17,298 research outputs found
Control for nuclear thermionic power source
A control for a power source which includes nuclear fuel interspersed with thermionic converters, is described. A power regulator maintains a substantially constant output voltage to a variable load, and a control circuit drives a neutron flux regulator in accordance with the current supplied to the power regulator and the neutron flux density in the region of the converters. The control circuit generates a control signal which is the difference between the neutron flux density and a linear function of the current, and drives the neutron regulator in a direction to decrease or increase the neutron flux according to the polarity of the control signal
Nuclear radiation problems, unmanned thermionic reactor ion propulsion spacecraft
A nuclear thermionic reactor as the electric power source for an electric propulsion spacecraft introduces a nuclear radiation environment that affects the spacecraft configuration, the use and location of electrical insulators and the science experiments. The spacecraft is conceptually configured to minimize the nuclear shield weight by: (1) a large length to diameter spacecraft; (2) eliminating piping penetrations through the shield; and (3) using the mercury propellant as gamma shield. Since the alumina material is damaged by the high nuclear radiation environment in the reactor it is desirable to locate the alumina insulator outside the reflector or develop a more radiation resistant insulator
Closed-loop Dynamics of In-core Thermionic Reactor Systems
Using a point model of an in-core thermionic converter, alternative schemes for providing closed loop reactor control were investigated. It was found that schemes based on variable gain power regulation buffers which use the reactor current as the control variable provide complete protection from thermionic burnout and also provide a virtually constant voltage to the user. A side benefit is that the emitter temperature transients are small-even for a complete electric load drop the emitter temperature transient is less than 100 deg K. The current regulation scheme was selected for further study with a distributed parameter model which was developed to account for variations in thermionic and heat transfer properties along the length of a cylindrical converter. It was found that even though the emitter temperature distribution is about 200 deg K along the converter length, the dynamic properties are unchanged when using the current control scheme
Development of a Polysilicon Process Based on Chemical Vapor Deposition of Dichlorosilane in an Advanced Siemen's Reactor
Dichlorosilane (DCS) was used as the feedstock for an advanced decomposition reactor for silicon production. The advanced reactor had a cool bell jar wall temperature, 300 C, when compared to Siemen's reactors previously used for DCS decomposition. Previous reactors had bell jar wall temperatures of approximately 750 C. The cooler wall temperature allows higher DCS flow rates and concentrations. A silicon deposition rate of 2.28 gm/hr-cm was achieved with power consumption of 59 kWh/kg. Interpretation of data suggests that a 2.8 gm/hr-cm deposition rate is possible. Screening of lower cost materials of construction was done as a separate program segment. Stainless Steel (304 and 316), Hastalloy B, Monel 400 and 1010-Carbon Steel were placed individually in an experimental scale reactor. Silicon was deposited from trichlorosilane feedstock. The resultant silicon was analyzed for electrically active and metallic impurities as well as carbon. No material contributed significant amounts of electrically active or metallic impurities, but all contributed carbon
Ability of fitness testing to predict injury risk during initial tactical training: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Potential Theory on Trees, Graphs and Ahlfors Regular Metric Spaces
We investigate connections between potential theories on a Ahlfors-regular
metric space X, on a graph G associated with X, and on the tree T obtained by
removing the "horizontal edges" in G. Applications to the calculation of set
capacity are given.Comment: 45 pages; presentation improved based on referee comment
Pressure distributions on three different cruciform aft-control surfaces of a wingless missile at Mach 1.60, 2.36, and 3.70. Volume 2: Clipped delta tail
Pressure coefficients were obtained in the Langley Unitary Plan wind tunnel for a wingless missile with a clipped delta tail. The angle of attack was varied from -4 deg to 20 deg, model roll angle was varied from 0 deg to 90 deg in 22.5 deg increments, and tail deflections were 0 deg to - 15 deg. The pressures were measured on two adjacent tail surfaces using 91 pressure orifices per tail surface. Results are presented in plotted and tabular form
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