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Sensor for measuring the atomic fraction in highly dissociated hydrogen (open access)

Sensor for measuring the atomic fraction in highly dissociated hydrogen

Atomic hydrogen is a very important constituent for processes ranging from cleaning oxide from GaAs and annealing amorphous silicon to the deposition of diamond. Because the usual techniques for measuring atomic fraction are either expensive and cumbersome to use, or unsuitable for application to highly dissociated hydrogen, a specially designed sensor was developed. Sensor design is based on a diffusion tube with noncatalytic walls, having one end open to the atom source and a catalytic closure at the other end. The sensor is simple and inexpensive to fabricate, and determining atom density is straightforward. Sensor design also inhibits thermal runaway, which occurs when atom density is high enough to impart enough recombination energy to the non-catalytic surface to substantially raise its temperature. While recombination coefficients for such surfaces are very low near room temperature, they increase nearly exponentially with temperature unless actively cooled. With the use of a straightforward calibration scheme to determine the variation in species fraction along the diffusion tube, the atomic fraction at the tube opening is determined. Design strategy, implementation considerations, and calibration method are presented. In addition, data obtained from an atomic hydrogen source are compared to relevant published data.
Date: December 31, 1994
Creator: Gardner, W.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technologies for the oil and gas industry (open access)

Technologies for the oil and gas industry

This is the final report of a five-month, Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) project at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). The authors performed a preliminary design study to explore the plausibility of using pulse-tube refrigeration to cool instruments in a hot down-hole environment for the oil and gas industry or geothermal industry. They prepared and distributed a report showing that this appears to be a viable technology.
Date: December 31, 1998
Creator: Goff, S.J.; Swift, G.W. & Gardner, D.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Indium dopant/defect complexes in lightly-doped ceria (open access)

Indium dopant/defect complexes in lightly-doped ceria

Four well-defined indium-dopant/lattice-defect complexes and the non-complexed substitutional indium dopant have been observed by perturbed angular correlation (PAC) spectroscopy in cerium oxide. PAC is a nuclear hyperfine experimental method that detects interactions between a radioactive probe nucleus and nearby atoms. The magnitude and symmetry of those interactions provide a signature for the electromagnetic fields at the probe nucleus. These fields are produced by the arrangement of charges and magnetic moments in the near environment of the probe, so they provide a means of identifying defect structures.
Date: December 31, 1991
Creator: Wang, Ruiping; Gardner, J. A.; Evenson, W. E. & Sommers, J. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion exchange properties of novel hydrous metal oxide materials (open access)

Ion exchange properties of novel hydrous metal oxide materials

Hydrous metal oxide (HMO) materials are inorganic ion exchangers which have many desirable characteristics for catalyst support applications, including high cation exchange capacity, anion exchange capability, high surface area, ease of adjustment of acidity and basicity, bulk or thin film preparation, and similar chemistry for preparation of various transition metal oxides. Cation exchange capacity is engineered into these materials through the uniform incorporation of alkali cations via manipulation of alkoxide chemistry. Specific examples of the effects of Na stoichiometry and the addition of SiO{sub 2} to hydrous titanium oxide (HTO) on ion exchange behavior will be given. Acid titration and cationic metal precursor complex exchange will be used to characterize the ion exchange behavior of these novel materials.
Date: December 31, 1996
Creator: Gardner, T.J. & McLaughlin, L.I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of the folded stripline and stacked stripline concepts to the folded waveguide launcher (open access)

Comparison of the folded stripline and stacked stripline concepts to the folded waveguide launcher

Two new concepts are being developed as possible upgrades to the folded waveguide launcher. The folded stripline is a folded waveguide with an additional conductor positioned inside. The term stripline refers to the resemblance of the design to microwave microstrip line. The conductor provides support for TEM mode propagation, which eliminates cutoff and the nonlinear frequency dependence of the waveguide impedance and phase velocity. A natural extension to the folded stripline is the stacked stripline, which comprises several stacked, independent TEM waveguides. Initial measurements indicate that both concepts have better magnetic flux coupling than the folded waveguide.
Date: December 31, 1993
Creator: Gardner, W. L.; Caughman, J. B. O.; Hoffman, D. J. & Probert, P. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application Of Biometrical Genetics Techniques To Irradiated And Non- Irradiated Populations Of Corn To Provide Information On Nature Of Gene Action Involved In The Inheritance Of Quantitative Traits And In Heterosis. Final Report, 1970. (open access)

Application Of Biometrical Genetics Techniques To Irradiated And Non- Irradiated Populations Of Corn To Provide Information On Nature Of Gene Action Involved In The Inheritance Of Quantitative Traits And In Heterosis. Final Report, 1970.

The purpose of this research was to extend out quantitative genetic investigations into some of the more basic aspects of genetic variation and heterosis observed in irradiated and non- irradiated populations of corn in order to determine more precisely how genes do act and interact to produce their observed cumulative effects.
Date: October 31, 1971
Creator: Gardner, C O
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of Biometrical Genetic Techniques to Irradiated and Non- Irradiated Populations of Corn to Provide Information on Nature of Gene Action Involved in the Inheritance of Quantitative Traits and in Heterosis. Technical Progress Report, 1966--67. (open access)

Application of Biometrical Genetic Techniques to Irradiated and Non- Irradiated Populations of Corn to Provide Information on Nature of Gene Action Involved in the Inheritance of Quantitative Traits and in Heterosis. Technical Progress Report, 1966--67.

This report talks about the Application of Biometrical Genetic Techniques to Irradiated and Non- Irradiated Populations of Corn to Provide Information on Nature of Gene Action Involved in the Inheritance of Quantitative Traits and in Heterosis.
Date: October 31, 1967
Creator: Gardner, C. O.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
PAC spectroscopy of electronic ceramics (open access)

PAC spectroscopy of electronic ceramics

Dilute indium dopants in cerium oxides and YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub x} have been studied by{sup 111}In/Cd Perturbed Angular Correlation (PAC) spectroscopy. By controlling oxygen vacancy concentration in the cerium oxides through doping or high-temperature vacuum annealing, we have found that indium always forms a defect complex unless the sample is doped to reduce greatly the oxygen vacancy concentration. Three different vacancy-associated complexes are found with concentrations that depend on doping and oxygen stoichiometry. Another defect complex occurs in samples having negligible vacancy concentration. At low temperatures, evidence is found of interaction with an electronic hole trapped by {sup 111}Cd after the radioactive decay of the {sup 111}In parent. In YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub x} the indium substitutes preferentially at the Y site but has measurable probability of substitution in at least one of the two copper sites. A symmetry change near 650 {degree}C is consistent with the well-documented orthorhombic/tetragonal transition for samples in air or oxygen.
Date: December 31, 1991
Creator: Gardner, J. A.; Wang, Ruiping; Schwenker, R.; Evenson, W. E.; Rasera, R. L. & Sommers, J. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Harmonic analysis of the AGS Booster imperfection (open access)

Harmonic analysis of the AGS Booster imperfection

The harmonic content of magnetic field imperfections in the AGS Booster has been determined through careful measurements of the required field corrections of transverse resonances. An analysis of the required correction yielded amplitude and phase information which points to possible sources of imperfections. Dipole and quadrupole imperfections, which are proportional to the field of bending magnets (B), are mainly driven by any misalignment of the magnets. Quadrupole and sextupole imperfections, which are proportional to dB/dt, are driven by imperfections of the eddy-current correction system. The observations also suggest the presence of a remnant field.
Date: December 31, 1993
Creator: Shoji, Y. & Gardner, C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Operating characteristics of rotating beds. Technical progress report for the third quarter 1988 (open access)

Operating characteristics of rotating beds. Technical progress report for the third quarter 1988

Vapor-liquid contacting in high gravitational fields offers prospects for significant reductions in the physical size, capital, and operating costs of packed towers. Pressure drops, power requirements, mass transfer coefficients and liquid residence time distributions are reported for a rotating bed separator. The beds studied were rigid, foamed aluminum, with specific surface areas ranging from 650 to 3000 m{sup 2}/m{sup 2}. Gravitational fields were varied from 50 to 300g.
Date: December 31, 1988
Creator: Keyvani, M. & Gardner, N. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
LOFT CIS Analysis S-5B Penetration 3" IA-296-AB. (open access)

LOFT CIS Analysis S-5B Penetration 3" IA-296-AB.

Abstract: The 3" IA-296-AB line from the containment penetration S-5B was analyzed to ASME Code, Subsection NC (Class 2) criteria. This section of piping is part of the Containment Isolation System; the model considered the line from penetration S-5B outward through a series of elbows and through the third isolation valve. Results of this analysis show that the section of line described will meet Class 2 requirements if additional supports are installed at three locations, as described in the body of this report.
Date: October 31, 1978
Creator: Barry, W. J., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Distributed Wind Energy in Idaho (open access)

Distributed Wind Energy in Idaho

This project is a research and development program aimed at furthering distributed wind technology. In particular, this project addresses some of the barriers to distributed wind energy utilization in Idaho.
Date: January 31, 2009
Creator: Gardner, John; Johnson, Kathryn; Haynes, Todd & Seifert, Gary
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Studies on the Kinetic Behavior of Water Boiler Type Reactors (open access)

Experimental Studies on the Kinetic Behavior of Water Boiler Type Reactors

The KEWB Program is devoted to the study of the dynamic behavior of homogeneous type research reactors. The objectives of this program include studies to develop better and more complete understanding of phenomena which contribute to the kinetic behavior and the inherent safety of the water boiler reactor. The approach to the objectives has heen to construct a prototype 50 kw homogeneous reactor with the necessary auxiliary apparatus and to study the transient behavior of the system as a function of the more significant parameters which affect this behavior. These include the amount of reactivity release, rate of reactivity release, initial core pressure, initial core temperature, initial reactor power, and void volume above the core. Data are plotted. (auth)
Date: October 31, 1958
Creator: Remley, M. E.; Flora, J. W.; Hetrick, D. L.; Muller, D. R.; Gardner, E. L.; Wimmer, R. E. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Attorney General Opinion: JM-198 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: JM-198

Document issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Jim Mattox, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification: Whether certain payments to a district attorney for work rendered in his private capacity are proper
Date: August 31, 1984
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Transient Solid Dynamics Simulations on the Sandia/Intel Teraflop Computer (open access)

Transient Solid Dynamics Simulations on the Sandia/Intel Teraflop Computer

Transient solid dynamics simulations are among the most widely used engineering calculations. Industrial applications include vehicle crashworthiness studies, metal forging, and powder compaction prior to sintering. These calculations are also critical to defense applications including safety studies and weapons simulations. The practical importance of these calculations and their computational intensiveness make them natural candidates for parallelization. This has proved to be difficult, and existing implementations fail to scale to more than a few dozen processors. In this paper we describe our parallelization of PRONTO, Sandia`s transient solid dynamics code, via a novel algorithmic approach that utilizes multiple decompositions for different key segments of the computations, including the material contact calculation. This latter calculation is notoriously difficult to perform well in parallel, because it involves dynamically changing geometry, global searches for elements in contact, and unstructured communications among the compute nodes. Our approach scales to at least 3600 compute nodes of the Sandia/Intel Teraflop computer (the largest set of nodes to which we have had access to date) on problems involving millions of finite elements. On this machine we can simulate models using more than ten- million elements in a few tenths of a second per timestep, and solve problems more …
Date: December 31, 1997
Creator: Attaway, S.; Brown, K.; Gardner, D.; Hendrickson, B. & Barragy, T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report of ecological research at Savannah River Ecology Laboratory. Annual report, August 1971--May 1, 1974 (open access)

Report of ecological research at Savannah River Ecology Laboratory. Annual report, August 1971--May 1, 1974

None
Date: May 31, 1974
Creator: Lewis, W. M.; Smith, M. H.; Beyers, R. J.; Gentry, J. B.; Gibbons, J. W.; Howell, F. G. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fourteenth workshop geothermal reservoir engineering: Proceedings (open access)

Fourteenth workshop geothermal reservoir engineering: Proceedings

The Fourteenth Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering was held at Stanford University on January 24--26, 1989. Major areas of discussion include: (1) well testing; (2) various field results; (3) geoscience; (4) geochemistry; (5) reinjection; (6) hot dry rock; and (7) numerical modelling. For these workshop proceedings, individual papers are processed separately for the Energy Data Base.
Date: December 31, 1989
Creator: Ramey, H. J. Jr.; Kruger, P.; Horne, R. N.; Miller, F. G.; Brigham, W. E. & Cook, J. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report on the Agricultural Experiment Stations, 1927 (open access)

Report on the Agricultural Experiment Stations, 1927

Volume provides a summary of the progress of each agricultural experiment station. Also includes statistics, a bibliography of experiment station publications, and selected studies.
Date: October 31, 1928
Creator: United States. Office of Experiment Stations.
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anderson Localization of Ballooning Modes, Quantum Chaos and the Stability of Compact Quasiaxially Symmetric Stellarators (open access)

Anderson Localization of Ballooning Modes, Quantum Chaos and the Stability of Compact Quasiaxially Symmetric Stellarators

The radially local magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) ballooning stability of a compact, quasiaxially symmetric stellarator (QAS), is examined just above the ballooning beta limit with a method that can lead to estimates of global stability. Here MHD stability is analyzed through the calculation and examination of the ballooning mode eigenvalue isosurfaces in the 3-space [s, alpha, theta(subscript ''k'')]; s is the edge normalized toroidal flux, alpha is the field line variable, and q(subscript ''k'') is the perpendicular wave vector or ballooning parameter. Broken symmetry, i.e., deviations from axisymmetry, in the stellarator magnetic field geometry causes localization of the ballooning mode eigenfunction, and gives rise to new types of nonsymmetric eigenvalue isosurfaces in both the stable and unstable spectrum. For eigenvalues far above the marginal point, isosurfaces are topologically spherical, indicative of strong ''quantum chaos.'' The complexity of QAS marginal isosurfaces suggests that finite Larmor radius stabilization estimates will be difficult and that fully three-dimensional, high-n MHD computations are required to predict the beta limit.
Date: October 31, 2001
Creator: Redi, M. H.; Johnson, J. L.; Klasky, S.; Canik, J.; Dewar, R. L. & Cooper, W. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The partial Siberian snake experiment at the Brookhaven AGS (open access)

The partial Siberian snake experiment at the Brookhaven AGS

We are building a 4.7 Tesla-meter room temperature solenoid to be installed in a 10-foot long AGS straight section. This experiment will test the idea of using a partial snake to correct all depolarizing imperfection resonances and also test the feasibility of betatron tune jump in correction intrinsic resonances in the presence of a partial snake.
Date: December 31, 1992
Creator: Huang, H.; Caussyn, D. D.; Ellison, T.; Jones, B.; Lee, S. Y.; Schwandt, P. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proton beam lifetime increase with 10- and 12-pole correctors in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (open access)

Proton beam lifetime increase with 10- and 12-pole correctors in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider

N/A
Date: October 31, 2012
Creator: Fischer, W.; Beebe-Wang, J.; Gu, X.; Luo, Y. & Nemesure, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drilling and geohydrologic data for test hole USW UZ-1, Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada (open access)

Drilling and geohydrologic data for test hole USW UZ-1, Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada

This report presents data collected to determine the hydrologic characteristics of tuffaceous rocks penetrated in test hole USW UZ-1. The borehole is the first of two deep, large-diameter, unsaturated-zone test holes dry drilled using the vacuum/reverse-air-circulation method. This test hole was drilled in and near the southwestern part of the Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada, in a program conducted in cooperation with the US Department of Energy. These investigations are part of the Yucca Mountain Project (formerly the Nevada Nuclear Waste Storage Investigations) to identify a potentially suitable site for the storage of high-level radioactive wastes. Data are presented for bit and casing configurations, coring methods, sample collection, drilling rate, borehole deviation, and out-of-gage borehole. Geologic data for this borehole include geophysical logs, a lithologic log of drill-bit cuttings, and strike and distribution of fractures. Hydrologic data include water-content and water-potential measurements of drill-bit cuttings, water-level measurements, and physical and chemical analyses of water. Laboratory measurements of moisture content and matric properties from the larger drill-bit cutting fragments were considered to be representative of in-situ conditions. 3 refs., 5 figs., 10 tabs.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Whitfield, M.S.; Thordarson, W.; Hammermeister, D.P. & Warner, J.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test and Evaluation of Alco/BLH Prototype Sodium-Heated Steam Generator: Final Report (open access)

Test and Evaluation of Alco/BLH Prototype Sodium-Heated Steam Generator: Final Report

A 30-Mwt prototype sodium-to-sodium intermediate heat exchanger and a 30-Mwt prototype sodium-heated steam generator were tested in combined operation in its Sodium Components Test Installation. This report contains the results of test and evaluation of the steam generator. During plant performance tests, performance degradation was observed, which resulted in the initiation of a diagnostic test series. This test series revealed that under certain operating conditions, the thermohydraulic characteristic of the steam generator changed either suddenly or gradually, resulting in overall performance degradation. A structural failure, requiring retirement of the unit, occurred before the diagnostic test series and analytical support effort were completed. This report describes the thermohydraulic and structural performance, including the structural failures, and related evaluation analyses of the Alco/BLH prototype steam generator performed prior to termination of the test and evaluation program. In addition, the report presents a post-test examination plan to obtain data that could possibly explain the cause of performance anomalies and structural failures experienced during testing.
Date: January 31, 1971
Creator: Kaplan, C. J.; Auge, L. J.; Cho, S. M.; Hanna, R. W.; Prevost, J. R.; Steger, N. A. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
LLNL's Experience with the 3rd ITWG Nuclear Forensics Round Robin - INMM 2011 (open access)

LLNL's Experience with the 3rd ITWG Nuclear Forensics Round Robin - INMM 2011

None
Date: May 31, 2011
Creator: Kristo, M J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library