This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/306,754, filed Feb. 22, 2010; the content of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
This application incorporates by reference in its entirety U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/696,851, filed Jan. 29, 2010; the content of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety now U.S. Pat. No. 8,571,167.
The present invention relates to nuclear power plants, and, more particularly, to fast neutron spectrum, sodium cooled reactors with metallic fuel.
World electricity demand is expected to as much as double by 2030 and quadruple by 2050. The world electricity demand increase is forecasted to come from developed countries but to an even larger extent from developing countries. To meet rapid growth in developing countries, nuclear energy should be packaged in a configuration tailored to meet their specific needs.
The accompanying drawings, which are included to provide a further understanding of the invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate preferred embodiments of the invention and together with the detailed description serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
A fast neutron spectrum, sodium cooled reactor with metallic fuel is described.
The core 503 may be submerged in a tank 505 of ambient pressure liquid sodium 507. The tank 505 may be thin-walled stainless steel, and may be sized for shipment by barge or rail. The tank 505 may be positioned in a guard vessel 517 and a deck 521 of the tank 505 that may be enclosed by a removable dome 519. The guard vessel 517 and dome 521 together may create a containment 523.
The SMR system 501 may be encased in a concrete silo 515. The core 503 and its containment 523 may be emplaced in a concrete silo with a concrete cover. The silo and its cover may create a shield structure to protect the reactor system 501 and the containment 523 from external hazards. The shield structure and/or the containment 523 and reactor 503 may be seismically isolated.
The SMR system 501 may also include control rods 513.
The liquid sodium 507 from the tank 505 may be pumped by one or more pumps 509 through the core 503 to carry heat away from the core 503. The liquid sodium 507 may carry the heat to one or more sodium to sodium heat exchangers 511. The liquid sodium 507 may be heated from about 350° Celsius to about 510° Celsius.
Small sodium-cooled fast reactors may demonstrate important inherent safety characteristics. These reactors may operate with simplified, fail-safe controls that may facilitate rapid licensing by regulatory authorities. For example, in response to an accident condition, such as loss of coolant flow, overcooling in the heat exchanger, control rod runout or loss of ability to reject heat, embodiments of the reactor may shut themselves down without human or safety-system intervention. For instance, as the reactor coolant heats up, the core structures may thermally expand causing increased neutron leakage from the core, in turn causing power levels to decrease in a self-correcting fashion.
SMR operation requirements may be significantly simpler than conventional nuclear systems due to a characteristic that allows the reactor to innately follow load requirements brought upon by varying levels of electricity demand.
Metal alloy fuel is well demonstrated, both from performance and fabrication perspectives, and can straightforwardly meet long refueling time interval requirements. Additionally, a cermet fuel may be used, while the cermet fuel none-the-less retains metallic alloy fuel attributes.
The reactor core may have a long life, up to about 20 years or more. The reactor may not have or require permanent onsite refueling equipment or fuel storage capability. Refueling may be done by an outside service provider that brings refueling equipment with a new core, changes the core out, and takes both used core and refueling equipment away when completed. Fuel handling and shipping can commence at a very short time after reactor shutdown owing to the derated specific power (kwt/kg fuel). One or more multi-assembly clusters in a reactor core may have derated specific power (kwt/kg fuel) for enabling long refueling intervals while remaining in the existing fuels database. This may also enable refueling operations very shortly after reactor shutdown. Refueling operations may start within approximately two weeks of overall reactor shutdown, and may finish within approximately 1 month of overall reactor shutdown. The whole reactor core may be replaced at one time, about every 20 years. As such, the reactor system may have no requirement that the operator handle fuel. The overall unit may be sealed, physically and with electronic monitors, so that any intrusion attempt is easily detected. The elimination of any need or the ability to gain direct access to the fuel and use of smart monitoring systems not only reduces operator requirements, but also addresses proliferation concerns. Additionally, the SMR is small enough to be located below ground, which enhances containment and protection from terrorist activities. Finally, embodiments of the system are small enough that they can be shipped by barge, rail, and truck and installed at the site using modular construction techniques: this ability to remotely manufacture and obtain economies of serial production is a desirable benefit.
When the fuel cartridges are returned to the manufacturer/designer/fabricator's facility, nearly all of the used nuclear material can be recycled and used as fuel in future cartridges, greatly reducing the volume and radio-toxicity of the final waste to be stored in a geologic repository. Unlike used fuel from conventional light water reactors, material from SMR's need not be stored for tens of thousands of years. Non-recyclable materials from SMR's require only a few hundred years of storage before the waste decays to levels of radiation associated with the original uranium ore.
The reactor concept and its supporting fuel cycle infrastructure may offer a configuration of nuclear energy tailored to meet the needs of emerging electricity markets in developing countries as well as imminent global need for carbon-free non-electric energy sources. This configuration of nuclear energy may rely on the huge energy density of nuclear fuel (>106 times that of fossil fuel) to enable a distributed fleet of small fast reactors of long (20 year) refueling interval, providing local energy services supported by a small number of centralized facilities handling fuel supply and waste management for the entire fleet. The reactors may be sized for local and/or small grids, and are standardized, modularized and pre-licensed for factory fabrication and rapid site assembly. Correspondingly, the centralized fuel cycle infrastructure may be sized for economy of scale to support a large fleet of reactors in the region and may be operated under international safeguards oversight. The configuration is tailored to meet the tenets of sustainable development.
Reactor Overview
Embodiments of the present invention may include an approximately 50 MWe (125 MWt) to approximately 100 MWe (260 MWt) sodium-cooled fast reactor operating on a long (approximately 15 to approximately 20 year) whole core refueling interval. An initial fuel load may be enriched uranium (<20% enriched) in the form of metal alloy fuel slugs, sodium or helium bonded to ferritic-martinsitic cladding. The reactor may exhibit an internal breeding ratio near unity such that its reactivity burnup swing is small and its core is fissile self-sufficient. A burnup swing of less than approximately 1% Δk/k may facilitate passive safety and passive load follow. Embodiments of the present invention may attain 80 MWtd/kg or more fuel average burnup, and upon pyrometallurgical recycle at completion of its 20 year burn cycle, depleted uranium makeup feedstock may be all that is required for the reload core. Upon multiple recycles, the core composition may gradually shift to an equilibrium transuranic fuel composition, which is also fissile self sufficient, and thus requiring only U238 makeup upon recycle.
A forced circulation heat source reactor may deliver heat at ˜500° C. through a sodium intermediate loop that drives a supercritical CO2 (S—CO2) Brayton Cycle power converter attaining ˜40% conversion efficiency and may be capable of incorporating bottoming cycles for desalination, district heat, etc. Other embodiments might drive a Rankine steam cycle. Embodiments of the present invention may employ passive decay heat removal; achieve passive safety response to Anticipated Transients Without Scram (ATWS); and employ passive load follow. The balance of plant may have no nuclear safety function.
The plant may be sized to permit factory fabrication of rail and barge shippable modules for rapid assembly at the site. Embodiments of the present invention may have features targeted to meet infrastructure and institutional needs of rapidly growing cities in the developing world as well as non-electric industrial and/or municipal niche applications in all nations.
Targeting Emerging Markets
Nuclear energy is a well-established industrial business that, over the past 35 years, has attained 13,000 reactor years of operating experience and 16% market share of world electricity supply. Nuclear energy is being deployed primarily in the form of large size (greater than or approximately equal to 1200 MWe) plants in industrialized nations. There are currently 436 reactors deployed in 30 countries. Future growth in nuclear deployments is projected to be as much as 66% or even 100% additional capacity by 2030. The majority of the growth is projected to take place in developing countries where institutional and infrastructure conditions often differ from those that, in the past, favored large scale plants and a once through fuel cycle. Developing nations often have small, local grids of under a few tens of GW, which are unable to accommodate a 1.2 to 1.5 GWe sized plant. Embodiments of the present invention operating at 100 MWe, are not only compatible with smaller grid size but additionally, the smaller capital outlay required for its installation is compatible with a developing country's necessity for sharing limited financing across multiple development projects during the early decades of its rapid economic growth.
A twenty year refueling interval with fuel supply, recycle, and waste management services outsourced to a regional center enable a nation to attain unprecedented energy security even absent a need to first emplace a complete indigenous fuel cycle/waste management infrastructure. Moreover, centralization of fuel cycle facilities for economy of scale in technical and institutional safeguards operations may facilitate an international nonproliferation regime even for widespread worldwide deployment of nuclear-based energy supply.
The energy supply growth rate in industrialized countries is projected to be slower than in developing countries. Nonetheless, new nuclear plants are needed for replacements of coal and nuclear plants as they are decommissioned at end of life. The large capacity interconnected grids in industrialized nations are compatible with large power rating plants. Niche markets, however, are expected to rapidly emerge in both developed and developing nations for non-electric and/or cogeneration applications of carbon-emission-free nuclear energy. Among these markets may be water desalination, oil sands/oil shale recovery and upgrading, and coal or bio to liquids synthetic fuel production. Passive safety posture precludes any safety function being assigned to the balance of plant and along with the reactor's reduced source term favor siting adjacent to industrial and municipal installations.
Features of the Fuel Cycle
First, the core power density (kwt/liter) and fuel specific power kwt/kg fuel may be derated so as to achieve a 20 year refueling interval while remaining within the bounds of the established metallic alloy fuels experimental database. This may provide a client long term energy security and a high level of reliable availability.
Second, the once in 20 year whole-core refueling may be conducted by factory personnel who bring the refueling equipment and fresh fuel from offsite, conduct the refueling operations, and then return the used core and the refueling equipment to the factory. This may provide the client a way to attain energy security absent a prior need to emplace indigenous facilities for enrichment, fuel fabrication, reprocessing, and waste repositories.
Third, the refueling operations may be done on the basis of a fuel handing assembly that may include multiple sub-components. Various numbers of sub-components may be included and may or may not be clustered. As an example, see an exemplary core made of seven fuel assembly clusters 801 in
During operations, the seven-assembly cluster may be transferred after a very short cooling period following reactor shutdown so as to minimally interrupt energy supply availability. The short cooling period and seven-assembly cluster features may be possible due to the derated fuel specific heat (kwt/kg fuel).
Fourth, the first fuel loading may be enriched uranium (enrichment <20%) and the core may be fissile self-sufficient such that at the end of the 20 year operation interval, the core contains as much bred-in fissionable content as has been burned out. Upon pyrometallurgical recycle of the used core, only U238 feedstock and fresh cladding may be required for refabrication of a replacement core.
Fifth, over multiple recycles, the composition of the core may gradually transition from a U235-rich composition towards an equilibrium transuranic-rich composition that is also fissile self sufficient. The fuel cycle waste stream may exclusively include fission products, which require only 200 to 300 years of sequestration before decaying to background levels of radioactivity, whereas all transuranics may be returned to the reactor as fuel where they are converted to fission products.
Sixth, after the first core loading, all subsequent cores may require only U238 as feedstock. This may extend the world's ore resource potential to nearly 100% productive use, and yielding at least a millennium of energy supply. Capability to use thorium-based metallic alloy fuel extends the world's resource base to multi millennia.
Seventh, the fuel fabrication technology may offer the option of incorporating LWR used fuel crushed oxide particles onto a metallic alloy to form a cermet. This option, when combined with an added (oxide reduction) step in the pyrometallurgical recycle process may offer a route to cost effective management of LWR used fuel by subsuming it into the fast reactor closed fuel cycle.
Features of a Heat Source Reactor
First, a core layout may include assembly clusters of individually ducted and orifaced fuel assemblies. As described above, see
Second, a “limited free bow” core clamping approach may be used. The clamping approach may utilize a removable and vertically adjustable horizontal wedge 901 located in a central assembly position of a core layout of ducted fuel assemblies 913 at an elevation approximately at above-core load pads 903, as shown in
Third, a core may retain performance parameters, both operational and safety, even as the fuel composition evolves over the 20 year burn cycle and further evolves from one recycle loading to another.
Fourth, embodiments of the present invention may include a strategy to monitor reactivity feedbacks throughout core life and to fine-tune their values using the vertical position adjustment of the wedge, should they drift as the core ages over its 20 year burn cycle. The integral reactivity feedbacks may be measured in situ by non-intrusive small adjustments of coolant flow rate, inlet coolant temperature, and control rod position. The rest position of the core clamping wedge 901 may be used to adjust the value of a core radial expansion component of the inherently negative power coefficient of reactivity, as shown in
Fifth, a passive safety response may be provided for loss of flow, loss of heat sink, chilled coolant inlet temperature and single rod runout transient overpower (ATWS) transient initiators without scram. The innate reactivity feedbacks with respect to power and fuel and coolant temperatures, when combined with a nearly zero reactivity burnup swing and with natural circulation capability at decay heat levels, may take the reactor to an undamaged safe state for all ATWS initiators, i.e., no damage may be incurred and a stable state may be reached for these initiators even if the rods fail to scram.
Sixth, a passive decay heat removal channel may be provided to the ambient atmosphere ultimate heat sink always operating as a backup to active decay heat removal channels. The passive channel may always be operating at less than or approximately equal to 1% full power and can be confirmed to be functioning at all stages of core life by in situ non-intrusive measurements. The heat capacity of the core and internal structure is sufficient to safely absorb the initial transient of decay heat in excess of the passive channels' capacity.
Features of a Power Plant
First, a heat source reactor driving a S—CO2 Brayton cycle energy converter may attain nearly 40% or more heat to electricity conversion efficiency while operating in the working fluid range of ˜500° C., 21 MPa to 31° C., ˜7 MPa. This converter may use rotating machinery of extraordinarily high power density and recuperative heat exchangers of exceptionally high power density.
Second, a heat source reactor may passively load follow the energy converter demand for heat. The reactor may sense the balance of plant demand communicated via flow rate and return temperature of the intermediate heat transport loop. The reactor's innate reactivity feedbacks may maintain heat production in balance with heat removal through the intermediate loop within tens of seconds and without need for active adjustments of control rods.
Third, a Balance of Plant (BOP) may be provided that carries no nuclear safety function and can be built, operated and maintained to normal industrial standards. The reactor can passively accommodate all physically attainable combinations of flow rate and return temperature returning from the BOP through the intermediate heat transport loop. The passive decay heat removal channel may have no dependence on the BOP, and the nearly zero burnup control swing makes a rod runout TOP resulting from a control system error a no damage event. So the BOP need not carry any nuclear safety function.
Fourth, embodiments of the present invention may include a potential to tie a broad diversity of BOP configurations to a standard, pre-licensed heat source reactor since the BOP carries no nuclear safety function. The S—CO2 Brayton cycle may reject ˜60% of supplied heat and may do so between ˜100° C. and 31° C. Many cogeneration options may exist for such a temperature range, including multi-effect distillation desalinization; district heat; district chilled water; ice production and others. Alternately, diverse non-electric industrial processes may be co-sited closely with the heat source reactor, given its self-protection features, small source term, passive load following feature, and high level of availability.
Although the foregoing description is directed to the preferred embodiments of the invention, it is noted that other variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art, and may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Moreover, features described in connection with one embodiment of the invention may be used in conjunction with other embodiments, even if not explicitly stated above.
The Government has certain rights in the invention pursuant to Work for Others Agreement No. 854V0.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1624704 | Adams | Apr 1927 | A |
2983663 | Bassett | May 1961 | A |
2992179 | Bassett | Jul 1961 | A |
3042594 | Hauth | Jul 1962 | A |
3098024 | Barney et al. | Jul 1963 | A |
3178354 | Vann et al. | Apr 1965 | A |
3197375 | Borst | Jul 1965 | A |
3215608 | Guenther | Nov 1965 | A |
3243352 | Boudouresques et al. | Mar 1966 | A |
3261378 | Ayer et al. | Jul 1966 | A |
3322509 | Vogg | May 1967 | A |
3328133 | Ishihara et al. | Jun 1967 | A |
3409973 | Kilp et al. | Nov 1968 | A |
3413383 | Hirose et al. | Nov 1968 | A |
3420738 | Grant | Jan 1969 | A |
3442762 | Denton | May 1969 | A |
3682774 | Beyer | Aug 1972 | A |
3683975 | Sease et al. | Aug 1972 | A |
3702282 | Gatley et al. | Nov 1972 | A |
3708393 | Waymire et al. | Jan 1973 | A |
3778348 | Sease et al. | Dec 1973 | A |
3808320 | Kaiser et al. | Apr 1974 | A |
3823067 | Stern et al. | Jul 1974 | A |
3939039 | Seki et al. | Feb 1976 | A |
4000617 | Fortescue | Jan 1977 | A |
4004972 | Mogard | Jan 1977 | A |
4050638 | Ito et al. | Sep 1977 | A |
4057465 | Thompson et al. | Nov 1977 | A |
4131511 | Mordarski et al. | Dec 1978 | A |
4147590 | Szekely | Apr 1979 | A |
4225560 | Nakanishi et al. | Sep 1980 | A |
4229942 | Gomberg et al. | Oct 1980 | A |
4257846 | Pierce | Mar 1981 | A |
4257847 | Gibby et al. | Mar 1981 | A |
4292127 | Hartley et al. | Sep 1981 | A |
RE31697 | Gomberg et al. | Oct 1984 | E |
4526741 | Cawley et al. | Jul 1985 | A |
4610842 | Vannesjo | Sep 1986 | A |
4624828 | Alexander | Nov 1986 | A |
4687629 | Mildrum | Aug 1987 | A |
4717534 | Morita | Jan 1988 | A |
4759911 | Bingham et al. | Jul 1988 | A |
4814046 | Johnson et al. | Mar 1989 | A |
4853177 | Pettus | Aug 1989 | A |
H689 | Christiansen et al. | Oct 1989 | H |
4943409 | Broadley | Jul 1990 | A |
4997596 | Proebstle et al. | Mar 1991 | A |
5044911 | Seidel et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5112534 | Guon et al. | May 1992 | A |
5196159 | Kawashima et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
5219519 | Matzner | Jun 1993 | A |
5257659 | Maag | Nov 1993 | A |
5317611 | Petrosky et al. | May 1994 | A |
5377246 | Taylor, Jr. et al. | Dec 1994 | A |
5400375 | Suzuki et al. | Mar 1995 | A |
5419886 | Grantham et al. | May 1995 | A |
5446773 | Wakabayashi | Aug 1995 | A |
5502754 | Erbes | Mar 1996 | A |
5517541 | Rosenbaum et al. | May 1996 | A |
5608768 | Matzner et al. | Mar 1997 | A |
5681404 | Adamson et al. | Oct 1997 | A |
5711826 | Nordstrom | Jan 1998 | A |
5742653 | Erbes et al. | Apr 1998 | A |
5828715 | Kurosaki et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
6091791 | Matsumoto et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6113982 | Claar et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6233298 | Bowman | May 2001 | B1 |
6251310 | Song et al. | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6263038 | Kantrowitz et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6298108 | Farawila | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6343107 | Erbes et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6668034 | Mahe | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6674830 | Kato et al. | Jan 2004 | B2 |
6768781 | Moriarty | Jul 2004 | B1 |
6888910 | Moriarty | May 2005 | B1 |
7445760 | Fukasawa et al. | Nov 2008 | B2 |
7521007 | Jarvinen et al. | Apr 2009 | B1 |
7711079 | Oh et al. | May 2010 | B2 |
7961835 | Keller | Jun 2011 | B2 |
8268204 | Rhee et al. | Sep 2012 | B2 |
8537961 | Keller | Sep 2013 | B2 |
8571167 | Walters | Oct 2013 | B2 |
20010007584 | Adamson et al. | Jul 2001 | A1 |
20020117093 | Stamps | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20050074083 | Haasbroek et al. | Apr 2005 | A1 |
20070280400 | Keller | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20070290178 | Baron et al. | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20080144762 | Holden et al. | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20090080586 | Yokoyama et al. | Mar 2009 | A1 |
20100303193 | Walters | Dec 2010 | A1 |
20110194666 | Walters | Aug 2011 | A1 |
20110206173 | Walters | Aug 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1206776 | Sep 1970 | GB |
50014318 | May 1975 | JP |
60181694 | Sep 1985 | JP |
02184792 | Jul 1990 | JP |
06194477 | Jul 1994 | JP |
07294676 | Nov 1995 | JP |
09033687 | Feb 1997 | JP |
09043389 | Feb 1997 | JP |
09043391 | Feb 1997 | JP |
09119994 | May 1997 | JP |
2008170252 | Jul 2008 | JP |
WO-2010141218 | Dec 2010 | WO |
WO-2011088116 | Jul 2011 | WO |
WO-2011142869 | Nov 2011 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Herrmann et al, “Electrolytic Reduction of Spent Nuclear Oxide Fuel as Part of an Integral Process to Separate and Recover Actinides from Fission Products,” Separation Science and Technology, 41: pp. 1965-1983, (2006). |
Kosaka et al, “A Study on Fission Products Removal by the Dry Pyrochemical Technique for the Fuel Decladding,” Proceedings of Global 2005, paper 199, Tsukuba, Japan, Oct. 2005. |
Song et al, “Fractional Release Behavior of Volatile and Semivolatile Fission Products During a Voloxidation and OREOX Treatment of Spent PWR Fuel,” Nuclear Technology; 162: 158-168, May 2008. |
Thomas, “AIROX Nuclear Fuel Recycling and Waste Management,” Proceedings of Global 93, 2: 722-728, Seattle, WA, Sep. 1993. |
Ogata et al., “Directions of Metal Fuel Development for Fast Reactors,” Proceedings of Global 2009, paper 9135, Paris, France, pp. 1456-1464; Sep. 6-11, 2009. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion for related application PCT/US10/35412, mailed Aug. 31, 2010. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion for related application PCT/US2011/020981, mailed Mar. 23, 2011. |
“Innovative small and medium sized reactors: Design features, safety approaches and R&D trends,” International Atomic Energy Agency, [online], May 2005, pp. 1-214 [retrieved on Nov. 11, 2011) Retrieved from the Internet: <URL: http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/publications/PDF/te—1451—web.pdf>. |
Cha et al., “Development of a Supercritical CO2 Brayton Energy Conversion System Coupled with a Sodium Cooled Fast Reactor,” Nuclear Engineering and Technology, [online] Oct. 2009: 41(8), pp. 1025-1044 [retrieved on Nov. 11, 2011] Retrieved from the Internet: <URL: http://article.nuclear.or.kr/jknsfile/v41/JK0411 025.pdf>. |
Kadak et al., “Nuclear Power Plant Design Project: A Response to the Environmental and Economic Challenge of Global Warming Phase 1 Review of Options & Selection of Technology of Choice,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology Independent Activities Period, [online], Jan. 1998, 56 pages [retrieved on Nov. 10, 2011] Retrieved from the Internet: <URL: http://web.mit.edu/pebble-bed/background.pdf>. |
Nuclear Power Technology Development, “Coordinated Research Project CRP 125001 Small Reactors without On-Site Refuelling (2004-2008)” International Atomic Energy Agency, [online], Updated on Oct. 15, 2008, pp. 1-12 [retrieved on Nov. 10, 2011). Retrieved from the Internet: <URL: http://www.iaea.org/NuclearPower/SMR/crpi25001.html>. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion for related International Application No. PCT/US2011/025455, dated Nov. 25, 2011, 11 pages. |
Chang et al., “Small Modular Fast Reactor Design Description,” Argonne National Laboratory, Jul. 2005, 194 pages. |
In the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Notice of Allowance in re: U.S. Appl. No. 12/696,851, dated Aug. 22, 2013, 6 pages. |
In the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Final Office Action in re: U.S. Appl. No. 12/696,851, dated Jun. 6, 2013, 8 pages. |
In the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Office Action in re: U.S. Appl. No. 12/696,851, dated Dec. 21, 2012, 9 pages. |
In the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Requirement for Restriction/Election in re: U.S. Appl. No. 12/696,851, dated Aug. 29, 2012, 9 pages. |
In the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Final Office Action in re: U.S. Appl. No. 13/004,974, dated Mar. 13, 2014, 5 pages. |
In the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Office Action in re: U.S. Appl. No. 13/004,974, dated Aug. 23, 2013, 9 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110206173 A1 | Aug 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61306754 | Feb 2010 | US |