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Calculation of Nuclear Reactor Cooling Tower Performance With Limited Data Streams

Journal of Thermal Science and Engineering Applications

Katinas, Christopher M.; Reichardt, Thomas A.; Kulp, Thomas J.; d'Entremont, Brian d.; Ray, William R.; Willis, Michael W.

Monitoring of cooling tower performance in a nuclear reactor facility is necessary to ensure safe operation; however, instrumentation for measuring performance characteristics can be difficult to install and may malfunction or break down over long duration experiments. This paper describes employing a thermodynamic approach to quantify cooling tower performance, the Merkel model, which requires only five parameters, namely, inlet water temperature, outlet water temperature, liquid mass flowrate, gas mass flowrate, and wet bulb temperature. Using this model, a general method to determine cooling tower operation for a nuclear reactor was developed in situations when neither the outlet water temperature nor gas mass flowrate are available, the former being a critical piece of information to bound the Merkel integral. Furthermore, when multiple cooling tower cells are used in parallel (as would be in the case of large-scale cooling operations), only the average outlet temperature of the cooling system is used as feedback for fan speed control, increasing the difficulty of obtaining the outlet water temperature for each cell. To address these shortcomings, this paper describes a method to obtain individual cell outlet water temperatures for mechanical forced-air cooling towers via parametric analysis and optimization. In this method, the outlet water temperature for an individual cooling tower cell is acquired as a function of the liquid-to-gas ratio (L/G). Leveraging the tight tolerance on the average outlet water temperature, an error function is generated to describe the deviation of the parameterized L/G to the highly controlled average outlet temperature. The method was able to determine the gas flowrate at rated conditions to be within 3.9% from that obtained from the manufacturer’s specification, while the average error for the four individual cooling cell outlet water temperatures were 1.6 °C, -0.5 °C, -1.0 °C, and 0.3 °C.

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Radiative transfer modeling of surface chemical deposits

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Reichardt, Thomas A.; Kulp, Thomas J.

Remote detection of a surface-bound chemical relies on the recognition of a pattern, or "signature," that is distinct from the background. Such signatures are a function of a chemical's fundamental optical properties, but also depend upon its specific morphology. Importantly, the same chemical can exhibit vastly different signatures depending on the size of particles composing the deposit. We present a parameterized model to account for such morphological effects on surface-deposited chemical signatures. This model leverages computational tools developed within the planetary and atmospheric science communities, beginning with T-matrix and ray-tracing approaches for evaluating the scattering and extinction properties of individual particles based on their size and shape, and the complex refractive index of the material itself. These individual-particle properties then serve as input to the Ambartsumian invariant imbedding solution for the reflectance of a particulate surface composed of these particles. The inputs to the model include parameters associated with a functionalized form of the particle size distribution (PSD) as well as parameters associated with the particle packing density and surface roughness. The model is numerically inverted via Sandia's Dakota package, optimizing agreement between modeled and measured reflectance spectra, which we demonstrate on data acquired on five size-selected silica powders over the 4-16 μm wavelength range. Agreements between modeled and measured reflectance spectra are assessed, while the optimized PSDs resulting from the spectral fitting are then compared to PSD data acquired from independent particle size measurements.

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Hierarchical multi-scale approach to validation and uncertainty quantification of hyper-spectral image modeling

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Engel, Dave W.; Reichardt, Thomas A.; Kulp, Thomas J.; Graff, David L.; Thompson, Sandra E.

Validating predictive models and quantifying uncertainties inherent in the modeling process is a critical component of the HARD Solids Venture program [1]. Our current research focuses on validating physics-based models predicting the optical properties of solid materials for arbitrary surface morphologies and characterizing the uncertainties in these models. We employ a systematic and hierarchical approach by designing physical experiments and comparing the experimental results with the outputs of computational predictive models. We illustrate this approach through an example comparing a micro-scale forward model to an idealized solid-material system and then propagating the results through a system model to the sensor level. Our efforts should enhance detection reliability of the hyper-spectral imaging technique and the confidence in model utilization and model outputs by users and stakeholders.

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Ideal system morphology and reflectivity measurements for radiative-transfer model development and validation

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Kulp, Thomas J.; Sommers, R.L.; Krafcik, Karen L.; Mills, Bernice E.; Reichardt, Thomas A.; Dorrance, J.K.; Lacasse, C.F.; Fuerschbach, Kyle H.; Craven, Julia M.

This paper describes measurements being made on a series of material systems for the purpose of developing a radiative-transfer model that describes the reflectance of light by granular solids. It is well recognized that the reflectance spectra of granular materials depend on their intrinsic (n(λ) and k(λ)) and extrinsic (morphological) properties. There is, however, a lack of robust and proven models to relate spectra to these parameters. The described work is being conducted in parallel with a modeling effort1 to address this need. Each follows a common developmental spiral in which material properties are varied and the ability of the model to calculate the effects of the changes are tested. The parameters being varied include particle size/shape, packing density, material birefringence, optical thickness, and spectral contribution of a substrate. It is expected that the outcome of this work will be useful in interpreting reflectance data for hyperspectral imaging (HSI), and for a variety of other areas that rely on it.

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Standoff ultraviolet raman scattering detection of trace levels of explosives

Reichardt, Thomas A.; Bisson, Scott E.; Kulp, Thomas J.

Ultraviolet (UV) Raman scattering with a 244-nm laser is evaluated for standoff detection of explosive compounds. The measured Raman scattering albedo is incorporated into a performance model that focused on standoff detection of trace levels of explosives. This model shows that detection at {approx}100 m would likely require tens of seconds, discouraging application at such ranges, and prohibiting search-mode detection, while leaving open the possibility of short-range point-and-stare detection. UV Raman spectra are also acquired for a number of anticipated background surfaces: tile, concrete, aluminum, cloth, and two different car paints (black and silver). While these spectra contained features in the same spectral range as those for TNT, we do not observe any spectra similar to that of TNT.

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Pump-probe detection of surface-bound organophosphonate compounds

2011 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics: Laser Science to Photonic Applications, CLEO 2011

Reichardt, Thomas A.; Bisson, Scott E.; Headrick, Jeffrey M.; Farrow, Roger L.; Kulp, Thomas J.

We demonstrate a pump-probe approach for the detection of organophosphonate compounds on substrates, in which the pump pulse fragments the parent molecule and the released phosphorous monoxide (PO) fragment is probed using laser-induced fluorescence. © 2011 OSA.

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Photofragmentation approaches for the detection of polyatomic molecules

Lasers and Electro-Optics/Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference: 2010 Laser Science to Photonic Applications, CLEO/QELS 2010

Reichardt, Thomas A.; Hoops, Alexandra A.; Headrick, Jeffrey M.; Farrow, Roger L.; Settersten, Thomas B.; Bisson, Scott E.; Kulp, Thomas J.

We review three photofragmentation detection approaches, describing the detection of (1) vapor-phase mercuric chloride by photofragment emission, (2) vapor-phase nitro-containing compounds by photofragmentation-ionization, and (3) surface-bound organophosphonate compounds by photofragmentation-laser-induced fluorescence. © 2010 Optical Society of America.

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Analysis of flow-cytometer scattering and fluorescence data to identify particle mixtures

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Reichardt, Thomas A.; Bisson, Scott E.; Crocker, Robert W.; Kulp, Thomas J.

As part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security Detect-to-Protect program, a multilab [Sandia National Laboratories (SNL), Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories (LLNL), Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), and Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)] effort is addressing the need for useable detect-to-warn bioaerosol sensors for public facility protection. Towards this end, the SNL team is employing rapid fluorogenic staining to infer the protein content of bioaerosols. This is being implemented in a flow cytometry platform wherein each particle detected generates coincident signals of forward scatter, side scatter, and fluorescence. Several thousand such coincident signal sets are typically collected to generate a probability distribution over the scattering and fluorescence values. A linear unmixing analysis is performed to differentiate components in the mixture. After forming a library of pure component distributions from measured pure material samples, the distribution of an unknown mixture of particles is treated as a linear combination of the pure component distributions. The scattering/fluorescence probability distribution data vector a is considered the product of two vectors, the fractional profile f and the scattering/ fluorescence distributions from pure components P. A least squares procedure minimizes the magnitude of the residual vector e in the expression a = fP T + e. The profile f designates a weighting fraction for each particle type included in the set of pure components, providing the composition of the unknown mixture. We discuss testing of this analysis approach and steps we have taken to evaluate the effect of interferents, both known and unknown.

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Confirmatory measurement channels for LIF-based bioaerosol instrumentation

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Bisson, Scott E.; Crocker, Robert W.; Kulp, Thomas J.; Reichardt, Thomas A.; Reilly, Peter T.A.; Whitten, William B.

As part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security Detect-to-Protect (DTP) program, a multilab [Sandia National Laboratories (SNL), Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories (LLNL), Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), and Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)] effort is addressing the need for useable detect-to-warn bioaerosol sensors for public facility protection. Towards this end, the SNL team is investigating the use of rapid fluorogenic staining to infer the protein content of bioaerosols. This is being implemented in a flow cytometer wherein each particle detected generates coincident signals of correlated forward scatter, side scatter, and fluorescence. Several thousand such coincident signal sets are typically collected to generate a distribution describing the probability of observing a particle with certain scattering and fluorescence values. These data are collected for sample particles in both a stained and unstained state. A linear unmixing analysis is performed to differentiate components in the mixture. In this paper, we discuss the implementation of the staining process and the cytometric measurement, the results of their application to the analysis of known and blind samples, and a potential instrumental implementations that would use staining.

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Next generation gas imaging: Active differential absorption measurement to enhance sensitivity and quantify concentration

Proceedings of the Air and Waste Management Association's Annual Conference and Exhibition, AWMA

Bambha, Ray B.; Reichardt, Thomas A.; Sommers, Ricky; Birtola, Sal; Hubbard, Gary; Kulp, Thomas J.; Schmitt, Randal L.; Tamura, Masayuki; Kothari, Kiran

A discussion on an active gas imager that can potentially improve system performance and reliability in Smart Leak Detection and Repair covers conventional single-wavelength imaging; differential imaging; methane detection; modification for detecting fugitive emissions relevant to refineries and chemical plants; and system description. This is an abstract of a paper presented at the AWMA's 99th Annual Conference and Exhibition (New Orleans, LA 6/20-23/2006).

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36 Results
36 Results