Patents by Inventor Troy J. Tranter

Troy J. Tranter has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20040052705
    Abstract: The invention includes a method of separating isotopes from a mixture containing at least two isotopes in a solution. A first isotope is precipitated and is collected from the solution. A daughter isotope is generated and collected from the first isotope. The invention includes a method of producing an actinium-225/bismuth-213 product from a material containing thorium-229 and thorium-232. A solution is formed containing nitric acid and the material and iodate is added to form a thorium iodate precipitate. A supernatant is separated from the thorium iodate precipitate and a second volume of nitric acid is added to the precipitate. The precipitate is stored and a decay product comprising actinium-225 and bismuth-213 is generated in the second volume of nitric acid which is then separated from the thorium iodate precipitate, filtered, and treated using at least one chromatographic procedure. The invention also includes a system for producing an actinium-225/bismuth-213 product.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 18, 2002
    Publication date: March 18, 2004
    Inventors: Troy J. Tranter, Terry A. Todd, Leroy C. Lewis, Joseph P. Henscheid
  • Patent number: 6667261
    Abstract: An open-cell glass crystalline porous material made from hollow microspheres which are cenospheres obtained from fly ash, having an open-cell porosity of up to 90 vol. % is produced. The cenospheres are separated into fractions based on one or more of grain size, density, magnetic or non-magnetic, and perforated or non-perforated. Selected fractions are molded and agglomerated by sintering with a binder at a temperature below the softening temperature, or without a binder at a temperature about, or above, the softening temperature but below the temperature of liquidity. The porous material produced has an apparent density of 0.3-0.6 g/cm3, a compressive strength in the range of 1.2-3.5 MPa, and two types of openings: through-flow wall pores in the cenospheres of 0.1-30 micrometers, and interglobular voids between the cenospheres of 20-100 micrometers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 15, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 23, 2003
    Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of Energy
    Inventors: Alexander G. Anshits, Olga M. Sharonova, Tatiana A. Vereshchagina, Irina D. Zykova, Yurii A. Revenko, Alexander A. Tretyakov, Albert S. Aloy, Rem I. Lubtsev, Dieter A. Knecht, Troy J. Tranter, Yevgeny Macheret
  • Publication number: 20030138563
    Abstract: An ion processing element employing composite media disposed in a porous substrate, for facilitating removal of selected chemical species from a fluid stream. The ion processing element includes a porous fibrous glass substrate impregnated by composite media having one or more active components supported by a matrix material of polyacrylonitrile. The active components are effective in removing, by various mechanisms, one or more constituents from a fluid stream passing through the ion processing element. Due to the porosity and large surface area of both the composite medium and the substrate in which it is disposed, a high degree of contact is achieved between the active component and the fluid stream being processed. Further, the porosity of the matrix material and the substrate facilitates use of the ion processing element in high volume applications where it is desired to effectively process a high volume flows.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 21, 2002
    Publication date: July 24, 2003
    Inventors: Nick R. Mann, Troy J. Tranter, Terry A. Todd, Ferdinand Sebesta
  • Patent number: 6514566
    Abstract: An ion processing element employing composite media disposed in a porous substrate, for facilitating removal of selected chemical species from a fluid stream. The ion processing element includes a porous fibrous glass substrate impregnated by composite media having one or more active components supported by a matrix material of polyacrylonitrile. The active components are effective in removing, by various mechanisms, one or more constituents from a fluid stream passing through the ion processing element. Due to the porosity and large surface area of both the composite medium and the substrate in which it is disposed, a high degree of contact is achieved between the active component and the fluid stream being processed. Further, the porosity of the matrix material and the substrate facilitates use of the ion processing element in high volume applications where it is desired to effectively process a high volume flows.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 19, 2001
    Date of Patent: February 4, 2003
    Assignee: Bechtel BWXT Idaho, LLC
    Inventors: Nick R. Mann, Troy J. Tranter, Terry A. Todd, Ferdinand Sebesta
  • Patent number: 6472579
    Abstract: Solidification of liquid radioactive waste, and other hazardous wastes, is accomplished by the method of the invention by incorporating the waste into a porous glass crystalline molded block. The porous block is first loaded with the liquid waste and then dehydrated and exposed to thermal treatment at 50-1,000° C. The porous glass crystalline molded block consists of glass crystalline hollow microspheres separated from fly ash (cenospheres), resulting from incineration of fossil plant coals. In a preferred embodiment, the porous glass crystalline blocks are formed from perforated cenospheres of grain size −400+50, wherein the selected cenospheres are consolidated into the porous molded block with a binder, such as liquid silicate glass. The porous blocks are then subjected to repeated cycles of saturating with liquid waste, and drying, and after the last cycle the blocks are subjected to calcination to transform the dried salts to more stable oxides.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 27, 2000
    Date of Patent: October 29, 2002
    Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Department of Energy
    Inventors: Alexander G. Anshits, Tatiana A. Vereshchagina, Elena N. Voskresenskaya, Eduard M. Kostin, Vyacheslav F. Pavlov, Yurii A. Revenko, Alexander A. Tretyakov, Olga M. Sharonova, Albert S. Aloy, Natalia V. Sapozhnikova, Dieter A. Knecht, Troy J. Tranter, Yevgeny Macheret
  • Patent number: 6444162
    Abstract: An open-cell glass crystalline porous material made from hollow microspheres which are cenospheres obtained from fly ash, having an open-cell porosity of up to 90 vol. % is produced. The cenospheres are separated into fractions based on one or more of grain size, density, magnetic or non-magnetic, and perforated or non-perforated. Selected fractions are molded and agglomerated by sintering with a binder at a temperature below the softening temperature, or without a binder at a temperature about, or above, the softening temperature but below the temperature of liquidity. The porous material produced has an apparent density of 0.3-0.6 g/cm3, a compressive strength in the range of 1.2-3.5 MPa, and two types of openings: through-flow wall pores in the cenospheres of 0.1-30 micrometers, and interglobular voids between the cenospheres of 20-100 micrometers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 27, 2000
    Date of Patent: September 3, 2002
    Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of Energy
    Inventors: Alexander G. Anshits, Olga M. Sharonova, Tatiana A. Vereshchagina, Irina D. Zykova, Yurii A. Revenko, Alexander A. Tretyakov, Albert S. Aloy, Rem I. Lubtsev, Dieter A. Knecht, Troy J. Tranter, Yevgeny Macheret
  • Publication number: 20020108899
    Abstract: An ion processing element employing composite media disposed in a porous substrate, for facilitating removal of selected chemical species from a fluid stream. The ion processing element includes a porous fibrous glass substrate impregnated by composite media having one or more active components supported by a matrix material of polyacrylonitrile. The active components are effective in removing, by various mechanisms, one or more constituents from a fluid stream passing through the ion processing element. Due to the porosity and large surface area of both the composite medium and the substrate in which it is disposed, a high degree of contact is achieved between the active component and the fluid stream being processed. Further, the porosity of the matrix material and the substrate facilitates use of the ion processing element in high volume applications where it is desired to effectively process a high volume flows.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 19, 2001
    Publication date: August 15, 2002
    Inventors: Nick R. Mann, Troy J. Tranter, Terry A. Todd, Ferdinand Sebesta
  • Patent number: 5802438
    Abstract: An improved method for producing .sup.99m Tc compositions. .sup.100 Mo metal is irradiated with photons in a particle (electron) accelerator to produce .sup.99 Mo metal which is dissolved in a solvent. A solvated .sup.99 Mo product is then dried to generate a supply of .sup.99 MoO.sub.3 crystals. The crystals are thereafter heated at a temperature which will sublimate the crystals and form a gaseous mixture containing vaporized .sup.99m TcO.sub.3 and vaporized .sup.99m TcO.sub.2 but will not cause the production of vaporized .sup.99 MoO.sub.3. The mixture is then combined with an oxidizing gas to generate a gaseous stream containing vaporized .sup.99m Tc.sub.2 O.sub.7. Next, the gaseous stream is cooled to a temperature sufficient to convert the vaporized .sup.99m Tc.sub.2 O.sub.7 into a condensed .sup.99m Tc-containing product. The product has high purity levels resulting from the use of reduced temperature conditions and ultrafine crystalline .sup.99 MoO.sub.3 starting materials with segregated .sup.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 19, 1997
    Date of Patent: September 1, 1998
    Assignee: Lockheed Martin Idaho Technologies Company
    Inventors: Ralph G. Bennett, Jerry D. Christian, Robert J. Kirkham, Troy J. Tranter