Pressure Testing of New 8” Pipeline Lateral With Air

Author(s):  
K. K. Botros ◽  
J. Geerligs ◽  
A. Glover ◽  
G. Nahas

A procedure for pressure testing of small diameter pipelines (up to NPS 12) using air has been developed based on pilot test results conducted on a controlled simulated test section of a small volume = 18.5 m3. This paper describes the simulated test facility and presents results of five simulated tests with different size pinhole leaks. A model describing leaks and effects of variation in air temperature has been developed, and together with the test results, a criteria for the upper limit of pipe volume to leak area ratio for implementation of air testing for various pipe sizes, has been arrived at. The procedure was then developed and utilized on a project approved by the Alberta Energy Utility Board. Results of this test on a new 12.2 km NPS 8 pipeline lateral in Alberta are also presented.

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
David E. Kretschmann ◽  
Ron Faller ◽  
Jason Hascall ◽  
John Reid ◽  
Dean Sicking ◽  
...  

1983 ◽  
Vol 105 (2) ◽  
pp. 348-353 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Wright ◽  
L. L. Tignac

Rocketdyne is under contract to the Department of Energy for the development of heat exchanger technology that will allow coal to be burned for power generation and cogeneration applications. This effort involves both atmospheric fluidized bed and pulverized coal combustion systems. In addition, the heat exchanger designs cover both metallic and ceramic materials for high-temperature operations. This paper reports on the laboratory and small AFB test results completed to date. It also covers the design and installation of a 6×6 ft atmospheric fluidized bed test facility being used to correlate and expand the knowledge gained from the initial tests. The paper concludes by showing the direction this technology is taking and outlining the steps to follow in subsequent programs.


2001 ◽  
Vol 2001 (1) ◽  
pp. 1307-1322
Author(s):  
Mike Boyle ◽  
Larry Sasser ◽  
Jeff Guild ◽  
Dave Pollack

Author(s):  
Alan R. May Estebaranz ◽  
Richard J. Williams ◽  
Simon I. Hogg ◽  
Philip W. Dyer

A laboratory scale test facility has been developed to investigate deposition in steam turbines under conditions that are representative of those in steam power generation cycles. The facility is an advanced two-reactor vessel test arrangement, which is a more flexible and more accurately controllable refinement to the single reactor vessel test arrangement described previously in ASME Paper No. GT2014-25517 [1]. The commissioning of the new test facility is described in this paper, together with the results from a series of tests over a range of steam conditions, which show the effect of steam conditions (particularly steam pressure) on the amount and type of deposits obtained. Comparisons are made between the test results and feedback/experience of copper fouling in real machines.


1984 ◽  
Vol 45 (C1) ◽  
pp. C1-101-C1-104
Author(s):  
T. Ando ◽  
S. Shimamoto ◽  
T. Hiyama ◽  
H. Tsuji ◽  
Y. Takahashi ◽  
...  

An extended test of a 60-cm-bore Nb3Sn coil (TMC-I), constructed as a development of superconducting toroidal coil in tokamak machine, has been carried out in the cluster test facility. A 192-cm-length (one turn) normal zone, nucleated by a heat-input in the innermost turn, is recovered to superconducting state at 6 kA and 10 T. For the manual dump with a decay time constant of 6.6 sec (B = 1.0 T/sec), no damage is found on the TMC-I. In addition, a out-of-plane force mode operation, using one of the cluster test coils, is done with no trouble. With these good results, the first stage in TMC-I test was completed. And as the next stage, up-grading the cluster test facility for further TMC-I test in 11 T is now going ahead.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-205
Author(s):  
Mendel Tuchman ◽  
Margaret L. R. Ramnaraine ◽  
William G. Woods ◽  
William Krivit

During the last 3 years, random urine samples from 408 patients were tested for elevated homovanillic acid (HVA) and vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) levels to rule out the diagnosis of neuroblastoma. Thirty-seven of these patients had elevated HVA and/or VMA levels, and neuroblastoma was subsequently diagnosed. In three additional patients with negative test results (normal HVA and VMA levels), tumors were subsequently diagnosed (false-negative rate of 7.5%). Ten percent of the patients with neuroblastoma had normal HVA and 27.5% had normal VMA levels at the time of diagnosis. Only one patient (2.5%) with neuroblastoma had elevated VMA levels in the presence of normal HVA levels. More than 60% of the patients with neuroblastoma had urinary HVA and/or VMA levels higher than twice the upper limit of normal. No false-positive results were encountered. Age and stage distributions of the patients are shown, and the significance of the results is discussed.


Author(s):  
Andrew J. Provenza ◽  
Carlos R. Morrison

A novel wireless device which transfers supply power through induction to rotating operational amplifiers and transmits low voltage AC signals to and from a rotating body by way of radio telemetry has been successfully demonstrated in the NASA Glenn Research Center (GRC) Dynamic Spin Test Facility. In the demonstration described herein, a rotating operational amplifier provides controllable AC power to a piezoelectric patch epoxied to the surface of a rotating Ti plate. The amplitude and phase of the sinusoidal voltage command signal, transmitted wirelessly to the amplifier, was tuned to completely suppress the 3rd bending resonant vibration of the plate. The plate’s 3rd bending resonance was excited using rotating magnetic bearing excitation while it spun at slow speed in a vacuum chamber. A second patch on the opposite side of the plate was used as a sensor. This paper discusses the characteristics of this novel device, the details of a spin test, results from a preliminary demonstration, and future plans.


1994 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 2042-2045 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Sugimoto ◽  
T. Isono ◽  
K. Koizuni ◽  
Y. Takahashi ◽  
M. Nishi ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 (1) ◽  
pp. 000414-000414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noriyoshi Shimizu ◽  
Wataru Kaneda ◽  
Hiromu Arisaka ◽  
Naoyuki Koizumi ◽  
Satoshi Sunohara ◽  
...  

In recent years, it has become apparent that the conventional FC-BGA (Flip Chip Ball Grid Array) substrate manufacturing method (Electroless Cu plating, Desmear, Laser Drilling processing) is reaching its limits for finer wiring dimensions and narrower pitches of the flip chip pad. On the other hand, the demand for miniaturization and higher density continues to increase. Our solution is the Organic Multi Chip Package, a combined organic interposer and organic substrate. Unlike a conventional 2.5D interposer that is separately manufactured and then attached to a substrate PWB (Printed Wire Board), the interposer of our Organic Multi Chip Package is built directly onto an organic substrate. First normal build-up layers are laminated on both sides of the PWB core and metal traces formed by conventional semi-additive techniques. After the back side is coated with a typical SR layer for FC-BGA, the top surface and its laser-drilled vias are smoothed by CMP (Chemical Mechanical Polishing). A thin-film process is used to deposit the interposer's insulating resin layers. Then normal processes are applied to open small diameter vias and a metal seed layer is sputtered on. The wiring is patterned, and the metal traces are fully formed by plating. Finally, the Cu pads on the top layer are treated by OSP (Organic Solderability Preservative). In this paper we discuss results using a prototype 40 mm × 40 mm Organic Multi Chip Package. The prototype's organic substrate has a two-metal layer core with 100 μm diameter through-holes, two build-up layers on the chip side, and three plus a solder resist layer on the BGA side. The interposer has four wiring layers. Thus the structure of the prototype is 4+(2/2/3). For evaluation purposes, there are four patterns of lines and spaces on the interposer: 2 μm/2 μm, 3 μm/3 μm, 4 μm/4 μm, and 5 μm/5 μm. The metal trace thicknesses are 2.5 μm, via diameters are 10 μm, pad pitches are 40 μm, and the Cu pad diameters are 25 μm. These dimensions allow the Organic Multi Chip Package to easily make the pitch conversions of the IC to the PCB. With a 4+(2/2/3) structure, the Organic Multi Chip Package is asymmetric, raising concerns about package warping. However, the warping can be reduced by the optimization of structure and materials. In this way, we were able to connect a high pin-count logic chip to standard Wide I/O memory chips. We think that there are at least two obvious advantages of the Organic Multi Chip Package. The first is a total height reduction compared to a structure with a separate silicon interposer attached to a PWB substrate. The Organic Multi Chip Package, with its built-on interposer, eliminates the need for solder joints between the interposer and substrate. In addition, the fine resin layers make our interposer much thinner than a silicon interposer. The second advantage is simpler assembly. Our structure does not require the separate step of assembling an interposer to the substrate. Assembly costs should be lower and yields higher. In this paper we demonstrate the successful attainment of fine lines and spaces on the Organic Multi Chip Package. We also show and discuss reliability test results.


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