Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Developing a more complete understanding of the water-driven chemical interactions that occur as industrial byproduct materials and other components are incorporated into concrete.
The Company has entered into a contract to design, construct and engineer the LLRW and byproduct material disposal sites.
The increase in operating income for the fiscal year and quarter was driven primarily by improved gross margins, improving operational efficiencies and recognizing higher sales of byproduct materials.
The remainder of the increase was related to the combination of higher per-unit byproduct prices and byproduct materials collected from recycling more units in 2011 compared to 2010.
Byproduct material includes uranium or thorium mill tailings as well as equipment, pipe and other materials used to handle and process the mill tailings.
Industrial materials recycling http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/conserve/rrr/imr/index.htm, also referred to as beneficial use, involves reusing or recycling byproduct materials generated from industrial processes.
Growth Media: Organic Mechanics Container Blend Potting Soil was developed as a growth medium that uses only organic, completely renewable or byproduct materials.
As of 2013, this is still the only alpha emitting byproduct material available, as a NRC Exempt Quantity, which may be held without a radioactive material license.
In this regard, in May 2008 the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality issued to the Company a license for the disposal of byproduct material at the Company's site in Andrews County, Texas.
WCS President Rodney Baltzer said, "We will immediately begin constructing the facilities for unloading hazardous waste and for disposal of radioactive byproduct material since licenses and contracts for those operations have already been secured.
These new facilities will enable WCS to begin operations under its license issued by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality ("TCEQ") in May 2008 to dispose of radioactive byproduct material and enhance its bulk waste handling and disposal capabilities.
The output of a workshop of experts drawn from industry, academia, and state and federal government, the report identifies barriers to acceptance and use of concrete in which greater fractions (30 percent or more) of the portland cement have been replaced by fly ash from electrical power plants and other industrial byproduct materials.
The WCS facility also is the site of the disposal facility for the Texas Low Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact, and most recently was the site of the storage and disposal of byproduct material from the DOE Fernald, Ohio cleanup site.