578 research outputs found
Estimate of the Fast Effect in the Lid Tank Source Plate
An estimate was made of the fast effect in the lid tank source plate. The number of fast fissions per thermal fission is 0.019. (auth
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Bubble growth in superheated He-II
Bubble growth in superheated He-II is controlled by the transfer of heat to the surface of the growing bubble by nonlinear Gorter-Mellink counterflow. The present work presents analytic formulas for the bubble radius as a function of time in the limiting cases of small and large superheats. The formulas include the effect of the inertial reaction of the surrounding liquid to the expansion of the bubble. A numerical example shows that bubble velocities of the order of meters per second are possible. A related problem, involving only heat transfer but no movement of the liquid, is the motion of the free surface of superheated He-II in a very long tube. This problem has a similarity solution. The interfacial velocity in the tube is much smaller than the bubble growth velocity. 1 ref
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Propagation of normal zones of finite size in large, composite superconductors
Very large, composite superconductors have been proposed for use in energy storage magnets. A typical conductor, rated at 230 kA, has been discussed by J. Waynert, Y. Eyssa, and X. Huang, namely, a 6-cm aluminum cylinder with superconducting filaments on its outer surface. Owing to its large size and nonuniform distribution of filaments, such a conductor can sustain normal zones of finite size that travel at a uniform velocity along the conductor. This paper presents a simple, analytical model that permits determination of the conditions under which such zones can exist and the size and velocity of such zones. It has been shown that the transport current has a threshold value below which finite normal zones cannot exist and that the propagation velocity corresponding to this threshold current, though not zero, is the smallest possible. 1 ref., 3 figs
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Quench pressure, thermal expulsion, and normal zone propagation in internally cooled superconductors
When a nonrecovering normal zone appears in an internally cooled superconductor, the pressure in the conductor rises, helium is expelled from its ends, and the normal zone grows in size. This paper presents a model of these processes that allows calculation of the pressure, the expulsion velocity, and the propagation velocity with simple formulas. The model is intended to apply to conductors such as the cable-in-conduit conductor of the Westinghouse LCT (WH-LCT) coil, the helium volumes of which have very large length-to-diameter ratios (3 /times/ 10/sup 5/). The predictions of the model agree with the rather limited data available from propagation experiments carried out on the WH-LCT coil. 3 refs., 1 fig
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Parametric study of the stability margin of cable-in-conduit superconductors: theory
Recently, Lue, Miller, and Dresner reported that the stability margin of cable-in-conduit superconductors is multivalued for certain combinations of transport current, ambient helium pressure, and externally imposed helium flow. There is a limiting transport current below which the stability margin is single-valued and equal to the upper stability margin. This theory is used here to determine the scaling of the limiting transport current with critical temperature, ambient helium temperature, resistivity of copper, length of the heated zone, duration of the heat pulse, hydraulic diameter of the helium-filled part of the cable, volume fraction of copper in the metal, and volume fraction of metal in the cable. Combined with experimental data, the scaling relation provides a sound basis for design
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Analytic solution for the propagation velocity in superconducting composities
The propagation velocity of normal zones in composite superconductors has been calculated analytically for the case of constant thermophysical properties, including the effects of current sharing. The solution is compared with that of a more elementary theory in which current sharing is neglected, i.e., in which there is a sharp transition from the superconducting to the normal state. The solution is also compared with experiment. This comparison demonstrates the important influence of transient heat transfer on the propagation velocity
To Adapt or Not to Adapt – Consequences of Adapting Driver and Traffic Light Agents
One way to cope with the increasing traffic demand is to integrate standard solutions with more intelligent control measures. However, the result of possible interferences between intelligent control or information provision tools and other components of the overall traffic system is not easily predictable. This paper discusses the effects of integrating co-adaptive decision-making regarding route choices (by drivers) and control measures (by traffic lights). The motivation behind this is that optimization of traffic light control is starting to be integrated with navigation support for drivers. We use microscopic, agent-based modelling and simulation, in opposition to the classical network analysis, as this work focuses on the effect of local adaptation. In a scenario that exhibits features comparable to real-world networks, we evaluate different types of adaptation by drivers and by traffic lights, based on local perceptions. In order to compare the performance, we have also used a global level optimization method based on genetic algorithms
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