Patents Assigned to The United States of America as represented by the United States Deparment of Energy
  • Patent number: 8260566
    Abstract: An apparatus and method relating to screening radioactive waste are disclosed for ensuring that at least one calculated parameter for the measurement data of a sample falls within a range between an upper limit and a lower limit prior to the sample being packaged for disposal. The apparatus includes a radiation detector configured for detecting radioactivity and radionuclide content of the of the sample of radioactive waste and generating measurement data in response thereto, and a collimator including at least one aperture to direct a field of view of the radiation detector. The method includes measuring a radioactive content of a sample, and calculating one or more parameters from the radioactive content of the sample.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 25, 2010
    Date of Patent: September 4, 2012
    Assignee: The United States of America, as represented by the United States Deparment of Energy
    Inventors: Douglas W. Akers, Lyle G. Roybal, Hopi Salomon, Charles Leroy Williams
  • Patent number: 8135244
    Abstract: A fiber-based optical pressure-sensor, made using semiconductor nanocrystal quantum dots (NQDs) as the active transducing material, provides response time fast enough for shock wave measurements. For NQDs, the shift in band gap as a result of applied pressure can be observed as a shift of the photoluminescence (PL) peak. Further, the shift of the principal absorbance feature allows pressure measurements faster than those obtainable by following the PL peak.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 2007
    Date of Patent: March 13, 2012
    Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Deparment of Energy
    Inventors: Robert K. Sander, Kirill K. Zhuravlev, Richard D. Schaller, Jeffrey M. Pietryga, Michael Whitehead
  • Patent number: 4516632
    Abstract: A microchannel crossflow fluid heat exchanger and a method for its fabrication are disclosed. The heat exchanger is formed from a stack of thin metal sheets which are bonded together. The stack consists of alternating slotted and unslotted sheets. Each of the slotted sheets includes multiple parallel slots which form fluid flow channels when sandwiched between the unslotted sheets. Successive slotted sheets in the stack are rotated ninety degrees with respect to one another so as to form two sets of orthogonally extending fluid flow channels which are arranged in a crossflow configuration. The heat exchanger has a high surface to volume ratio, a small dead volume, a high heat transfer coefficient, and is suitable for use with fluids under high pressures. The heat exchanger has particular application in a Stirling engine that utilizes a liquid as the working substance.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 31, 1982
    Date of Patent: May 14, 1985
    Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Deparment of Energy
    Inventors: Gregory W. Swift, Albert Migliori, John C. Wheatley