Magnetron co-sputtering system for coating ICF targets (open access)

Magnetron co-sputtering system for coating ICF targets

Fabrication of Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) targets requires deposition of various types of coatings on microspheres. The mechanical strength, and surface finish of the coatings are of concern in ICF experiments. The tensile strength of coatings can be controlled through grain refinement, selective doping and alloy formation. We have constructed a magnetron co-sputtering system to produce variable density profile coatings with high tensile strength on microspheres. The preliminary data on the properties of a Au-Cu binary alloy system by SEM and STEM analysis is presented.
Date: December 9, 1981
Creator: Hsieh, E. J.; Meyer, S. F.; Halsey, W. G.; Jameson, G. T. & Wittmayer, F. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
pi. pi. scattering by pole extrapolation methods. [2. 67 GeV/c, angular distribution, Chew-Low and Durr-Pilkum methods, OPE model, isospin] (open access)

pi. pi. scattering by pole extrapolation methods. [2. 67 GeV/c, angular distribution, Chew-Low and Durr-Pilkum methods, OPE model, isospin]

A 25-inch hydrogen bubble chamber was used at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory Bevatron to produce 300,000 pictures of ..pi../sup +/p interactions at an incident momentum of the ..pi../sup +/ of 2.67 GeV/c. The 2-prong events were processed using the FSD and the FOG-CLOUDY-FAIR data reduction system. Events of the nature ..pi../sup +/p ..-->.. ..pi../sup +/p..pi../sup 0/ and ..pi../sup +/p ..-->.. ..pi../sup +/..pi../sup +/n with values of momentum transfer to the proton of -t less than or equal to 0.238 GeV/sup 2/ were selected. These events were used to extrapolate to the pion pole (t = m/sub ..pi..//sup 2/) in order to investigate the ..pi.. ..pi.. interaction with isospins of both T = 1 and T = 2. Two methods were used to do the extrapolation: the original Chew-Low method developed in 1959 and the Durr-Pilkuhn method developed in 1965 which takes into account centrifugal barrier penetration factors. At first it seemed that, while the Durr-Pilkuhn method gave better values for the total ..pi.. ..pi.. cross section, the Chew-Low method gave better values for the angular distribution. Further analysis, however, showed that if the requirement of total OPE (one-pion-exchange) were dropped, then the Durr-Pilkuhn method gave more reasonable values of the …
Date: December 9, 1977
Creator: Lott, F.W. III
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contributions to the INTOR workshop (open access)

Contributions to the INTOR workshop

This paper discusses the use of Nb/sub 3/Sn conductors as coils for toroidal fields in thermonuclear reactors. In particular, the mechanical properties are investigated for these conductors as well as substitute materials. 8 refs.
Date: December 9, 1987
Creator: Miller, J.R. (comp.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Debunching into a bucket of lower harmonic number (open access)

Debunching into a bucket of lower harmonic number

The adiabatic debunching of beam from buckets of higher harmonic number into waiting buckets of lower harmonic number is a critical step in the current scheme of operation for Tev I. The optimum choice of rf system parameters for this ''bunch coalescing'' process is not immediately obvious. In this note two examples are presented along with generalizations based upon them and experience with the Tevatron I design which can simplify the selection of appropriate parameters for different conditions.
Date: December 9, 1987
Creator: MacLachlan, J.A. & Griffin, J.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Extensible Open-Source Compiler Infrastructure for Testing (open access)

An Extensible Open-Source Compiler Infrastructure for Testing

Testing forms a critical part of the development process for large-scale software, and there is growing need for automated tools that can read, represent, analyze, and transform the application's source code to help carry out testing tasks. However, the support required to compile applications written in common general purpose languages is generally inaccessible to the testing research community. In this paper, we report on an extensible, open-source compiler infrastructure called ROSE, which is currently in development at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. ROSE specifically targets developers who wish to build source-based tools that implement customized analyses and optimizations for large-scale C, C++, and Fortran90 scientific computing applications (on the order of a million lines of code or more). However, much of this infrastructure can also be used to address problems in testing, and ROSE is by design broadly accessible to those without a formal compiler background. This paper details the interactions between testing of applications and the ways in which compiler technology can aid in the understanding of those applications. We emphasize the particular aspects of ROSE, such as support for the general analysis of whole programs, that are particularly well-suited to the testing research community and the scale of the …
Date: December 9, 2005
Creator: Quinlan, D; Ur, S & Vuduc, R
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Ultra-Precise System for Electrical Resistivity Tomography Measurements (open access)

An Ultra-Precise System for Electrical Resistivity Tomography Measurements

The objective of this research was to determine the feasibility of building and operating an ERT system that will allow measurement precision that is an order of magnitude better than existing systems on the market today and in particular if this can be done without significantly greater manufacturing or operating costs than existing commercial systems. Under this proposal, we performed an estimation of measurement errors in galvanic resistivity data that arise as a consequence of the type of electrode material used to make the measurements. In our laboratory, measurement errors for both magnitude and induced polarization (IP) were estimated using the reciprocity of data from an array of electrodes as might be used for electrical resistance tomography using 14 different metals as well as one non-metal - carbon. In a second phase of this study, using archival data from two long-term ERT surveys, we examined long-term survivability of electrodes over periods of several years. The survey sites were: the Drift Scale Test at Yucca Mountain, Nevada (which was sponsored by the U. S. Department of Energy as part of the civilian radioactive waste management program), and a water infiltration test at a site adjacent to the New Mexico Institute of …
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: LaBrecque, Douglas J & Adkins, Paula L
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Probing the spin polarization of current by soft x-ray imaging of current-induced magnetic vortex dynamics (open access)

Probing the spin polarization of current by soft x-ray imaging of current-induced magnetic vortex dynamics

Time-resolved soft X-ray transmission microscopy is applied to image the current-induced resonant dynamics of the magnetic vortex core realized in a micron-sized Permalloy disk. The high spatial resolution better than 25 nm enables us to observe the resonant motion of the vortex core. The result also provides the spin polarization of the current to be 0.67 {+-} 0.16 for Permalloy by fitting the experimental results with an analytical model in the framework of the spin-transfer torque.
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: Kasai, Shinya; Fischer, Peter; Im, Mi-Young; Yamada, Keisuke; Nakatani, Yoshinobu; Kobayashi, Kensuke et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microchannel Reactor System Design & Demonstration For On-Site H2O2 Production by Controlled H2/O2 Reaction (open access)

Microchannel Reactor System Design & Demonstration For On-Site H2O2 Production by Controlled H2/O2 Reaction

We successfully demonstrated an innovative hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production concept which involved the development of flame- and explosion-resistant microchannel reactor system for energy efficient, cost-saving, on-site H2O2 production. We designed, fabricated, evaluated, and optimized a laboratory-scale microchannel reactor system for controlled direct combination of H2 and O2 in all proportions including explosive regime, at a low pressure and a low temperature to produce about 1.5 wt% H2O2 as proposed. In the second phase of the program, as a prelude to full-scale commercialization, we demonstrated our H2O2 production approach by ‘numbering up’ the channels in a multi-channel microreactor-based pilot plant to produce 1 kg/h of H2O2 at 1.5 wt% as demanded by end-users of the developed technology. To our knowledge, we are the first group to accomplish this significant milestone. We identified the reaction pathways that comprise the process, and implemented rigorous mechanistic kinetic studies to obtain the kinetics of the three main dominant reactions. We are not aware of any such comprehensive kinetic studies for the direct combination process, either in a microreactor or any other reactor system. We showed that the mass transfer parameter in our microreactor system is several orders of magnitude higher than what obtains in the …
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: Lawal, Adeniyi
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Field driven ferromagnetic phase nucleation and propagation from the domain boundaries in antiferromagnetically coupled perpendicular anisotropy films (open access)

Field driven ferromagnetic phase nucleation and propagation from the domain boundaries in antiferromagnetically coupled perpendicular anisotropy films

We investigate the reversal process in antiferromagnetically coupled [Co/Pt]{sub X-1}/{l_brace}Co/Ru/[Co/Pt]{sub X-1}{r_brace}{sub 16} multilayer films by combining magnetometry and Magnetic soft X-ray Transmission Microscopy (MXTM). After out-of-plane demagnetization, a stable one dimensional ferromagnetic (FM) stripe domain phase (tiger-tail phase) for a thick stack sample (X=7 is obtained), while metastable sharp antiferromagnetic (AF) domain walls are observed in the remanent state for a thinner stack sample (X=6). When applying an external magnetic field the sharp domain walls of the thinner stack sample transform at a certain threshold field into the FM stripe domain wall phase. We present magnetic energy calculations that reveal the underlying energetics driving the overall reversal mechanisms.
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: Hauet, Thomas; Gunther, Christian M.; Hovorka, Ondrej; Berger, Andreas; Im, Mi-Young; Fischer, Peter et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multiscale integration schemes for jump-diffusion systems (open access)

Multiscale integration schemes for jump-diffusion systems

We study a two-time-scale system of jump-diffusion stochastic differential equations. We analyze a class of multiscale integration methods for these systems, which, in the spirit of [1], consist of a hybridization between a standard solver for the slow components and short runs for the fast dynamics, which are used to estimate the effect that the fast components have on the slow ones. We obtain explicit bounds for the discrepancy between the results of the multiscale integration method and the slow components of the original system.
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: Givon, D. & Kevrekidis, I.G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Life Cycle Costs for the Domestic Reactor-Based Plutonium Disposition Option (open access)

Life Cycle Costs for the Domestic Reactor-Based Plutonium Disposition Option

None
Date: December 9, 1999
Creator: Williams, K.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic response of materials on sub-nanosecond time scales, and beryllium properties for inertial confinement fusion (open access)

Dynamic response of materials on sub-nanosecond time scales, and beryllium properties for inertial confinement fusion

During the past few years, substantial progress has been made in developing experimental techniques capable of investigating the response of materials to dynamic loading on nanosecond time scales and shorter, with multiple diagnostics probing different aspects of the behavior. these relatively short time scales are scientifically interesting because plastic flow and phase changes in common materials with simple crystal structures--such as iron--may be suppressed, allowing unusual states to be induced and the dynamics of plasticity and polymorphism to be explored. Loading by laser ablation can be particularly convenient. The TRIDENT laser has been used to impart shocks and isentropic compression waves from {approx}1 to 200GPa in a range of elements and alloys, with diagnostics including surface velocimetry (line-imaging VISAR), surface displacement (framed area imaging), x-ray diffraction (single crystal and polycrystal), ellipsometry, and Raman spectroscopy. A major motivation has been the study of the properties of beryllium under conditions relevant to the fuel capsule in inertial confinement fusion: magnetically-driven shock and isentropic compression shots at Z were used to investigate the equation of state and shock melting characteristics, complemented by laser ablation experiments to investigate plasticity and heterogeneous response. These results will help to constrain acceptable tolerances on manufacturing, and possible …
Date: December 9, 2004
Creator: Swift, D. C.; Tierney, T. E.; Luo, S. N.; Paisley, D. L.; Kyrala, G. A.; Hauer, A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cycling of DOC and DON by Novel Heterotrophic and Photoheterotrophic Bacteria in the Ocean: Final Report (open access)

Cycling of DOC and DON by Novel Heterotrophic and Photoheterotrophic Bacteria in the Ocean: Final Report

The flux of dissolved organic matter (DOM) through aquatic bacterial communities is a major process in carbon cycling in the oceans and other aquatic systems. Our work addressed the general hypothesis that the phylogenetic make-up of bacterial communities and the abundances of key types of bacteria are important factors influencing the processing of DOM in aquatic ecosystems. Since most bacteria are not easily cultivated, the phylogenetic diversity of these microbes has to be assessed using culture-independent approaches. Even if the relevant bacteria were cultivated, their activity in the lab would likely differ from that under environmental conditions. This project found variation in DOM uptake by the major bacterial groups found in coastal waters. In brief, the data suggest substantial differences among groups in the use of high and molecular weight DOM components. It also made key discoveries about the role of light in affecting this uptake especially by cyanobacteria. In the North Atlantic Ocean, for example, over half of the light-stimulated uptake was by the coccoid cyanobacterium, Prochlorococcus, with the remaining uptake due to Synechococcus and other photoheterotrophic bacteria. The project also examined in detail the degradation of one organic matter component, chitin, which is often said to be the …
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: Kirchman, David L
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Memo to Skip Laitner of EPA: initial comments on 'The internetbegins with coal' (open access)

Memo to Skip Laitner of EPA: initial comments on 'The internetbegins with coal'

This memo explores the assumptions in Mark P. Mills' report titled 'The Internet Begins with Coal' that relate to current electricity use 'associated with the Internet'. We find that Mills has significantly overestimated electricity use, in some cases by more than an order of magnitude. We adjust his estimates to reflect measured data and more accurate assumptions, which reduces Mills' overall estimate of total Internet-related electricity use by about a factor of eight.
Date: December 9, 1999
Creator: Koomey, Jonathan G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
DEVELOPMENT OF AG-1 SECTION FI ON METAL MEDIA FILTERS - 9061 (open access)

DEVELOPMENT OF AG-1 SECTION FI ON METAL MEDIA FILTERS - 9061

Development of a metal media standard (FI) for ASME AG-1 (Code on Nuclear Air and Gas Treatment) has been under way for almost ten years. This paper will provide a brief history of the development process of this section and a detailed overview of its current content/status. There have been at least two points when dramatic changes have been made in the scope of the document due to feedback from the full Committee on Nuclear Air and Gas Treatment (CONAGT). Development of the proposed section has required resolving several difficult issues associated with scope; namely, filtering efficiency, operating conditions (media velocity, pressure drop, etc.), qualification testing, and quality control/acceptance testing. A proposed version of Section FI is currently undergoing final revisions prior to being submitted for balloting. The section covers metal media filters of filtering efficiencies ranging from medium (less than 99.97%) to high (99.97% and greater). Two different types of high efficiency filters are addressed; those units intended to be a direct replacement of Section FC fibrous glass HEPA filters and those that will be placed into newly designed systems capable of supporting greater static pressures and differential pressures across the filter elements. Direct replacements of FC HEPA filters …
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: Adamson, D & Charles A. Waggoner, C
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acquisition of Single Crystal Growth and Characterization Equipment (open access)

Acquisition of Single Crystal Growth and Characterization Equipment

Final Report for DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-04ER46178 'Acquisition of Single Crystal Growth and Characterization Equipment'. There is growing concern in the condensed matter community that the need for quality crystal growth and materials preparation laboratories is not being met in the United States. It has been suggested that there are too many researchers performing measurements on too few materials. As a result, many user facilities are not being used optimally. The number of proficient crystal growers is too small. In addition, insufficient attention is being paid to the enterprise of finding new and interesting materials, which is the driving force behind much of condensed matter research and, ultimately, technology. While a detailed assessment of this situation is clearly needed, enough evidence of a problem already exists to compel a general consensus that the situation must be addressed promptly. This final report describes the work carried out during the last four years in our group, in which a state-of-the-art single crystal growth and characterization facility was established for the study of novel oxides and intermetallic compounds of rare earth, actinide and transition metal elements. Research emphasis is on the physics of superconducting (SC), magnetic, heavy fermion (HF), non-Fermi liquid (NFL) and …
Date: December 9, 2008
Creator: Maple, M. Brian & Zocco, Diego A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A three-level BDDC algorithm for Mortar discretizations (open access)

A three-level BDDC algorithm for Mortar discretizations

In this paper, a three-level BDDC algorithm is developed for the solutions of large sparse algebraic linear systems arising from the mortar discretization of elliptic boundary value problems. The mortar discretization is considered on geometrically non-conforming subdomain partitions. In two-level BDDC algorithms, the coarse problem needs to be solved exactly. However, its size will increase with the increase of the number of the subdomains. To overcome this limitation, the three-level algorithm solves the coarse problem inexactly while a good rate of convergence is maintained. This is an extension of previous work, the three-level BDDC algorithms for standard finite element discretization. Estimates of the condition numbers are provided for the three-level BDDC method and numerical experiments are also discussed.
Date: December 9, 2007
Creator: Kim, H. & Tu, X.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electronic interactions between gold nanoclusters in constrainedgeometries (open access)

Electronic interactions between gold nanoclusters in constrainedgeometries

None
Date: December 9, 2005
Creator: Kim, Sang Hoon; Hwang, S.; Shon, Young-Seok; Ogletree, D. Frank & Salmeron, Miquel
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fuel bundle, control rod, and neutron source specifications (open access)

Fuel bundle, control rod, and neutron source specifications

Data are provided for the ordering of fuel assemblies for the LOFT reactor. (JDB)
Date: December 9, 1971
Creator: Russell, M.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isotope Brayton ground demonstration testing and flight qualification. Volume 1. Technical program (open access)

Isotope Brayton ground demonstration testing and flight qualification. Volume 1. Technical program

A program is proposed for the ground demonstration, development, and flight qualification of a radioisotope nuclear heated dynamic power system for use on space missions beginning in the 1980's. This type of electrical power system is based upon and combines two aerospace technologies currently under intense development; namely, the MHW isotope heat source and the closed Brayton cycle gas turbine. This power system represents the next generation of reliable, efficient economic electrical power equipment for space, and will be capable of providing 0.5 to 2.0 kW of electric power to a wide variety of spacecraft for earth orbital and interplanetary missions. The immediate design will be based upon the requirements for the Air Force SURVSATCOM mission. The proposal is presented in three volumes plus an Executive Summary. This volume describes the tasks in the technical program.
Date: December 9, 1974
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Herbert Easterly auxiliary truck heater (open access)

Herbert Easterly auxiliary truck heater

The objective of this work was to continue the development of the Herbert Easterly heater apparatus for vehicles, such as semi-trailer tractors in order to fully establish its technical feasibility and provide the basis for its commercialization. This heater is auxiliary to the vehicle's primary heating system. With the engine off it heats both the vehicle engine to a temperature at which it starts easily and the vehicle passenger compartment. Specifically, this heater is automatically ignitable, operates directly from the vehicle diesel fuel supply and preheats the vehicle engine fuel prior to combustion. During the course of this work nine different versions of prototype heaters were designed, constructed and tested. All designs were based on the ideas and principles outlined in the Easterly patent. Each successive version incorporated design and fabrication improvements relative to the previous version. The final version, Prototype 9, utilized a multiple water jacket design to capture additional heat from the combustion gases prior to exhausting to the atmosphere. This final prototype exceeded the performance of a commercially available Webasto DBW-2010 using the same commercial burner as the one used in the Webasto unit. The time required to raise the heater fluid temperature by 120{degree}F was 23% …
Date: December 9, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study to assess the feasibility of scaling up the powder metallurgy approach for the fabrication of commercial Nb/sub 3/Sn filamentary superconductors (open access)

Study to assess the feasibility of scaling up the powder metallurgy approach for the fabrication of commercial Nb/sub 3/Sn filamentary superconductors

A preliminary assessment was made of the feasibility of scaling up the laboratory techniques of making filamentary Nb/sub 3/Sn superconductors using powder metallurgy to commercial fabrication process. The purpose of the effort is divided into two tasks. The first one is to demonstrate that sintered niobium rods infiltrated with tin can be reduced in area of approximately 10/sup 4/. The second task pertains to the extrusion by conventional manner a copper billet containing several sintered rods each encapsulated in tantalum. The ultimate goal of the project is to establish optimal processing parameters that are suitable for the production of long lengths of fully stabilized, large current and high field conductors.
Date: December 9, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial TMX central-cell ICRH experiments (open access)

Initial TMX central-cell ICRH experiments

Four topics are discussed in this report: the feasibility of applying ion cyclotron resonance heating (ICRH) in the TMX central cell, some applications of heating, the results of preliminary experiments, and plans for further ICRH experiments.
Date: December 9, 1980
Creator: Molvik, A.W.; Coffield, F.E.; Falabella, S.; Griffin, D.; McVey, B.; Pickles, W. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isotope Brayton ground-demonstration testing and flight qualification: executive summary (open access)

Isotope Brayton ground-demonstration testing and flight qualification: executive summary

The organization and management of a program for designing, ground testing and flight qualification of a radioisotope-fueled Brayton cycle power system for space vehicles are summarized. The conceptual design, and predicted performance and cost of the Brayton power system and the ground demonstration are outlined. The personnel and facilities which will be used in the program are described. (LCL)
Date: December 9, 1974
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library