A Possible Dechirper Device for the LCLS and LCLS-II (open access)

A Possible Dechirper Device for the LCLS and LCLS-II

None
Date: December 16, 2013
Creator: Bane, K.; Emma, P.; Huang, Z.; Iverson, R.; Raubenheimer, T.; Stupakov, G. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser-Plasma Interactions in Drive Campaign targets on the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Laser-Plasma Interactions in Drive Campaign targets on the National Ignition Facility

None
Date: November 16, 2013
Creator: Hinkel, D. E.; Callahan, D. A.; Moody, J. D.; Amendt, P. A.; Lasinski, B. F.; MacGowan, B. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commercial Building Partnerships Replication and Diffusion (open access)

Commercial Building Partnerships Replication and Diffusion

This study presents findings from survey and interview data investigating replication efforts of Commercial Building Partnership (CBP) partners that worked directly with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). PNNL partnered directly with 12 organizations on new and retrofit construction projects, which represented approximately 28 percent of the entire U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) CBP program. Through a feedback survey mechanism, along with personal interviews, PNNL gathered quantitative and qualitative data relating to replication efforts by each organization. These data were analyzed to provide insight into two primary research areas: 1) CBP partners’ replication efforts of technologies and approaches used in the CBP project to the rest of the organization’s building portfolio (including replication verification), and, 2) the market potential for technology diffusion into the total U.S. commercial building stock, as a direct result of the CBP program. The first area of this research focused specifically on replication efforts underway or planned by each CBP program participant. Factors that impact replication include motivation, organizational structure and objectives firms have for implementation of energy efficient technologies. Comparing these factors between different CBP partners revealed patterns in motivation for constructing energy efficient buildings, along with better insight into market trends for green building …
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Antonopoulos, Chrissi A.; Dillon, Heather E. & Baechler, Michael C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of Land Surface Model Performance in WRF for Simulating Wind at Heights Relevant to the Wind Energy Community (open access)

Assessment of Land Surface Model Performance in WRF for Simulating Wind at Heights Relevant to the Wind Energy Community

None
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Wharton, S; Simpson, M; Osuna, J; Newman, J & Biraud, S
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instrumentation for the proposed low energy RHIC electron Cooling project (open access)

Instrumentation for the proposed low energy RHIC electron Cooling project

N/A
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: D., Gassner; Fedotov, A.; Kayran, D.; Litvinenko, V.; Michnoff, R.; Miller, T. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Utilizing Atlassian Jira For Large-Scale Software Development Management* (open access)

Utilizing Atlassian Jira For Large-Scale Software Development Management*

None
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Fisher, J; Koning, D & Ludwigsen, A P
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status Of The National Ignition Facility (NIF) Integrated Computer Control And Information Systems* (open access)

Status Of The National Ignition Facility (NIF) Integrated Computer Control And Information Systems*

Discusses the status of the control and information systems to support a wide variety of experiments being conducted on NIF including ignition experiments.
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Bowers, G.; Brunton, G.; Casey, A.; Churby, A.; Christensen, M.; Demaret, R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Socioeconomic Assessment and Research Program (open access)

Socioeconomic Assessment and Research Program

Preliminary review and analyses of residential energy consumption surveys' (various) comparing levels of energy expenditures across population categories.
Date: March 16, 2013
Creator: Poyer, David A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Use of Fast Neutron Detection for Materials Accountability (open access)

The Use of Fast Neutron Detection for Materials Accountability

None
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Nakae, L. F.; Chapline, G. F.; Glenn, A. M.; Kerr, P. L.; Kim, K. S.; Ouedraogo, S. A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated Transmission and Distribution Control (open access)

Integrated Transmission and Distribution Control

Distributed, generation, demand response, distributed storage, smart appliances, electric vehicles and renewable energy resources are expected to play a key part in the transformation of the American power system. Control, coordination and compensation of these smart grid assets are inherently interlinked. Advanced control strategies to warrant large-scale penetration of distributed smart grid assets do not currently exist. While many of the smart grid technologies proposed involve assets being deployed at the distribution level, most of the significant benefits accrue at the transmission level. The development of advanced smart grid simulation tools, such as GridLAB-D, has led to a dramatic improvement in the models of smart grid assets available for design and evaluation of smart grid technology. However, one of the main challenges to quantifying the benefits of smart grid assets at the transmission level is the lack of tools and framework for integrating transmission and distribution technologies into a single simulation environment. Furthermore, given the size and complexity of the distribution system, it is crucial to be able to represent the behavior of distributed smart grid assets using reduced-order controllable models and to analyze their impacts on the bulk power system in terms of stability and reliability. The objectives of …
Date: January 16, 2013
Creator: Kalsi, Karanjit; Fuller, Jason C.; Tuffner, Francis K.; Lian, Jianming; Zhang, Wei; Marinovici, Laurentiu D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design and implementation of Dilation X-ray Imager for NIF "DIXI" (open access)

Design and implementation of Dilation X-ray Imager for NIF "DIXI"

None
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Ayers, M J; Nagel, S R; Felker, B; Bell, P M; Bradley, D K; Piston, K et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal and Chemical Evolution of Collapsing Filaments (open access)

Thermal and Chemical Evolution of Collapsing Filaments

None
Date: January 16, 2013
Creator: Gray, W & Scannapieco, E
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation Analyses in Support of DOE’s Fossil Fuel Rule for Single Component Equipment and Lighting Replacements (open access)

Simulation Analyses in Support of DOE’s Fossil Fuel Rule for Single Component Equipment and Lighting Replacements

At the request of DOE’s Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP), Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) conducted a series of building energy simulations using a large office model to investigate the potential savings that could be accrued from a typical chiller, boiler, or lighting replacement in a Federal office building.
Date: October 16, 2013
Creator: Halverson, Mark A. & Wang, Weimin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering Ralstonia eutropha for Production of Isobutanol (IBT) Motor Fuel from Carbon Dioxide, Hydrogen, and Oxygen Project Final Report (open access)

Engineering Ralstonia eutropha for Production of Isobutanol (IBT) Motor Fuel from Carbon Dioxide, Hydrogen, and Oxygen Project Final Report

This research project is a collaboration between the Sinskey laboratory at MIT and the Worden laboratory at Michigan State University. The goal of the project is to produce Isobutanol (IBT), a branched-chain alcohol that can serve as a drop-in transportation fuel, through the engineered microbial biosynthesis of Carbon Dioxide, Hydrogen, and Oxygen using a novel bioreactor. This final technical report presents the findings of both the biological engineering work at MIT that extended the native branched-chain amino acid pathway of the wild type Ralstonia eutropha H16 to perform this biosynthesis, as well as the unique design, modeling, and construction of a bioreactor for incompatible gasses at Michigan State that enabled the operational testing of the complete system. This 105 page technical report summarizing the three years of research includes 72 figures and 11 tables of findings. Ralstonia eutropha (also known as Cupriavidus necator) is a Gram-negative, facultatively chemolithoautotrophic bacteria. It has been the principle organism used for the study of polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) polymer biosynthesis. The wild-type Ralstonia eutropha H16 produces PHB as an intracellular carbon storage material while under nutrient stress in the presence of excess carbon. Under this stress, it can accumulate approximately 80 % of its cell dry …
Date: December 16, 2013
Creator: Sinskey, Anthony J.; Worden, Robert Mark; Brigham, Christopher; Lu, Jingnan; Quimby, John Westlake; Gai, Claudia et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coupled-Channels Effects In Optical Potentials For Deformed Nuclei (open access)

Coupled-Channels Effects In Optical Potentials For Deformed Nuclei

None
Date: December 16, 2013
Creator: Thompson, I J; Dietrich, F S & Ormand, W E
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accurate Numerical Simulations Of Chemical Phenomena Involved in Energy Production and Storage with MADNESS and MPQC: ALCF-2 Early Science Program Technical Report (open access)

Accurate Numerical Simulations Of Chemical Phenomena Involved in Energy Production and Storage with MADNESS and MPQC: ALCF-2 Early Science Program Technical Report

This report describes the interfacing of Eigen3 as C++ Substitute of LACKPACK and introduces elemental for the diagonalization of large matrices.
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Harrison, R.J.; Vzquez-Mayagoitia, A.; Hammond, J.R. (LCF) & University), (Stony Brook
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Brookhaven 200 MeV Linear Accelerator Beam Instrumentation Upgrade (open access)

Brookhaven 200 MeV Linear Accelerator Beam Instrumentation Upgrade

N/A
Date: September 16, 2013
Creator: Gould, O.; Briscoe, B.; Gassner, D.; LoDestro, V.; Michnoff, R.; Morris, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulations of the Thermodynamic and Diffusion Properties of Actinide Oxide Fuel Materials (open access)

Simulations of the Thermodynamic and Diffusion Properties of Actinide Oxide Fuel Materials

Spent nuclear fuel from commercial reactors is comprised of 95-99 percent UO{sub 2} and 1-5 percent fission products and transuranic elements. Certain actinides and fission products are of particular interest in terms of fuel stability, which affects reprocessing and waste materials. The transuranics found in spent nuclear fuels are Np, Pu, Am, and Cm, some of which have long half- lives (e.g., 2.1 million years for {sup 237}Np). These actinides can be separated and recycled into new fuel matrices, thereby reducing the nuclear waste inventory. Oxides of these actinides are isostructural with UO{sub 2}, and are expected to form solid solutions. This project will use computational techniques to conduct a comprehensive study on thermodynamic properties of actinide-oxide solid solutions. The goals of this project are to: Determine the temperature-dependent mixing properties of actinide-oxide fuels; Validate computational methods by comparing results with experimental results; Expand research scope to complex (ternary and quaternary) mixed actinide oxide fuels. After deriving phase diagrams and the stability of solid solutions as a function of temperature and pressure, the project team will determine whether potential phase separations or ordered phases can actually occur by studying diffusion of cations and the kinetics of potential phase separations or …
Date: April 16, 2013
Creator: Becker, Udo
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quantify Water Extraction by TBP/Dodecane via Molecular Dynamics Simulations (open access)

Quantify Water Extraction by TBP/Dodecane via Molecular Dynamics Simulations

The purpose of this project is to quantify the interfacial transport of water into the most prevalent nuclear reprocessing solvent extractant mixture, namely tri-butyl- phosphate (TBP) and dodecane, via massively parallel molecular dynamics simulations on the most powerful machines available for open research. Specifically, we will accomplish this objective by evolving the water/TBP/dodecane system up to 1 ms elapsed time, and validate the simulation results by direct comparison with experimentally measured water solubility in the organic phase. The significance of this effort is to demonstrate for the first time that the combination of emerging simulation tools and state-of-the-art supercomputers can provide quantitative information on par to experimental measurements for solvent extraction systems of relevance to the nuclear fuel cycle. Results: Initially, the isolated single component, and single phase systems were studied followed by the two-phase, multicomponent counterpart. Specifically, the systems we studied were: pure TBP; pure n-dodecane; TBP/n-dodecane mixture; and the complete extraction system: water-TBP/n-dodecane two phase system to gain deep insight into the water extraction process. We have completely achieved our goal of simulating the molecular extraction of water molecules into the TBP/n-dodecane mixture up to the saturation point, and obtained favorable comparison with experimental data. Many insights into …
Date: May 16, 2013
Creator: Khomami, Bamin; Cui, Shengting; de Almeida, Valmor F. & Felker, Kevin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library