339 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Initial Investigation of Waste Feed Delivery Tank Mixing and Sampling Issues
The Hanford tank farms contractor will deliver waste to the Waste Treatment Plant (WTP) from a staging double-shell tank. The WTP broadly classifies waste it receives in terms of “Envelopes,” each with different limiting properties and composition ranges. Envelope A, B, and C wastes are liquids that can include up to 4% entrained solids that can be pumped directly from the staging DST without mixing. Envelope D waste contains insoluble solids and must be mixed before transfer. The mixing and sampling issues lie within Envelope D solid-liquid slurries. The question is how effectively these slurries are mixed and how representative the grab samples are that are taken immediately after mixing. This report summarizes the current state of knowledge concerning jet mixing of wastes in underground storage tanks. Waste feed sampling requirements are listed, and their apparent assumption of uniformity by lack of a requirement for sample representativeness is cited as a significant issue. The case is made that there is not an adequate technical basis to provide such a sampling regimen because not enough is known about what can be achieved in mixing and distribution of solids by use of the baseline submersible mixing pump system. A combined mixing-sampling test program is recommended to fill this gap. Historical Pacific Northwest National Laboratory project and tank farms contractor documents are used to make this case. A substantial investment and progress are being made to understand mixing issues at the WTP. A summary of the key WTP activities relevant to this project is presented in this report. The relevant aspects of the WTP mixing work, together with a previously developed scaled test strategy for determining solids suspension with submerged mixer pumps (discussed in Section 3) provide a solid foundation for developing a path forward
A test for efficiency in the supply of public education
This paper devises and applies a statistical test for efficient provision of local public education. The test is based on the `Samuelson condition' of equality between the sum of marginal rates of substitution and marginal cost. The econometric method is a micro-based approach to the estimation of the marginal rate of substitution function. This method accounts for possible `Tiebout bias' caused by the fact that individuals may choose their school districts in accordance with their tastes for education.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/27356/1/0000381.pd
Pseudosarcomatous myofibroblastic proliferations of the genitourinary tract are genetically different from nodular fasciitis and lack USP6, ROS1 and ETV6 gene rearrangements
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145266/1/his13526_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145266/2/his13526.pd
Symbiotic starburst-black hole AGN -- I. Isothermal hydrodynamics of the mass-loaded ISM
Compelling evidence associates the nuclei of active galaxies and massive
starbursts. The symbiosis between a compact nuclear starburst stellar cluster
and a massive black hole can self-consistently explain the properties of active
nuclei. The young stellar cluster has a profound effect on the most important
observable properties of active galaxies through its gravity, and by mass
injection through stellar winds, supernovae and stellar collisions. Mass
injection generates a nuclear ISM which flows under gravitational and radiative
forces until it leaves the nucleus or is accreted onto the black hole or
accretion disc.
The radiative force exerted by the black hole--accretion disc radiation field
is not spherically symmetric. This results in complex flows in which regions of
inflow can coexist with high Mach number outflowing winds and hydrodynamic
jets. We present two-dimensional hydrodynamic models of such nISM flows, which
are highly complex and time variable. Shocked shells, jets and explosive
bubbles are produced, with bipolar winds driving out from the nucleus. Our
results graphically illustrate why broad emission line studies have
consistently failed to identify any simple, global flow geometry. The real
structure of the flows is _inevitably_ yet more complex.Comment: 51 pages, 85 postscript figures, Latex, using MNRAS macros, to be
published in MNRAS. Postscript will full resolution pictures and mpeg
simulations available via http://ast.leeds.ac.uk/~rjrw/agn.htm
Hanford Tank Farms Waste Certification Flow Loop Test Plan
A future requirement of Hanford Tank Farm operations will involve transfer of wastes from double shell tanks to the Waste Treatment Plant. As the U.S. Department of Energy contractor for Tank Farm Operations, Washington River Protection Solutions anticipates the need to certify that waste transfers comply with contractual requirements. This test plan describes the approach for evaluating several instruments that have potential to detect the onset of flow stratification and critical suspension velocity. The testing will be conducted in an existing pipe loop in Pacific Northwest National Laboratory’s facility that is being modified to accommodate the testing of instruments over a range of simulated waste properties and flow conditions. The testing phases, test matrix and types of simulants needed and the range of testing conditions required to evaluate the instruments are describe
Recommended from our members
Final Report One-Twelfth-Scale Mixing Experiments to Characterize Double-Shell Tank Slurry Uniformity
The objectives of these 1/12-scale scoping experiments were to Determine which of the dimensionless parameters discussed in Bamberger and Liljegren (1994) affect the maximum concentration that can be suspended during jet mixer pump operation in the full-scale double-shell tanks Develop empirical correlations to predict the nozzle velocity required for jet mixer pumps to suspend the contents of full-scale double-shell tanks Apply the models to predict the nozzle velocity required to suspend the contents of Tank 241 AZ-101 Obtain experimental concentration data to compare with the TEMPEST( )(Trent and Eyler 1989) computational modeling predictions to guide further code development Analyze the effects of changing nozzle diameter on exit velocity (U0) and U0D0 (the product of the exit velocity and nozzle diameter) required to suspend the contents of a tank. The scoping study experimentally evaluated uniformity in a 1/12-scale experiment varying the Reynolds number, Froude number, and gravitational settling parameter space. The initial matrix specified only tests at 100% U0D0 and 25% U0D0. After initial tests were conducted with small diameter, low viscosity simulant this matrix was revised to allow evaluation of a broader range of U0D0s. The revised matrix included full factorial test between 100% and 50% U0D0 and two half-factorial tests at 75% and 25% U0D0. Adding points at 75% U0D0 and 50% U0D0 allowed evaluation curvature. Eliminating points at 25% U0D0 decreased the testing time by several weeks. Test conditions were achieved by varying the simulant viscosity, the mean particle size, and the jet nozzle exit velocity. Concentration measurements at sampling locations throughout the tank were used to assess the degree of uniformity achieved during each test. Concentration data was obtained using a real time ultrasonic attenuation probe and discrete batch samples. The undissolved solids concentration at these locations was analyzed to determine whether the tank contents were uniform ( ±10% variation about mean) in concentration. Concentration inhomogeneity was modeled as a function of dimensionless groups. The two parameters that best describe the maximum solids volume fraction that can be suspended in a double-shell tank were found to be 1) the Froude number (Fr) based on nozzle velocity (U0) and tank contents level (H) and 2) the dimensionless particle size (dp/D0). The dependence on the Reynolds number (Re) does not appear to be statistically significant
Recommended from our members
Attribution-based motivation treatment efficacy in an online learning environment for students who differ in cognitive elaboration
Attribution-based motivation treatments can boost performance in competitive achievement settings (Perry and Hamm 2017), yet their efficacy relative to mediating processes and affect-based treatments remains largely unexamined. In a two-semester, pre-post, randomized treatment study (n = 806), attributional retraining (AR) and stress-reduction (SR) treatments were administered in an online learning environment to first-year college students who differed in cognitive elaboration (low, high). Low elaborators who received AR outperformed their SR peers by nearly a letter grade on a class test assessed 5 months post-treatment. Path analysis revealed this AR-performance linkage was mediated by causal attributions, perceived control, and positive and negative achievement emotions in a hypothesized causal sequence. Results advance the literature by showing AR (vs. SR) improved performance indirectly via cognitive and affective process variables specified by Weiner’s (1985a, 2012) attribution theory of motivation and emotion
Motivation-focused thinking: Buffering against stress-related physical symptoms and depressive symptomology
Developmental transitions are experienced throughout the life course and necessitate adapting to consequential and unpredictable changes that can undermine health. Our six-month study (n = 239) explored whether selective secondary control striving (motivation-focused thinking) protects against the elevated levels of stress and depressive symptoms increasingly common to young adults navigating the challenging school-to-university transition. Path analyses supplemented with tests of moderated mediation revealed that, for young adults who face challenging obstacles to goal attainment, selective sec-ondary control indirectly reduced long-term stress-related physical and depres-sive symptoms through selective primary control and previously unexamined measures of discrete emotions. Results advance the existing literature by demonstrating that (a) selective secondary control has health benefits for vul-nerable young adults and (b) these benefits are largely a consequence of the process variables proposed in Heckhausen et al.’s (2010) theory
- …