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<title>Laboratory for Energy and the Environment (LFEE)</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/18192</link>
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<title>Summary : Photovoltaic International Plan Meeting, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, July 9, 1979.</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35251</link>
<description>Summary : Photovoltaic International Plan Meeting, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, July 9, 1979.

</description>
<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jun 1979 22:58:59 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>The design of regulatory rules</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35250</link>
<description>The design of regulatory rules

Vogelsang, Ingo

</description>
<pubDate>Sat, 28 Apr 1979 22:58:59 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Photovoltaics and the National Park Service : an institutional analysis</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35248</link>
<description>Photovoltaics and the National Park Service : an institutional analysis

Nutt-Powell, Thomas Evan

Sorrell, Levi Anthony

This paper is one of a series resulting from institutional analysis &#13;
of photovoltaic (PV) acceptance. The case reported here involves the &#13;
acceptance of PV by the National Park Service. As part of the Department &#13;
of the Interior, the NPS is an agency exemplifying the federal non- &#13;
defense sector. A modified.organizational set model which concentrates &#13;
on exchanges between and among organizational set elements, was used in &#13;
this study. Though initially the inquiry from the Department of Energy &#13;
to NPS to do a PV field test at a NPS site was considered the perturba- &#13;
tion prompter, preliminary exploration showed an earlier perturbation-- &#13;
the need for energy conservation. The differentiations which followed on &#13;
this perturbation provided an envelope within which PV was subsequently &#13;
considered and accepted. This envelope made an otherwise incompre- &#13;
hensible innovation more comprehensible by its association with an &#13;
ongoing routine of acceptance of energy conservation initiatives. The &#13;
critical role of the NPS's Denver Service Center as an innovation &#13;
mediator is described. The DSC serves such a function routinely for the &#13;
NPS, a reality which greatly enhances the likelihood of acceptance of &#13;
innovations disseminated through this institutional entity.

On cover: Energy Laboratory Utility Systems Program.

</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 29 May 1979 22:58:59 GMT</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Individual burner air/fuel ratio control optical adaptive feedback control system</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35247</link>
<description>Individual burner air/fuel ratio control optical adaptive feedback control system

Beér, James Miklós

Jacques, M. T.

Teare, J. Derek

Conventional combustion control systems for multiburner installations&#13;
which rely on monitoring the average C02 and/or 02 content of the gases&#13;
have a number of inherent limitations on their ability to maintain efficient plant operation. Air infiltration'into the flue or sampling lines&#13;
has the same effect as an instrumental error in causing the control&#13;
system to adjust the stoichiometry to an incorrect level. Even' when the&#13;
overall stoichiometry of the furnace is correctly and accurately controlled&#13;
it is still extremely difficult to ensure that no individual burners are&#13;
operating inefficiently due to local maldistributions of air or fuel, or&#13;
to poor nozzle spray characteristics. The potential for fuel savings and&#13;
for'improved limitation of pollutant emissions has provided strong incentive for the development of individual burner fuel/air ratio control&#13;
systems which would eliminate the shortcomings associated with the global&#13;
control method.&#13;
The present report first reviews past attempts to identify some unique&#13;
property of an individual flame which can be reliably interpreted as an&#13;
indicator of the flame behavior over a wide range of operating conditions..&#13;
Information potentially usable in this manner could be contained in the&#13;
acoustic characteristics of the flame, in the local distribution of key&#13;
chemical species, or in the electromagnetic radiation or absorption&#13;
behavior of regions of the flame.   For many reasons the previous studies&#13;
have tended to concentrate on the optical portion of the electromagnetic&#13;
spectrum, with particular emphasis on emission from flames over much of&#13;
the ultraviolet (u.v.), visible and infrared (i.r.) wavelength regions. A&#13;
brief review is given of the pioneering work of Penzias and his associates, and of the later work carried out at Sheffield University by Smith which&#13;
led to the development of the LandTM control system. All of these studies&#13;
dealt with the infrared emission from flames, wilth particular emphasis on&#13;
the CO2 barnd at 4.3 pm, and on the H0/CO2 binds near 2.8 m.&#13;
The report then addresses the experimental work carried out at M.I.T&#13;
under the sponsorship of five utility companies supporting the M.I.T.&#13;
Energy Laboratory Electric Power Program. This focused initially on&#13;
attempts to use a Land control system in the Combustion Research Facility&#13;
(CRF), with limited success in terms of achieving stability and adequacy&#13;
of control when operating conditions were varied over a moderate range.&#13;
The experiments in the CRF also yielded very useful data on the intensities&#13;
and sources of u.v. emission from No. 6 fuel oil flames over a wide range&#13;
of fuel equivalence ratio. One other set of experiments carried out in the&#13;
CRF made use of equipment and personnel supplied by the Foxboro Company,&#13;
and results of this work are discussed.&#13;
Also included in the report is a summary of measurements carried&#13;
out on a small methane-fueled burner which add appreciably to the&#13;
available information on the dependence of the infrared emission on viewing&#13;
location relative to the flame front and on fuel equivalence ratio.&#13;
The overall results obtained under this program do not leave the&#13;
prospect of individual fuel/air ratio controllers within immediate grasp,&#13;
but they substantially advance the state of knowledge required for attainment of such control. They give a strong indication that satisfactory&#13;
control could be obtained over a wide range of furnace operating conditions&#13;
if both i.r. and u.v. signals were monitored and used in the control&#13;
system.

On cover : Combustion Research Facility.

</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 29 Dec 1981 22:58:59 GMT</pubDate>
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