16,839 research outputs found
Evaluation of the electrochemical O2 concentrator as an O2 compressor
A program was successfully completed to analytically and experimentally evaluate the feasibility of using an electrochemical oxygen (O2) concentrator as an O2 compressor. The electrochemical O2 compressor (EOC) compresses 345 kN/sq m (50 psia) O2 generated on board the space vehicle by the water electrolysis subsystem (WES) in a single stage to 20,700 kN/sq m (3000 psia) to refill spent extravehicular equipment O2 bottles and to eliminate the need for high pressure O2 storage. The single cell EOC designed, fabricated, and used for the feasibility testing is capable of being tested at O2 pressures up to 41,400 kN/sq m (6000 psia). A ground support test facility to test the EOC cell was designed, fabricated, and used for the EOC feasibility testing. A product assurance program was established, implemented, and maintained which emphasized safety and materials compatibility associated with high pressure O2 operation. A membrane development program was conducted to develop a membrane for EOC application. Data obtained using a commercially available membrane were used to guide the development of the membranes fabricated specifically for an EOC. A total of 15 membranes were fabricated
An experimental study of the buckling of complete spherical shells
Buckling of complete spherical shells to examine Tsien energy hypothesi
Electrochemical carbon dioxide concentrator: Math model
A steady state computer simulation model of an Electrochemical Depolarized Carbon Dioxide Concentrator (EDC) has been developed. The mathematical model combines EDC heat and mass balance equations with empirical correlations derived from experimental data to describe EDC performance as a function of the operating parameters involved. The model is capable of accurately predicting performance over EDC operating ranges. Model simulation results agree with the experimental data obtained over the prediction range
Electrochemical carbon dioxide concentrator subsystem math model
A steady state computer simulation model has been developed to describe the performance of a total six man, self-contained electrochemical carbon dioxide concentrator subsystem built for the space station prototype. The math model combines expressions describing the performance of the electrochemical depolarized carbon dioxide concentrator cells and modules previously developed with expressions describing the performance of the other major CS-6 components. The model is capable of accurately predicting CS-6 performance over EDC operating ranges and the computer simulation results agree with experimental data obtained over the prediction range
Recommended from our members
Repeatable approaches to work with scientific uncertainty and advance climate change adaptation in US national parks
Quantum Monte Carlo Calculations of Nuclei
The energies of , , and ground states, the
and scattering states of , the
ground states of , , and and the and
excited states of have been accurately calculated with the Green's
function Monte Carlo method using realistic models of two- and three-nucleon
interactions. The splitting of the isospin and
isospin , multiplets is also studied. The observed
energies and radii are generally well reproduced, however, some definite
differences between theory and experiment can be identified.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur
Spacecraft nitrogen generation
Two spacecraft nitrogen (N2) generation systems based on the catalytic dissociation of hydrazine (N2H4) were evaluated. In the first system, liquid N2H4 is catalytically dissociated to yield an N2 and hydrogen (H2) gas mixture. Separation of the N2/H2 gas mixture to yield N2 and a supply of H2 is accomplished using a polymer-electrochemical N2/H2 separator. In the second system, the N2/H2 gas mixture is separated in a two-stage palladium/silver (Pd/Ag) N2/H2 separator. The program culminated in the successful design, fabrication, and testing of a N2H4 catalytic dissociator, a polymer-electrochemical N2/H2 separator, and a two-stage Pd/Ag N2/H2 separator. The hardware developed was sized for an N2 delivery rate of 6.81 kg/d (15lb/day). Experimental results demonstrated that both spacecraft N2 generation systems are capable of producing 6.81 kg/d (15lb/day) of 99.9% pure N2 at a pressure greater than or equal to 1035 kN/m(2) (150 psia)
Leading-Log Effects in the Resonance Electroweak Form Factors
We study log corrections to inelastic scattering at high Bjorken x for Q^2
from 1 to 21 GeV^2. At issue is the presence of log corrections, which can be
absent if high x scattering has damped gluon radiation. We find logarithmic
correction of the scaling curve extrapolated to low Q^2 improves the duality
between it and the resonance plus background data in the Delta region,
indicating log corrections exist in the data. However, at W > 2 GeV and high x,
the data shows a (1-x)^3 form. Log corrections in one situation but not in
another can be reconciled by a W- or Q^2- dependent higher twist correction.Comment: 13 pages, report nos. RPI-94-N90 and WM-94-106, revtex, two figures
(available by fax or post
Correlation effects in the ground state of trapped atomic Bose gases
We study the effects of many-body correlations in trapped ultracold atomic
Bose gases. We calculate the ground state of the gas using a ground-state
auxiliary-field quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) method [Phys. Rev. E 70, 056702
(2004)]. We examine the properties of the gas, such as the energetics,
condensate fraction, real-space density, and momentum distribution, as a
function of the number of particles and the scattering length. We find that the
mean-field Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) approach gives qualitatively incorrect result
of the kinetic energy as a function of the scattering length. We present
detailed QMC data for the various quantities, and discuss the behavior of GP,
modified GP, and the Bogoliubov method under a local density approximation.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, as typeset using REVTEX4. Submitted to Phys.
Rev.
Monolithic Arrays of Grating-Surface-Emitting Diode Lasers and Quantum Well Modulators for Optical Communications
The electro-optic switching properties of injection-coupled coherent 2-D grating-surface-emitting laser arrays with multiple gain sections and quantum well active layers are discussed and demonstrated. Within such an array of injection-coupled grating-surface-emitting lasers, a single gain section can be operated as intra-cavity saturable loss element that can modulate the output of the entire array. Experimental results demonstrate efficient sub-nanosecond switching of high power grading-surface-emitting laser arrays by using only one gain section as an intra-cavity loss modulator
- …