3D volume into varying colors and opacities, and creates an image by integrating the color and opacity effects along viewing rays through each pixel [1]. For data specified on a regular grid, the ray tracing is straightforward [2,3,4,5], and similar effects can be obtained with 3D textures [6]. For curvilinear or irregular grids, these methods are only applicable after the data has been resampled. An alternative, which works directly on these more general grids, is cell projection [7,8,9]. The cells composited onto the image in back to front sorted order. The projections of the edges of a single cell divide the image plane into polygons, which can be scan converted and composited by standard graphics hardware. In references [9,10,11], we assumed that the cells were polyhedra with planar faces. A curvilinear grid maps a rectangular grid onto a curved volume, for example to fit next to an airplane wing or ship hull, and quadrilateral faces may map to non-planar surfaces. Irregular grids are fitted to complex geometries, for example mechanical parts, and even initially flat faces may become non-planar as the grid elements deform, for example, in a car crash simulation. Non-planar …
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Max, N.; Williams, P. & Silva, C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coupled Thermal-Chemical-Mechanical Modeling of Validation Cookoff Experiments (open access)

Coupled Thermal-Chemical-Mechanical Modeling of Validation Cookoff Experiments

The cookoff of energetic materials involves the combined effects of several physical and chemical processes. These processes include heat transfer, chemical decomposition, and mechanical response. The interaction and coupling between these processes influence both the time-to-event and the violence of reaction. The prediction of the behavior of explosives during cookoff, particularly with respect to reaction violence, is a challenging task. To this end, a joint DoD/DOE program has been initiated to develop models for cookoff, and to perform experiments to validate those models. In this paper, a series of cookoff analyses are presented and compared with data from a number of experiments for the aluminized, RDX-based, Navy explosive PBXN-109. The traditional thermal-chemical analysis is used to calculate time-to-event and characterize the heat transfer and boundary conditions. A reaction mechanism based on Tarver and McGuire's work on RDX{sup 2} was adjusted to match the spherical one-dimensional time-to-explosion data. The predicted time-to-event using this reaction mechanism compares favorably with the validation tests. Coupled thermal-chemical-mechanical analysis is used to calculate the mechanical response of the confinement and the energetic material state prior to ignition. The predicted state of the material includes the temperature, stress-field, porosity, and extent of reaction. There is little experimental …
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Erikson, William W.; Schmitt, Robert G.; Atwood, A. I. & Curran, P. D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Formation of ohmic contacts to MOCVD grown p-GaN by controlled activation of Mg (open access)

Formation of ohmic contacts to MOCVD grown p-GaN by controlled activation of Mg

We report on the formation of low resistivity ohmic contacts to p-GaN, r{sub c} < 10{sup {minus}4}{Omega}cm{sup 2}, by increasing the concentration of the active Mg in the subcontact zone, via Zr-mediated release of hydrogen. We have investigated the process of evolution of hydrogen from MOCVD grown p-GaN via Zr-based metallization, and determined the optimum processing conditions (temperature and gas ambient) for fabrication of low resistance ohmic contacts. When the process is conducted in N{sub 2} flow, the metallization remains stable at temperatures required to achieve the ohmic behavior, and the morphology of the metal/semiconductor interface is unaltered by such a heat treatment. The processing in O{sub 2}, on the contrary, causes the interdiffusion of metallization constituents and the incorporation of oxygen into the semiconductor subcontact region, which could be responsible for increased resistivity of these contacts.
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Kaminska, E.; Piotrowska, A.; Barcz, A.; Bour, D.; Zielinski, M. & Jasinski, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrology and Hydraulic Properties of a Bedded Evaporite Formation (open access)

Hydrology and Hydraulic Properties of a Bedded Evaporite Formation

The Permian Salado Formation in the Delaware Basin of New Mexico is an extensively studied evaporite deposit because it is the host formation for the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, a repository for transuranic wastes. Geologic and hydrologic studies of the Salado conducted since the mid-1970's have led to the development of a conceptual model of the hydrogeology of the formation that involves far-field permeability in anhydrite layers and at least some impure halite layers. Pure halite layers and some impure halite layers may not possess an interconnected pore network adequate to provide permeability. Pore pressures are probably very close to lithostatic pressure. In the near field around an excavation, dilation, creep, and shear have created and/or enhanced permeability and decreased pore pressure. Whether flow occurs in the far field under natural gradients or only after some threshold gradient is reached is unknown. If far-field flow does occur, mean pore velocities are probably on the order of a meter per hundreds of thousands to tens of millions of years. Flow dimensions inferred from most hydraulic-test responses are subradial, which is believed to reflect channeling of flow through fracture networks, or portions of fractures, that occupy a diminishing proportion of the radially …
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Beauheim, Richard L. & Roberts, Randall M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Process development for cladding APT tungsten targets (open access)

Process development for cladding APT tungsten targets

This report describes development of processes for cladding APT Target tungsten components with a thin layer (0.127-mm) of Alloy 718, Alloy 600 or 316L stainless steel alloy. The application requires that the cladding be thermally bonded to the tungsten in order to transfer heat generated in the tungsten volume to a surrounding coolant. High temperature diffusion bonding using the hot isostatic processing (HIP) technique was selected as the method for creating a metallurgical bond between pure tungsten tubes and rods and the cladding materials. Bonding studies using a uniaxially loaded vacuum hot press were conducted in preliminary experiments to determine acceptable time-temperature conditions for diffusion bonding. The results were successfully applied in cladding tungsten rods and tubes with these alloys. Temperatures 800-810 C were suitable for cladding tungsten with Alloy 600 and 316L stainless steel alloy, whereas tungsten was clad with Alloy 718 at 1020 C.
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Horner, M H; Barber, R & Dalder, E
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RATDAMPER - A Numerical Model for Coupling Mechanical and Hydrological Properties within the Disturbed Rock Zone at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (open access)

RATDAMPER - A Numerical Model for Coupling Mechanical and Hydrological Properties within the Disturbed Rock Zone at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant

A numerical model for predicting damage and permeability in the disturbed rock zone (DRZ) has been developed. The semi-empirical model predicts damage based on a function of stress tensor invariant. For a wide class of problems hydrologic/mechanical coupling is necessary for proper analysis. The RATDAMPER model incorporates dilatant volumetric strain and permeability. The RATDAMPER model has been implemented in a weakly coupled code, which combines a finite element structural code and a finite difference multi-phase fluid flow code. Using the development of inelastic volumetric strain, a value of permeability can be assigned. This flexibility allows empirical permeability functional relationships to be evaluated.
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: RATH,JONATHAN S.; PFEIFLE,T.W. & HUNSCHE,U.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
SYNCHROTRON X - RAY OBSERVATIONS OF A MONOLAYER TEMPLATE FOR MINERALIZATION. (open access)

SYNCHROTRON X - RAY OBSERVATIONS OF A MONOLAYER TEMPLATE FOR MINERALIZATION.

Mineral nucleation at a Langmuir film interface has been studied by synchrotron x-ray scattering. Diluted calcium bicarbonate solutions were used as subphases for arachidic and stearic acid monolayers, compressed in a Langmuir trough. Self-assembly of the monolayer template is observed directly, and subsequent crystal growth monitored in-situ.
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: DIMASI,E. & GOWER,L.B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant soil vapor extraction system : a post-audit modeling study. (open access)

Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant soil vapor extraction system : a post-audit modeling study.

None
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: Williams, G. P.; Tomasko, D. & Jiang, Z.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Validation Testing of Procedures for Determining the Performance of Stand-Alone Photovoltaic Systems (open access)

Validation Testing of Procedures for Determining the Performance of Stand-Alone Photovoltaic Systems

Standard test procedures, ''IEEE P1526/D1 Draft Recommended Practice for Testing the Performance of Stand-Alone Photovoltaic Systems,'' [1] have been developed to assess the performance of stand-alone PV systems tested outdoors under prevailing conditions. A copy of the procedures is included in Appendix E. This report presents an overview of the procedures and results from three validation tests conducted between January 1999 and September 2000 at one European and four US test sites. There was good measurement agreement between the results measured at different test sites on similar systems. To date, most PV system performance test procedures have looked at the performance of the individual components and have not addressed how the integrated system works as a whole. The performance test procedures described in this report verify that the system and load operate as expected, ensure that the PV array and system are capable of recharging the battery, determine the usable battery capacity (UBC), and determine if there is any significant change in the UBC measured three different times during the procedures. The procedures have been submitted to both IEEE SCC21 and IEC TC82 for use in developing standards. The IEEE SCC21 has initiated P1526, ''Recommended Practice for Testing the Performance …
Date: November 27, 2000
Creator: McNutt, P.; Kroposki, B.; Hansen, R.; DeBlasio, R.; Lynn, K.; Wilson, W. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparing zonal and CFD models of air flows in large indoor spaces to experimental data (open access)

Comparing zonal and CFD models of air flows in large indoor spaces to experimental data

None
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Mora, Laurent; Gadgil, Ashok & Wurtz, Etienne
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cooperative Research in C1 Chemistry (open access)

Cooperative Research in C1 Chemistry

C1 chemistry refers to the conversion of simple carbon-containing materials that contain one carbon atom per molecule into valuable products. The feedstocks for C1 chemistry include natural gas, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, methanol and synthesis gas (a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen). Synthesis gas, or syngas, is produced primarily by the reaction of natural gas, which is principally methane, with steam. It can also be produced by gasification of coal, petroleum coke, or biomass. The availability of syngas from coal gasification is expected to increase significantly in the future because of increasing development of integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) power generation. Because of the abundance of remote natural gas, the advent of IGCC, and environmental advantages, C1 chemistry is expected to become a major area of interest for the transportation fuel and chemical industries in the relatively near future. The CFFLS will therefore perform a valuable national service by providing science and engineering graduates that are trained in this important area. Syngas is the source of most hydrogen. Approximately 10 trillion standard cubic feet (SCF) of hydrogen are manufactured annually in the world. Most of this hydrogen is currently used for the production of ammonia and in a variety …
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Huffman, Gerald P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamics of Bubbles Rising in Finite and Infinite Media (open access)

Dynamics of Bubbles Rising in Finite and Infinite Media

The dynamic behavior of single bubbles rising in quiescent liquid Suva (R134a) in a duct has been examined through the use of a high speed video system. Size, shape and velocity measurements obtained with the video system reveal a wide variety of characteristics for the bubbles as they rise in both finite and infinite media. This data, coupled with previously published data for other working fluids, has been used to assess and extend a rise velocity model given by Fan and Tsuchiya. As a result of this assessment, a new rise velocity model has been developed which maintains the physically consistent characteristics of the surface tension in the distorted bubbly regime. In addition, the model is unique in that it covers the entire range of bubble sizes contained in the spherical, distorted and planar slug regimes.
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Maneri, C. C. & Vassallo, P. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feedback from video for virtual reality Navigation (open access)

Feedback from video for virtual reality Navigation

Important preconditions for wide acceptance of virtual reality (VR) systems include their comfort, ease and naturalness to use. Most existing trackers super from discomfort-related issues. For example, body-based trackers (hand controllers, joysticks, helmet attachments, etc.) restrict spontaneity and naturalness of motion, while ground-based devices (e.g., hand controllers) limit the workspace by literally binding an operator to the ground. There are similar problems with controls. This paper describes using real-time video with registered depth information (from a commercially available camera) for virtual reality navigation. Camera-based setup can replace cumbersome trackers. The method includes selective depth processing for increased speed, and a robust skin-color segmentation for accounting illumination variations.
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Tsap, L V
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final report submitted to the Department of Energy [Encapsulation of metal chelate and oxo catalysts in nanoporous hosts] (open access)

Final report submitted to the Department of Energy [Encapsulation of metal chelate and oxo catalysts in nanoporous hosts]

The focus of this project is directed at the design of novel zeolite-based hybrid catalysts, based on encapsulated transition metal chelate complexes and metal oxo species. One goal is to achieve improved control over the active species in heterogeneous catalysis, as well as improved reactant and product selectivities. This is achieved by combining the catalytic activity of transition metal catalysts with the large surface area of microporous and mesoporous hosts. Furthermore, shape selectivity may be achieved through the well-defined pore structure of zeolites. Several families of complexes have been studied, including nitrogen chelate complexes, chiral salen complexes, and supported molybdenum-oxo species. In the group of nitrogen-containing metal chelate complexes, some are derived from triazacyclononane, while others are derived from tetradentate cyclam-type ligands. These complexes have been studied in solution, encapsulated in the cages of zeolites, and attached to the channel walls of the novel mesoporous MCM-41-type materials. The latter approach is based on covalent grafting of the ligand to the host, followed by metalation. These heterogenized complexes show good activity in highly selective olefin epoxidation reactions. Furthermore, we have investigated the encapsulation of chiral metal chelate complexes, including manganese salen complexes in the cages of EMT zeolite. This large-pore host …
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Bein, Thomas
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fracture Behavior of Double-Ion-Exchanged Glass (open access)

Fracture Behavior of Double-Ion-Exchanged Glass

None
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: BEAUCHAMP,EDWIN KNIGHT
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
How to Create, Modify, and Interface Aspen In-House and User Databanks for System Configuration 1: (open access)

How to Create, Modify, and Interface Aspen In-House and User Databanks for System Configuration 1:

The goal of this document is to provide detailed instructions to create, modify, interface, and test Aspen User and In-House databanks with minimal frustration. The level of instructions are aimed at a novice Aspen Plus simulation user who is neither a programming nor computer-system expert. The instructions are tailored to Version 10.1 of Aspen Plus and the specific computing configuration summarized in the Title of this document and detailed in Section 2. Many details of setting up databanks depend on the computing environment specifics, such as the machines, operating systems, command languages, directory structures, inter-computer communications software, the version of the Aspen Engine and Graphical User Interface (GUI), and the directory structure of how these were installed.
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Camp, D W
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
How to Create, Modify, and Interface Aspen In-House and User Databanks for System Configuration 2: (open access)

How to Create, Modify, and Interface Aspen In-House and User Databanks for System Configuration 2:

The goal of this document is to provide detailed instructions to create, modify, interface, and test Aspen User and In-House databanks with minimal frustration. The level of instructions are aimed at a novice Aspen Plus simulation user who is neither a programming nor computer-system expert. The instructions are tailored to Version 10.1 of Aspen Plus and the specific computing configuration summarized in the Title of this document and detailed in Section 2. Many details of setting up databanks depend on the computing environment specifics, such as the machines, operating systems, command languages, directory structures, inter-computer communications software, the version of the Aspen Engine and Graphical User Interface (GUI), and the directory structure of how these were installed.
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Camp, D W
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser Filamentation of a Femtosecond Pulse in Air at 400nm (open access)

Laser Filamentation of a Femtosecond Pulse in Air at 400nm

None
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: NELSON,THOMAS R.; LUK,TING S.; BERNSTEIN,AARON C. & CAMERON,STEWART M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical Study of Global Stability of Oblate Field-Reversed Configurations (open access)

Numerical Study of Global Stability of Oblate Field-Reversed Configurations

Global stability of the oblate (small elongation, E < 1) Field-Reversed Configuration (FRC) has been investigated numerically using both three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) and hybrid (fluid electrons and kinetic ions) simulations. For every non-zero value of the toroidal mode number n, there are three MHD modes that must be stabilized. For n = 1, these are the interchange, the tilt and the radial shift; while for n > 1 these are the interchange and two co-interchange modes with different polarization. It is shown that the n = 1 tilt mode becomes an external mode when E < 1, and it can be effectively stabilized by close-fitting conducting shells, even in the small Larmor radii (MHD) regime. The tilt mode stability improves with increasing oblateness, however at suffciently small elongations the radial shift mode becomes more unstable than the tilt mode. The interchange mode stability is strongly profile dependent, and all n * 1 interchange modes can be stabilized for a class of pressure profile with separatrix beta larger than 0.035. Our results show that all three n = 1 modes can be stabilized in the MHD regime, but the stabilization of the n > 1 co-interchange modes still remains an open …
Date: October 27, 2000
Creator: Belova, E. V.; Jardin, S. C.; Ji, H.; Yamada, M. & Kulsrud, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library