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Showing papers by "United States Department of Energy published in 1977"


Patent
04 Aug 1977
TL;DR: In this paper, the use of desiccants in conjunction with an open-loop drying cycle and a closed loop drying cycle to reclaim the energy expended in vaporizing moisture in harvested crops is described.
Abstract: This invention relates to the use of desiccants in conjunction with an openoop drying cycle and a closed loop drying cycle to reclaim the energy expended in vaporizing moisture in harvested crops. In the closed loop cycle, the drying air is brought into contact with a desiccant after it exits the crop drying bin. Water vapor in the moist air is absorbed by the desiccant, thus reducing the relative humidity of the air. The air is then heated by the used desiccant and returned to the crop bin. During the open loop drying cycle the used desiccant is heated (either fossil or solar energy heat sources may be used) and regenerated at high temperature, driving water vapor from the desiccant. This water vapor is condensed and used to preheat the dilute (wet) desiccant before heat is added from the external source (fossil or solar). The latent heat of vaporization of the moisture removed from the desiccant is reclaimed in this manner. The sensible heat of the regenerated desiccant is utilized in the open loop drying cycle. Also, closed cycle operation implies that no net energy is expended in heating drying air.

48 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the structural changes that two supported molybdenum oxide catalysts undergo upon specific chemical treatments were investigated using Ramaman spectroscopy, showing that all of the spectral features of the unused catalyst are not recovered after this "regeneration" procedure.

46 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of critical reviews in Environmental Control: Vol. 8, No. 1-4, pp. 101-152, focusing on copper in the marine environment.
Abstract: (1977). Copper in the marine environment — Part I. C R C Critical Reviews in Environmental Control: Vol. 8, No. 1-4, pp. 101-152.

30 citations



Patent
31 May 1977
TL;DR: In this paper, a heliostat is rotated about its axis to track the apparent diurnal movement of the sun, while the reflecting surface is substantially simultaneously bowed into a cylindrical trough having a radius adapted to focus incident light at the plane of the receiver aperture.
Abstract: A heliostat apparatus includes a frame which is rotatable about an axis which is parallel to the aperture plane of an elongate receiver. A plurality of flat flexible mirror elements are mounted to the frame between several parallel, uniformly spaced resilient beams which are pivotally connected at their ends to the frame. Channels are mounted to the sides of the beams for supporting the edges of the mirror elements. Each of the beams has a longitudinally varying configuration designed to bow into predetermined, generally circular curvatures of varying radii when the center of the beam is deflected relative to the pivotally connected ends of the beams. All of the parallel resilient beams are simultaneously deflected by a cam shaft assembly extending through openings in the centers of the beams, whereby the mirror elements together form an upwardly concave, cylindrical reflecting surface. The heliostat is rotated about its axis to track the apparent diurnal movement of the sun, while the reflecting surface is substantially simultaneously bowed into a cylindrical trough having a radius adapted to focus incident light at the plane of the receiver aperture.

28 citations


Patent
29 Nov 1977
TL;DR: In this article, a directional detector of gamma rays is described, which consists of a strip of an electrical cuctor of high atomic number backed with a second electrical conductor of low atomic number.
Abstract: A directional detector of gamma rays comprises a strip of an electrical cuctor of high atomic number backed with a strip of a second electrical conductor of low atomic number. These elements are enclosed within an electrical conductor that establishes an electrical ground, maintains a vacuum enclosure and screens out low-energy gamma rays. The detector exhibits a directional sensitivity marked by an increased output in the favored direction by a factor of ten over the output in the unfavored direction.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the fuel element behavior under local off-normal cooling conditions and the possible failure propagation are of special interest in the safety analysis of liquid metal fast breeder Reactors.

3 citations


Patent
30 Mar 1977
TL;DR: In this article, a method and horizontal furnace for vapor phase growth of HgI2 crystals which utilizes controlled axial and radial airflow to maintain the desired temperature gradients is presented. But it is not applicable for use as room-temperature nuclear radiation detectors.
Abstract: A method and horizontal furnace for vapor phase growth of HgI2 crystals which utilizes controlled axial and radial airflow to maintain the desired temperature gradients. The ampoule containing the source material is rotated while axial and radial air tubes are moved in opposite directions during crystal growth to maintain a desired distance and associated temperature gradient with respect to the growing crystal, whereby the crystal interface can advance in all directions, i.e., radial and axial according to the crystallographic structure of the crystal. Crystals grown by this method are particularly applicable for use as room-temperature nuclear radiation detectors.

3 citations


Patent
28 Dec 1977
TL;DR: In this article, the deposition of radionuclides manganese-54, cobalt-58, and cobalt 60 from liquid sodium coolant is controlled by providing surfaces of nickel or high nickel alloys to extract the radions from the liquid sodium, and by providing tungsten, molybdenum or tantalum to prevent or retard radionside deposition.
Abstract: The deposition of radionuclides manganese-54, cobalt-58, and cobalt-60 from liquid sodium coolant is controlled by providing surfaces of nickel or high nickel alloys to extract the radionuclides from the liquid sodium, and by providing surfaces of tungsten, molybdenum or tantalum to prevent or retard radionuclide deposition.

2 citations