2,767 research outputs found
Alternatives for Measuring Hazardous Waste Reduction
PTI Project number 233U-4913FRHWRIC Project Number 89006
A highly efficient engineering tool for three-dimensional scramjet flowfield and heat transfer computations
The SIMPLE-based parabolic flow code, SHIP3D, was under development for use as a parametric design and analysis tool for scramjets. Some capabilities and applications of the code are demonstrated, and a report on its current status is given. The focus is on the combustor for which the code was mostly used. Recently, it was also applied to nozzle flows. Code validation results are presented for combustor unit problems involving film cooling, transverse fuel injection, and nozzle test. A parametric study of a film cooled or transpiration cooled Mach 16 combustor is also conducted to illustrate the application of the code to a design problem
A Membrane Approach to CO2 Capture
For the past eight years, Membrane Technology and Research, Inc. (MTR) sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, has been developing membrane technology to capture CO2 from power plant flue gas. A 20 ton/day test system has been built and operated at two field sites. The technology is moving to the 200 ton/day (10 MWe) demonstration scale. A block diagram of the MTR process is shown in Figure 1. One innovation of this process is the use of a two-step membrane design where the second step uses a membrane operating with air sweep to selectively recycle CO2 to the boiler. The use of combustion air to provide driving force for CO2 separation significantly reduces the energy cost. Because the air
to the boiler already contains CO2, the CO2 concentration in the flue gas leaving the boiler increases from 13% CO2 to as much as 20% CO2. The removal rate required by the first step membrane is then reduced and the concentration of CO2 in the membrane permeate is increase to the 60 to 75% range.
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Estrategias de formulación de los mercados de abasto y su influencia en la sociedad y cultura
Los mercados de abasto es una de las infraestructuras más antiguas de comercialización que convive con el retail moderno, manteniendo su posicionamiento, gracias no solo a la ventaja competitiva del producto fresco sino a los impactos sociales y culturales que generan. Por otro lado los supermercados y su gran desarrollo logÃstico operacional y fuerte crecimiento, han modificado los hábitos de compra del consumidor, con la creación de distintos formatos de venta, posicionándose cada vez más en la preferencia de compra, pudiéndose perder ese potencial beneficio sociocultural, por lo que los mercados de abasto tradicionales necesitan implementar nuevas estrategias que les permita seguir desarrollando esos aspectos relevantes de la sociedad, recuperando sus orÃgenes de ser edificaciones potencialmente influyentes de su entorno, a través de intervenciones que generan vinculaciones sociales y culturales, encontrándose en la investigación soluciones como: Beneficios sociales a través de la integración estratégica de comerciantes y vecinos, Beneficios urbanos a través de la integración con su entorno, Beneficios culturales a través de nuevos servicios con valor agregado, mejoras de los servicios internos implementando el diseño emocional y merchandising en la exhibición
Next generation software environments : principles, problems, and research directions
The past decade has seen a burgeoning of research and development in software environments. Conferences have been devoted to the topic of practical environments, journal papers produced, and commercial systems sold. Given all the activity, one might expect a great deal of consensus on issues, approaches, and techniques. This is not the case, however. Indeed, the term "environment" is still used in a variety of conflicting ways. Nevertheless substantial progress has been made and we are at least nearing consensus on many critical issues.The purpose of this paper is to characterize environments, describe several important principles that have emerged in the last decade or so, note current open problems, and describe some approaches to these problems, with particular emphasis on the activities of one large-scale research program, the Arcadia project. Consideration is also given to two related topics: empirical evaluation and technology transition. That is, how can environments and their constituents be evaluated, and how can new developments be moved effectively into the production sector
Radiation content of Conformally flat initial data
We study the radiation of energy and linear momentum emitted to infinity by
the headon collision of binary black holes, starting from rest at a finite
initial separation, in the extreme mass ratio limit. For these configurations
we identify the radiation produced by the initially conformally flat choice of
the three geometry. This identification suggests that the radiated energy and
momentum of headon collisions will not be dominated by the details of the
initial data for evolution of holes from initial proper separations
. For non-headon orbits, where the amount of radiation is orders of
magnitude larger, the conformally flat initial data may provide a relative even
better approximation.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Seismic reflections from depths of less than two meters
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from "http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com".Three distinct seismic reflections were obtained from within the upper 2.1 m of flood-plain alluvium in the Arkansas River valley near Great Bend, Kansas. Reflections were observed at depths of 0.63, 1.46, and 2.10 m and confirmed by finite-difference wave-equation modeling. The wavefield was densely sampled by placing geophones at 5-cm intervals, and near-source nonelastic deformation was minimized by using a very small seismic impulse source. For the reflections to be visible within this shallow range, low seismic P-wave velocities (<300 m/s) and high dominant-frequency content of the data (∼450 Hz) were essential. The practical implementation of high-resolution seismic imaging at these depths has the potential to complement ground-penetrating radar (GPR), chiefly in areas where materials exhibiting high electrical conductivity, such as clays, prevent the effective use of GPR. Potential applications of these results exist in hydrogeology and environmental, Quaternary, and neotectonic geology
X ray imaging microscope for cancer research
The NASA technology employed during the Stanford MSFC LLNL Rocket X Ray Spectroheliograph flight established that doubly reflecting, normal incidence multilayer optics can be designed, fabricated, and used for high resolution x ray imaging of the Sun. Technology developed as part of the MSFC X Ray Microscope program, showed that high quality, high resolution multilayer x ray imaging microscopes are feasible. Using technology developed at Stanford University and at the DOE Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), Troy W. Barbee, Jr. has fabricated multilayer coatings with near theoretical reflectivities and perfect bandpass matching for a new rocket borne solar observatory, the Multi-Spectral Solar Telescope Array (MSSTA). Advanced Flow Polishing has provided multilayer mirror substrates with sub-angstrom (rms) smoothnesss for the astronomical x ray telescopes and x ray microscopes. The combination of these important technological advancements has paved the way for the development of a Water Window Imaging X Ray Microscope for cancer research
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