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Analysis of the Ultra-fast Switching Dynamics in a Hybrid MOSFET/Driver (open access)

Analysis of the Ultra-fast Switching Dynamics in a Hybrid MOSFET/Driver

The turn-on dynamics of a power MOSFET during ultra-fast, {approx} ns, switching are discussed in this paper. The testing was performed using a custom hybrid MOSFET/Driver module, which was fabricated by directly assembling die-form components, power MOSFET and drivers, on a printed circuit board. By using die-form components, the hybrid approach substantially reduces parasitic inductance, which facilitates ultra-fast switching. The measured turn on time of the hybrid module with a resistive load is 1.2 ns with an applied voltage of 1000 V and drain current of 33 A. Detailed analysis of the switching waveforms reveals that switching behavior must be interpreted differently in the ultra-fast regime. For example, the gate threshold voltage to turn on the device is observed to increase as the switching time decreases. Further analysis and simulation of MOSFET switching behavior shows that the minimum turn on time scales with the product of the drain-source on resistance and drain-source capacitance, R{sub DS(on)}C{sub OSS}. This information will be useful in power MOSFET selection and gate driver design for ultra-fast switching applications.
Date: August 17, 2011
Creator: Tang, T. & Burkhart, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of the Software as a Service Model to the Control of Complex Building Systems (open access)

Application of the Software as a Service Model to the Control of Complex Building Systems

In an effort to create broad access to its optimization software, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), in collaboration with the University of California at Davis (UC Davis) and OSISoft, has recently developed a Software as a Service (SaaS) Model for reducing energy costs, cutting peak power demand, and reducing carbon emissions for multipurpose buildings. UC Davis currently collects and stores energy usage data from buildings on its campus. Researchers at LBNL sought to demonstrate that a SaaS application architecture could be built on top of this data system to optimize the scheduling of electricity and heat delivery in the building. The SaaS interface, known as WebOpt, consists of two major parts: a) the investment& planning and b) the operations module, which builds on the investment& planning module. The operational scheduling and load shifting optimization models within the operations module use data from load prediction and electrical grid emissions models to create an optimal operating schedule for the next week, reducing peak electricity consumption while maintaining quality of energy services. LBNL's application also provides facility managers with suggested energy infrastructure investments for achieving their energy cost and emission goals based on historical data collected with OSISoft's system. This paper describes these …
Date: March 17, 2011
Creator: Stadler, Michael; Donadee, Jonathan; Marnay, Chris; Mendes, Goncalo; Appen, Jan von; Megel, Oliver et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Archaeological Protein Residues: New Data for Conservation Science (open access)

Archaeological Protein Residues: New Data for Conservation Science

This article identifies several cases where archaeological protein residues may be of benefit, justifies the use of protein residues in particular, and discusses areas for improvement.
Date: February 17, 2011
Creator: Barker, Andrew
System: The UNT Digital Library
B to tau Leptonic and Semileptonic Decays (open access)

B to tau Leptonic and Semileptonic Decays

Decays of B mesons to states involving {tau} leptons can be used as a tool to search for the effects of new physics, such as those involving a charged Higgs boson. The experimental status of the decays B {yields} {tau}{nu} and B {yields} D{sup (*)}{tau}{nu} is discussed, together with limits on new physics effects from current results. Leptonic and semileptonic decays of B mesons into states involving {tau} leptons remain experimentally challenging, but can prove a useful tool for constraining Standard Model parameters, and also offer to constrain the effects of any new physics that may exist including the presence of a charged Higgs boson.
Date: November 17, 2011
Creator: Barrett, M. & U., /Brunel
System: The UNT Digital Library
Best Practices in Support of Implementing the revised DOE USQ Guide, DOE G 424.1-1B (open access)

Best Practices in Support of Implementing the revised DOE USQ Guide, DOE G 424.1-1B

None
Date: October 17, 2011
Creator: Mitchell, M A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Complete Genome Sequence of the Anaerobic, Halophilic Alkalithermophile Natranaerobius thermophilus JW/NM-WN-LF (open access)

Complete Genome Sequence of the Anaerobic, Halophilic Alkalithermophile Natranaerobius thermophilus JW/NM-WN-LF

None
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: Han, J.; Nolan, M.; Kyrpides, N.; Pitluck, S.; Goodwin, L.; Zhao, B. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coupler Studies for PBG Fiber Accelerators (open access)

Coupler Studies for PBG Fiber Accelerators

Photonic band gap (PBG) fiber with hollow core defects are being designed and fabricated for use as laser driven accelerators because they can provide gradients of several GeV/m for picosecond pulse lengths. We expect to produce fiber down to {lambda} = 1.5-2.0 {micro}m wavelengths but still lack a viable means for efficient coupling of laser power into such structures due to the very different character of the TM-like modes from those used in the telecom field and the fact that the defect must function as both a longitudinal waveguide for the accelerating field and a transport channel for the particles. We discuss the status of our work in pursuing both end and side coupling. For both options, the symmetry of these crystals leads to significant differences with the telecom field. Side coupling provides more options and appears to be preferred. Our goals are to test gradients, mode content and coupling efficiencies on the NLCTA at SLAC. While there are many potential types of fiber based on very different fabrication methods and materials we will concentrate on 2D axisymmetric glass with hexagonal symmetry but will discuss several different geometries including 2D and 3D planar structures. Since all of these can be …
Date: August 17, 2011
Creator: England, J.; Ng, C.; Noble, R.; Spencer, J.; Wu, Z. & Xu, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Dawn of Nuclear Photonics with Laser-based Gamma-rays (open access)

The Dawn of Nuclear Photonics with Laser-based Gamma-rays

A renaissance in nuclear physics is occurring around the world because of a new kind of incredibly bright, gamma-ray light source that can be created with short pulse lasers and energetic electron beams. These highly Mono-Energetic Gamma-ray (MEGa-ray) sources produce narrow, laser-like beams of incoherent, tunable gamma-rays and are enabling access and manipulation of the nucleus of the atom with photons or so called 'Nuclear Photonics'. Just as in the early days of the laser when photon manipulation of the valence electron structure of the atom became possible and enabling to new applications and science, nuclear photonics with laser-based gamma-ray sources promises both to open up wide areas of practical isotope-related, materials applications and to enable new discovery-class nuclear science. In the United States, the development of high brightness and high flux MEGa-ray sources is being actively pursued at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore (LLNL), California near San Francisco. The LLNL work aims to create by 2013 a machine that will advance the state of the art with respect to source the peak brightness by 6 orders of magnitude. This machine will create beams of 1 to 2.3 MeV photons with color purity matching that of common lasers. …
Date: March 17, 2011
Creator: Barty, C J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of the ILC RTML Extraction Lines (open access)

Design of the ILC RTML Extraction Lines

The ILC [1] Damping Ring to the Main Linac beamline (RTML) contains three extraction lines (EL). Each EL can be used both for an emergency abort dumping of the beam and tune-up continual train-by-train extraction. Two of the extraction lines are located downstream of the first and second stages of the RTML bunch compressor, and must accept both compressed and uncompressed beam with energy spreads of 2.5% and 0.15%, respectively. In this paper we report on an optics design that allowed minimizing the length of the extraction lines while offsetting the beam dumps from the main line by the distance required for acceptable radiation levels in the service tunnel. The proposed extraction lines can accommodate beams with different energy spreads while at the same time providing the beam size acceptable for the aluminum dump window. The RTML incorporates three extraction lines, which can be used for either an emergency beam abort or for a train-by-train extraction. The first EL is located downstream of the Damping Ring extraction arc. The other two extraction lines are located downstream of each stage of the two-stage bunch compressor. The first extraction line (EL1) receives 5GeV beam with an 0.15% energy spread. The extraction line …
Date: October 17, 2011
Creator: Seletskiy, S.; Tenenbaum, P.; Walz, D. & Solyak, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detailed chemical kinetic reaction mechanisms for soy and rapeseed biodiesel fuels (open access)

Detailed chemical kinetic reaction mechanisms for soy and rapeseed biodiesel fuels

None
Date: May 17, 2011
Creator: Westbrook, C K; Naik, C V; Herbinet, O; Pitz, W J; Mehl, M; Sarathy, S M et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dissociative Electron Attachment to Carbon Dioxide via the 8.2 eV Feshbach resonance (open access)

Dissociative Electron Attachment to Carbon Dioxide via the 8.2 eV Feshbach resonance

Momentum imaging experiments on dissociative electron attachment (DEA) to CO{sub 2} are combined with the results of ab initio calculations to provide a detailed and consistent picture of the dissociation dynamics through the 8.2 eV resonance, which is the major channel for DEA in CO{sub 2}. The present study resolves several puzzling misconceptions about this system.
Date: August 17, 2011
Creator: Slaughter, Dan; Adaniya, Hidihito; Rescigno, Tom; Haxton, Dan; Orel, Ann; McCurdy, Bill et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamical Messengers for Gauge Mediation (open access)

Dynamical Messengers for Gauge Mediation

We construct models of indirect gauge mediation where the dynamics responsible for breaking supersymmetry simultaneously generates a weakly coupled subsector of messengers. This provides a microscopic realization of messenger gauge mediation where the messenger and hidden sector fields are unified into a single sector. The UV theory is SQCD with massless and massive quarks plus singlets, and at low energies it flows to a weakly coupled quiver gauge theory. One node provides the primary source of supersymmetry breaking, which is then transmitted to the node giving rise to the messenger fields. These models break R-symmetry spontaneously, produce realistic gaugino and sfermion masses, and give a heavy gravitino.
Date: August 17, 2011
Creator: Hook, Anson; Torroba, Gonzalo & /SLAC /Stanford U., Phys. Dept.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electro-optic techniques in electron beam diagnostics (open access)

Electro-optic techniques in electron beam diagnostics

Electron accelerators such as laser wakefield accelerators, linear accelerators driving free electron lasers, or femto-sliced synchrotrons, are capable of producing femtosecond-long electron bunches. Single-shot characterization of the temporal charge profile is crucial for operation, optimization, and application of such accelerators. A variety of electro-optic sampling (EOS) techniques exists for the temporal analysis. In EOS, the field profile from the electron bunch (or the field profile from its coherent radiation) will be transferred onto a laser pulse co-propagating through an electro-optic crystal. This paper will address the most common EOS schemes and will list their advantages and limitations. Strong points that all techniques share are the ultra-short time resolution (tens of femtoseconds) and the single-shot capabilities. Besides introducing the theory behind EOS, data from various research groups is presented for each technique.
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: van Tilborg, Jeroen; Toth, Csaba; Matlis, Nicholas; Plateau, Guillaume & Leemans, Wim
System: The UNT Digital Library
Event-by-event evaluation of the prompt fission neutron spectrum from 239Pu(n, f) (open access)

Event-by-event evaluation of the prompt fission neutron spectrum from 239Pu(n, f)

None
Date: May 17, 2011
Creator: Vogt, R.; Randrup, J.; Brown, D. A.; Descalle, M. A. & Ormand, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploration of the Versatility of Ring Opening Metathesis Polymerization: an Approach for Gaining Access to Low Density Polymeric Aerogels (open access)

Exploration of the Versatility of Ring Opening Metathesis Polymerization: an Approach for Gaining Access to Low Density Polymeric Aerogels

None
Date: November 17, 2011
Creator: Kim, S. H.; Worsley, M. A.; Valdez, C. A.; Shin, S. J.; Dawedeit, C.; Braun, T. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Femtosecond spectroscopy with vacuum ultraviolet pulse pairs (open access)

Femtosecond spectroscopy with vacuum ultraviolet pulse pairs

We combine different wavelengths from an intense high-order harmonics source with variable delay at the focus of a split-mirror interferometer to conduct pump-probe experiments on gas-phase molecules. We report measurements of the time resolution (< 44fs) and spatial profiles (4 {micro}m x 12 {micro}m) at the focus of the apparatus. We demonstrate the utility of this two-color, high-order-harmonic technique by time resolving molecular hydrogen elimination from C{sub 2} H{sub 4} excited into its absorption band at 161nm.
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: Allison, Tom; Wright, Travis; Stooke, Adam; Khurmi, Champak; van Tilborg, Jeroen; Liu, Yanwei et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
GAMMA RADIATION INTERACTS WITH MELANIN TO ALTER ITS OXIDATION-REDUCTION POTENTIAL AND RESULTS IN ELECTRIC CURRENT PRODUCTION (open access)

GAMMA RADIATION INTERACTS WITH MELANIN TO ALTER ITS OXIDATION-REDUCTION POTENTIAL AND RESULTS IN ELECTRIC CURRENT PRODUCTION

The presence of melanin pigments in organisms is implicated in radioprotection and in some cases, enhanced growth in the presence of high levels of ionizing radiation. An understanding of this phenomenon will be useful in the design of radioprotective materials. However, the protective mechanism of microbial melanin in ionizing radiation fields has not yet been elucidated. Here we demonstrate through the electrochemical techniques of chronoamperometry, chronopotentiometry and cyclic voltammetry that microbial melanin is continuously oxidized in the presence of gamma radiation. Our findings establish that ionizing radiation interacts with melanin to alter its oxidation-reduction potential. Sustained oxidation resulted in electric current production and was most pronounced in the presence of a reductant, which extended the redox cycling capacity of melanin. This work is the first to establish that gamma radiation alters the oxidation-reduction behavior of melanin, resulting in electric current production. The significance of the work is that it provides the first step in understanding the initial interactions between melanin and ionizing radiation taking place and offers some insight for production of biomimetic radioprotective materials.
Date: May 17, 2011
Creator: Turick, C.; Ekechukwu, A. & Milliken, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Resolution BPM Upgrade for the ATF Damping Ring at KEK (open access)

High Resolution BPM Upgrade for the ATF Damping Ring at KEK

A beam position monitor (BPM) upgrade at the KEK Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) damping ring has been accomplished, carried out by a KEK/FNAL/SLAC collaboration under the umbrella of the global ILC R&D effort. The upgrade consists of a high resolution, high reproducibility read-out system, based on analog and digital down-conversion techniques, digital signal processing, and also implements a new automatic gain error correction schema. The technical concept and realization as well as results of beam studies are presented. The next generation of linear colliders require ultra-low vertical emittance of <2 pm-rad. The damping ring at the KEK Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) is designed to demonstrate this mission critical goal. A high resolution beam position monitor (BPM) system for the damping ring is one of the key tools for realizing this goal. The BPM system needs to provide two distnict measurements. First, a very high resolution ({approx}100-200nm) closed-orbit measurement which is averaged over many turns and realized with narrowband filter techniques - 'narrowband mode'. This is needed to monitor and steer the beam along an optimum orbit and to facilitate beam-based alignment to minimize non-linear field effects. Second, is the ability to make turn by turn (TBT) measurements to support optics …
Date: August 17, 2011
Creator: Eddy, N.; Briegel, C.; Fellenz, B.; Gianfelice-Wendt, E.; Prieto, P.; Rechenmacher, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Resolution Simulations of Ignition Capsule Designs for the National Ignition Facility (open access)

High Resolution Simulations of Ignition Capsule Designs for the National Ignition Facility

Ignition capsule designs for the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [G. H. Miller, E. I. Moses, and C. R. Wuest, Opt. Eng. 443, 2841 (2004)] have continued to evolve in light of improved physical data inputs, improving simulation techniques, and - most recently - experimental data from a growing number of NIF sub-ignition experiments. This paper summarizes a number of recent changes to the cryogenic capsule design and some of our latest techniques in simulating its performance. Specifically, recent experimental results indicated harder x-ray drive spectra in NIF hohlraums than were predicted and used in previous capsule optimization studies. To accommodate this harder drive spectrum, a series of high-resolution 2-D simulations, resolving Legendre mode numbers as high as two thousand, were run and the germanium dopant concentration and ablator shell thicknesses re-optimized accordingly. Simultaneously, the possibility of cooperative or nonlinear interaction between neighboring ablator surface defects has motivated a series of fully 3-D simulations run with the massively parallel HYDRA code. These last simulations include perturbations seeded on all capsule interfaces and can use actual measured shell surfaces as initial conditions. 3-D simulations resolving Legendre modes up to two hundred on large capsule sectors have run through ignition and burn, and …
Date: February 17, 2011
Creator: Clark, D. S.; Haan, S. W.; Cook, A. W.; Edwards, M. J.; Hammel, B. A.; Koning, J. M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Identification of a haloalkaliphilic and thermostable cellulase with improved ionic liquid tolerance (open access)

Identification of a haloalkaliphilic and thermostable cellulase with improved ionic liquid tolerance

Some ionic liquids (ILs) have been shown to be very effective solvents for biomass pretreatment. It is known that some ILs can have a strong inhibitory effect on fungal cellulases, making the digestion of cellulose inefficient in the presence of ILs. The identification of IL-tolerant enzymes that could be produced as a cellulase cocktail would reduce the costs and water use requirements of the IL pretreatment process. Due to their adaptation to high salinity environments, halophilic enzymes are hypothesized to be good candidates for screening and identifying IL-resistant cellulases. Using a genome-based approach, we have identified and characterized a halophilic cellulase (Hu-CBH1) from the halophilic archaeon, Halorhabdus utahensis. Hu-CBH1 is present in a gene cluster containing multiple putative cellulolytic enzymes. Sequence and theoretical structure analysis indicate that Hu-CBH1 is highly enriched with negatively charged acidic amino acids on the surface, which may form a solvation shell that may stabilize the enzyme, through interaction with salt ions and/or water molecules. Hu-CBH1 is a heat tolerant haloalkaliphilic cellulase and is active in salt concentrations up to 5 M NaCl. In high salt buffer, Hu-CBH1 can tolerate alkali (pH 11.5) conditions and, more importantly, is tolerant to high levels (20percent w/w) of ILs, …
Date: February 17, 2011
Creator: Zhang, Tao; Datta, Supratim; Eichler, Jerry; Ivanova, Natalia; Axen, Seth D.; Kerfeld, Cheryl A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inclusive and Exclusive |Vub| (open access)

Inclusive and Exclusive |Vub|

The current status of the determinations of CKM matrix element |V{sub ub}| via exclusive and inclusive charmless semileptonic B decays is reviewed. The large datasets collected at the B-Factories, and the increased precision of theoretical calculations have allowed an improvement in the determination of |V{sub ub}|. However, there are still significant uncertainties. In the exclusive approach, the most precise measurement of the pion channel branching ratio is obtained by an untagged analysis. This very good precision can be reached by tagged analyses with more data. The problem with exclusive decays is that the strong hadron dynamics can not be calculated from first principles and the determination of the form factor has to rely on light-cone sum rules or lattice QCD calculations. The current data samples allow a comparison of different FF models with data distributions. With further developments on lattice calculations, the theoretical error should shrink to reach the experimental one. The inclusive approach still provides the most precise |V{sub ub}| determinations. With new theoretical calculations, the mild (2.5{sigma}) discrepancy with respect to the |V{sub ub}| value determined from the global UT fit has been reduced. As in the exclusive approach, theoretical uncertainties represent the limiting factor to the precision …
Date: November 17, 2011
Creator: Petrella, Antonio
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the Unoccupied Electronic Structure of UO2 with Bermstrahlung Isochromat Spectroscopy and X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy (open access)

Investigation of the Unoccupied Electronic Structure of UO2 with Bermstrahlung Isochromat Spectroscopy and X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy

UO{sub 2} is an important nuclear fuel for electrical power generation. Global goal : Actinides (5f electron systems) exhibit fascinating physical and chemical properties, due to 5f electron correlation, including the highly radioactive systems such as Pu. Onsite Instrumentation: A spectroscopic system containing spin resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (SRPES) and bremsstrahlung isochromat spectroscopy (BIS) has been built and commissioned at LLNL. ALS Instrumentation: The XAS was done on Beamline 8. Both Total Electron Yield (TEY) and Total Fluorescence Yield (TFY) were used. TFY is less surface sensitive than TEY. A combined experimental and theoretical study of Uranium Dioxide has been performed, including XAS, BIS, XPS and spectral simulations. The Conduction Bands or Unoccupied Density of States (UDOS) of UO{sub 2} are shown to be divided into two parts, the lower region being U5f-O2p and the upper region U6d-O2p. This means that UO{sub 2} is an f-f Mott Insulator, electron-correlated system. The keys to success with the XAS were the (1) the utilization of both TEY and TFY and (2) the accurate co-location of the uranium and oxygen states, which in turn hinged upon a proper calibration of the gratings of the beamline monochromator. The calibration of the gratings was greatly aided …
Date: March 17, 2011
Creator: Tobin, J. G.; Yu, S. W.; Crowhurst, J. C.; Sharma, S.; Dewhurst, J. K.; Olalde-Velasco, P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
NIF Capsule Performance Modeling (open access)

NIF Capsule Performance Modeling

None
Date: October 17, 2011
Creator: Weber, S.; Callahan, D.; Cerjan, C.; Edwards, J.; Haan, S.; Hicks, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The On-Orbit Calibrations for the Fermi Large Area Telescope (open access)

The On-Orbit Calibrations for the Fermi Large Area Telescope

The Large Area Telescope (LAT) on-board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope began its on-orbit operations on June 23, 2008. Calibrations, defined in a generic sense, correspond to synchronization of trigger signals, optimization of delays for latching data, determination of detector thresholds, gains and responses, evaluation of the perimeter of the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA), measurements of live time, of absolute time, and internal and spacecraft boresight alignments. Here we describe on-orbit calibration results obtained using known astrophysical sources, galactic cosmic rays, and charge injection into the front-end electronics of each detector. Instrument response functions will be described in a separate publication. This paper demonstrates the stability of calibrations and describes minor changes observed since launch. These results have been used to calibrate the LAT datasets to be publicly released in August 2009.
Date: November 17, 2011
Creator: Abdo, Aous A.; /Naval Research Lab, Wash., D.C.; Ackermann, M.; /Stanford U., HEPL /KIPAC, Menlo Park /Stanford U., Phys. Dept.; Ajello, M.; /Stanford U., HEPL /KIPAC, Menlo Park /Stanford U., Phys. Dept. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library