Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Publications

NIST Authors in Bold

Displaying 55551 - 55575 of 74167

Enhancement of R123 Pool Boiling by the Addition of N-Hexane (NISTIR 5780)

March 1, 1996
Author(s)
Mark A. Kedzierski
This paper presents the heat transfer data used to file international patent WO 94/18282. The data consisted of pool boiling performance of a GEWA-TTM surface for three fluids: (1) pure R123, (2) R123/n-hexane (99/1), and (3) R123/n-hexane (98/2). The heat

Multizone Modeling of Three Residential Indoor Air Quality Control Options

March 1, 1996
Author(s)
Steven J. Emmerich, Andrew K. Persily
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) performed a preliminary study of the use of central forced-air heating and cooling system modifications to control indoor air quality (IAQ) in residential buildings. The objective of this effort was

Test Optics Error Removal

March 1, 1996
Author(s)
Christopher J. Evans, R Kestner
Wave-front or surface errors may be divided into rotationally symmetric and nonrotationally symmetric terms. It is shown that if either the test part or the reference surface in an interferometric test is rotated to N equally spaced positions about the

Using Logic to Specify Shapes and Spatial Relations in Design Grammars

March 1, 1996
Author(s)
Scott Chase
Shape algebraic representations provide several advantages over more traditional geometric representations. The use of predicate logic formulations of shape and spatial relations provides a natural, intuitive way to extend shape representations of the

Commercial helium permeation leak standards: Their properties and reliability

February 12, 1996
Author(s)
Patrick J. Abbott, S A. Tison
Standard leaks or leak artifacts are used extensively in industrial and research environments, typically for the calibration of helium leak detectors. The most commonly used leak is the helium permeation type, which uses a glass, quartz, or polymer barrier
Displaying 55551 - 55575 of 74167
Was this page helpful?