11,225 research outputs found

    Solar energy for process heat: Design/cost studies of four industrial retrofit applications

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    Five specific California plants with potentially attractive solar applications were identified in a process heat survey. These five plants were visited, process requirements evaluated, and conceptual solar system designs were generated. Four DOE (ERDA) sponsored solar energy system demonstration projects were also reviewed and compared to the design/cost cases included in this report. In four of the five cases investigated, retrofit installations providing significant amounts of thermal energy were found to be feasible. The fifth was rejected because of the condition of the building involved, but the process (soap making) appears to be an attractive potential solar application. Costs, however, tend to be high. Several potential areas for cost reduction were identified including larger collector modules and higher duty cycles

    Salt-gradient Solar Ponds: Summary of US Department of Energy Sponsored Research

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    The solar pond research program conducted by the United States Department of Energy was discontinued after 1983. This document summarizes the results of the program, reviews the state of the art, and identifies the remaining outstanding issues. Solar ponds is a generic term but, in the context of this report, the term solar pond refers specifically to saltgradient solar pond. Several small research solar ponds have been built and successfully tested. Procedures for filling the pond, maintaining the gradient, adjusting the zone boundaries, and extracting heat were developed. Theories and models were developed and verified. The major remaining unknowns or issues involve the physical behavior of large ponds; i.e., wind mixing of the surface, lateral range or reach of horizontally injected fluids, ground thermal losses, and gradient zone boundary erosion caused by pumping fluid for heat extraction. These issues cannot be scaled and must be studied in a large outdoor solar pond

    Neuraminidase Activity in \u3cem\u3eDiplococcus pneumoniae\u3c/em\u3e

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    Kelly, R. T. (Marquette University School of Medicine, Milwaukee, Wis.), D. Greiff, and S. Farmer. Neuraminidase activity in Diplococcus pneumoniae. J. Bacteriol. 91:601ā€“603. 1966.ā€”A method for the quantitation of neuraminidase in the presence of N-acetylneuraminic acid aldolase is described. The neuraminidase content of Diplococcus pneumoniae was found to be dependent on the media employed for growth; the highest enzyme activity per milligram of bacterial protein was obtained with Todd-Hewitt broth. Neuraminidase production was stimulated in D. pneumoniae by the addition of N-acetylneuraminlactose, N-acetylneuraminic acid, or N-acetylmannosamine to the growth medium. Three rough strains of D. pneumoniae, which were nonpathogenic for mice, lacked neuraminidase activity. Seven of 12 smooth strains contained neuraminidase; enzyme activity was not detected in the remaining 5 smooth strains. There was no correlation between the presence of neuraminidase activity and the capsular type or between neuraminidase production and animal virulence

    Correlation and Statistical Characteristics of Turbulence Fronts in the Wakes of Hypervelocity Bodies

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    Data on statistical wake turbulence of the far wake of sphere and cone models with velocities from 9,800 to 21,500 feet/second and range pressures from 50 to 120 mm Hg. are presented and analyzed. The measurement technique used is that of observing the turbulence edge position of the wake on schlieren films. The measured parameters are the wake width; edge roughness; auto-correlation function; microscale; e-fold; integral, and average eddy lengths; wake dissipation parameter; Kolmogoroff and energy containing wave number parameters; Lagrangian integral time scale parameter; Strouhal number; cross-correlation function; and wake edge velocity. The results of these measurements are compared with other investigators, as well as other methods of observing the character of the turbulence of the far wake. The present data shows reasonable agreement with that of other investigators using the same observation technique. However, there is a lack of agreement between the results from some of the methods of observation and/or measurement techniques. The severest criticism of the present method of observation is found to be the need for a meridional plane view correction factor along with the lack of a direct relation of the wake edge position to the internal turbulence structure
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