Chemical Technology Division annual technical report, 1990 [electronic resource].
- Published:
- Washington, D.C. : United States. Dept. of Energy, 1991.
Oak Ridge, Tenn. : Distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Dept. of Energy. - Physical Description:
- Pages: (244 pages) : digital, PDF file
- Additional Creators:
- Argonne National Laboratory, United States. Department of Energy, and United States. Department of Energy. Office of Scientific and Technical Information
Access Online
- Restrictions on Access:
- Free-to-read Unrestricted online access
- Summary:
- Highlights of the Chemical Technology (CMT) Division's activities during 1990 are presented. In this period, CMT conducted research and development in the following areas: (1) electrochemical technology, including advanced batteries and fuel cells; (2) technology for coal- fired magnetohydrodynamics and fluidized-bed combustion; (3) methods for recovery of energy from municipal waste and techniques for treatment of hazardous organic waste; (4) the reaction of nuclear waste glass and spent fuel under conditions expected for a high-level waste repository; (5) processes for separating and recovering transuranic elements from nuclear waste streams, concentrating plutonium solids in pyrochemical residues by aqueous biphase extraction, and treating natural and process waters contaminated by volatile organic compounds; (6) recovery processes for discharged fuel and the uranium blanket in the Integral Fast Reactor (IFR); (7) processes for removal of actinides in spent fuel from commercial water-cooled nuclear reactors and burnup in IFRs; and (8) physical chemistry of selected materials in environments simulating those of fission and fusion energy systems. The Division also has a program in basic chemistry research in the areas of fluid catalysis for converting small molecules to desired products; materials chemistry for superconducting oxides and associated and ordered solutions at high temperatures; interfacial processes of importance to corrosion science, high-temperature superconductivity, and catalysis; and the geochemical processes responsible for trace-element migration within the earth's crust. The Analytical Chemistry Laboratory in CMT provides a broad range of analytical chemistry support services to the scientific and engineering programs at Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). 66 refs., 69 figs., 6 tabs.
- Report Numbers:
- E 1.99:anl-91/18
anl-91/18 - Subject(s):
- Other Subject(s):
- Anl
- Research Programs
- Electric Batteries
- Electrochemistry
- Fast Reactors
- Fluidized-Bed Combustion
- Fuel Cells
- Hazardous Materials
- High-Level Radioactive Wastes
- Magnetohydrodynamics
- Municipal Wastes
- Physical Chemistry
- Progress Report
- Refuse Derived Fuels
- Reprocessing
- Chemical Reactions
- Chemistry
- Combustion
- Direct Energy Converters
- Document Types
- Electrochemical Cells
- Epithermal Reactors
- Fluid Mechanics
- Fuels
- Hydrodynamics
- Materials
- Mechanics
- National Organizations
- Oxidation
- Radioactive Materials
- Radioactive Wastes
- Reactors
- Separation Processes
- Thermochemical Processes
- Us Aec
- Us Doe
- Us Erda
- Us Organizations
- Wastes
- Note:
- Published through SciTech Connect.
05/01/1991.
"anl-91/18"
"DE91014718"
Not Available. - Funding Information:
- W-31109-ENG-38
View MARC record | catkey: 13844700