Surface Engineering of Corrosion, Environmental Fracture, Cavitation & Impingement Resistant Materials (open access)

Surface Engineering of Corrosion, Environmental Fracture, Cavitation & Impingement Resistant Materials

None
Date: July 25, 2012
Creator: Farmer, J; Rukbenchik, A; Menon, S; McNelley, T & Hackel, L
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel deflecting cavity design for eRHIC (open access)

Novel deflecting cavity design for eRHIC

To prevent significant loss of the luminosity due to large crossing angle in the future ERL based Electron Ion Collider at BNL (eRHIC), there is a demand for crab cavities. In this article, we will present a novel design of the deflecting/crabbing 181 MHz superconducting RF cavity that will fulfil the requirements of eRHIC. The quarter-wave resonator structure of the new cavity possesses many advantages, such as compact size, high R{sub t}/Q, the absence of the same order mode and lower order mode, and easy higher order mode damping. We will present the properties and characteristics of the new cavity in detail. As the accelerator systems grow in complexity, developing compact and efficient deflecting cavities is of great interest. Such cavities will benefit situations where the beam line space is limited. The future linac-ring type electron-ion collider requires implementation of a crab-crossing scheme for both beams at the interaction region. The ion beam has a long bunches and high rigidity. Therefore, it requires a low frequency, large kicking angle deflector. The frequency of the deflecting mode for the current collider design is 181 MHz, and the deflecting angle is {approx}5 mrad for each beam. At such low frequency, the previous …
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Wu, Q.; Belomestnykh, S. & Ben-Zvi, Ilan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flammability Control In A Nuclear Waste Vitrification System (open access)

Flammability Control In A Nuclear Waste Vitrification System

The Defense Waste Processing Facility at the Savannah River Site processes high-level radioactive waste from the processing of nuclear materials that contains dissolved and precipitated metals and radionuclides. Vitrification of this waste into borosilicate glass for ultimate disposal at a geologic repository involves chemically modifying the waste to make it compatible with the glass melter system. Pretreatment steps include removal of excess aluminum by dissolution and washing, and processing with formic and nitric acids to: 1) adjust the reduction-oxidation (redox) potential in the glass melter to reduce radionuclide volatility and improve melt rate; 2) adjust feed rheology; and 3) reduce by steam stripping the amount of mercury that must be processed in the melter. Elimination of formic acid in pretreatment has been studied to eliminate the production of hydrogen in the pretreatment systems, which requires nuclear grade monitoring equipment. An alternative reductant, glycolic acid, has been studied as a substitute for formic acid. However, in the melter, the potential for greater formation of flammable gases exists with glycolic acid. Melter flammability is difficult to control because flammable mixtures can be formed during surges in offgases that both increase the amount of flammable species and decrease the temperature in the vapor …
Date: July 25, 2013
Creator: Zamecnik, John R.; Choi, Alexander S.; Johnson, Fabienne C.; Miller, Donald H.; Lambert, Daniel P.; Stone, Michael E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-harmonic Fast Wave Heating and Current Drive Results for Deuterium H-mode Plasmas in the National Spherical Torus Experiment (open access)

High-harmonic Fast Wave Heating and Current Drive Results for Deuterium H-mode Plasmas in the National Spherical Torus Experiment

A critical research goal for the spherical torus (ST) program is to initiate, ramp-up, and sustain a discharge without using the central solenoid. Simulations of non-solenoidal plasma scenarios in the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) [1] predict that high-harmonic fast wave (HHFW) heating and current drive (CD) [2] can play an important roll in enabling fully non-inductive (fNI {approx} 1) ST operation. The NSTX fNI {approx} 1 strategy requires 5-6 MW of HHFW power (PRF) to be coupled into a non-inductively generated discharge [3] with a plasma current, Ip {approx} 250-350 kA, driving the plasma into an HHFW H-mode with Ip {approx} 500 kA, a level where 90 keV deuterium neutral beam injection (NBI) can heat the plasma and provide additional CD. The initial approach on NSTX has been to heat Ip {approx} 300 kA, inductively heated, deuterium plasmas with CD phased HHFW power [2], in order to drive the plasma into an H-mode with fNI {approx} 1.
Date: July 25, 2012
Creator: Taylor, G.; Bonoli, P. T.; Harvey, R. W.; Hosea, J. C.; Jaeger, E. F.; LeBlanc, B. P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shot Planning and Analysis Tools (open access)

Shot Planning and Analysis Tools

Shot planning and analysis tools (SPLAT) integrate components necessary to help achieve a high over-all operational efficiency of the National Ignition Facility (NIF) by combining near and long-term shot planning, final optics demand and supply loops, target diagnostics planning, and target fabrication requirements. Currently, the SPLAT project is comprised of two primary tool suites for shot planning and optics demand. The shot planning component provides a web-based interface to selecting and building a sequence of proposed shots for the NIF. These shot sequences, or 'lanes' as they are referred to by shot planners, provide for planning both near-term shots in the Facility and long-term 'campaigns' in the months and years to come. The shot planning capabilities integrate with the Configuration Management Tool (CMT) for experiment details and the NIF calendar for availability. Future enhancements will additionally integrate with target diagnostics planning and target fabrication requirements tools. The optics demand component is built upon predictive modelling of maintenance requirements on the final optics as a result of the proposed shots assembled during shot planning. The predictive models integrate energetics from a Laser Performance Operations Model (LPOM), the status of the deployed optics as provided by the online Final Optics Inspection system, …
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Casey, A.; Beeler, R.; Conder, A.; Fallejo, R.; Flegel, M.; Hutton, M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Breaking and Moving Hotspots in a Large Grain Nb Cavity with a Laser Beam (open access)

Breaking and Moving Hotspots in a Large Grain Nb Cavity with a Laser Beam

Magnetic vortices pinned near the inner surface of SRF Nb cavities are a possible source of RF hotspots, frequently observed by temperature mapping of the cavities outer surface at RF surface magnetic fields of about 100 mT. Theoretically, we expect that the thermal gradient provided by a 10 W green laser shining on the inner cavity surface at the RF hotspot locations can move pinned vortices to different pinning locations. The experimental apparatus to send the beam onto the inner surface of a photoinjector-type large-grain Nb cavity is described. Preliminary results on the changes in thermal maps observed after applying the laser heating are also reported.
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Ciovati, G.; Cheng, G.; Flood, R. J.; Jordan, K.; Kneisel, P.; Morrone, M. L. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of the fundamental power coupler and photocathode inserts for the 112MHz superconducting electron gun (open access)

Design of the fundamental power coupler and photocathode inserts for the 112MHz superconducting electron gun

A 112 MHz superconducting quarter-wave resonator electron gun will be used as the injector of the Coherent Electron Cooling (CEC) proof-of-principle experiment at BNL. Furthermore, this electron gun can be the testing cavity for various photocathodes. In this paper, we present the design of the cathode stalks and a Fundamental Power Coupler (FPC) designated to the future experiments. Two types of cathode stalks are discussed. Special shape of the stalk is applied in order to minimize the RF power loss. The location of cathode plane is also optimized to enable the extraction of low emittance beam. The coaxial waveguide structure FPC has the properties of tunable coupling factor and small interference to the electron beam output. The optimization of the coupling factor and the location of the FPC are discussed in detail. Based on the transmission line theory, we designed a half wavelength cathode stalk which significantly brings down the voltage drop between the cavity and the stalk from more than 5.6 kV to 0.1 kV. The transverse field distribution on cathode has been optimized by carefully choosing the position of cathode stalk inside the cavity. Moreover, in order to decrease the RF power loss, a variable diameter design of …
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Xin, T.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Belomestnykh, S.; Chang, X.; Rao, T.; Skaritka, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Survey of SRF guns (open access)

Survey of SRF guns

Developing Superconducting RF (SRF) electron guns is an active field with several laboratories working on different gun designs. While the first guns were based on elliptic cavity geometries, Quarter Wave Resonator (QWR) option is gaining popularity. QWRs are especially well suited for producing beams with high charge per bunch. In this talk we will describe recent progress in developing both types of SRF guns. SRF guns made excellent progress in the last two years. Several guns generated beams and one, at HZDR, injected beam into an accelerator. By accomplishing this, HZDR/ELBE gun demonstrated feasibility of the SRF gun concept with a normal-conducting Cs{sub 2}Te cathode. The cathode demonstrated very good performance with the lifetime of {approx}1 year. However, for high average current/high bunch charge operation CsK{sub 2}Sb is preferred as it needs green lasers, unlike UV laser for the Cs{sub 2}Te, which makes it easier to build laser/optics systems. Other high QE photocathodes are being developed for SRF guns, most notably diamond-amplified photocathode. Several QWR guns are under development with one producing beam already. They are very promising for high bunch charge operation. The field is very active and we should expect more good results soon.
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Belomestnykh, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Ignition Facility and Managing Location, Component, and State (open access)

National Ignition Facility and Managing Location, Component, and State

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is a stadium-sized facility that contains a 192-beam, 1.8-Megajoule, 500-Terawatt, ultraviolet laser system coupled with a 10-meter diameter target chamber. There are over 6,200 Line Replaceable Units (LRUs) comprised of more than 104,000 serialized parts that make up the NIF. Each LRU is a modular unit typically composed of a mechanical housing, laser optics (glass, lenses, or mirrors), and utilities. To date, there are more than 120,000 data sets created to characterize the attributes of these parts. Greater than 51,000 Work Permits have been issued to install, maintain, and troubleshoot the components. One integrated system is used to manage these data, and more. The Location Component and State (LoCoS) system is a web application built using Java Enterprise Edition technologies and is accessed by over 1,200 users. It is either directly or indirectly involved with each aspect of NIF work activity, and interfaces with ten external systems including the Integrated Computer Control System (ICCS) and the Laser Performance Operations Model (LPOM). Besides providing business functionality, LoCoS also acts as the NIF enterprise service bus. In this role, numerous integration approaches had to be adopted including: file exchange, database sharing, …
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Foxworthy, C.; Fung, T.; Beeler, R.; Li, J.; Dugorepec, J. & Chang, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
TOF-SIMS Analysis of Hydrogen in Niobium, From 160 deg. K to 475 deg. K (open access)

TOF-SIMS Analysis of Hydrogen in Niobium, From 160 deg. K to 475 deg. K

Niobium (Nb) is the material of choice for superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities due to its high critical temperature and critical magnetic field. Interstitial impurity elements such as H directly influence the efficiency of these cavities. Quantification of H in Nb is difficult since H is extremely mobile in Nb with a very high diffusion coefficient even at room temperature. In the presented work, Time of Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) was used to characterize H in Nb over a wide temperature range (160°K to 475°K) in situ to check for changes in mobility. Multiple experiments showed that as the specimen temperature is decreased below 300 °K, the H/Nb intensity changes by first increasing and then decreasing drastically at temperatures below 200°K. As specimen temperature is increased from 300°K to 450°K, the H/Nb intensity decreases. Remarkably, the H intensity with respect to Nb increases with time at 475°K (approximately 200°C). Correlation between this data and the H-Nb phase diagram appears to account for the H behaviour.
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: P. Maheshwari, A.D. Batchelor, D.P. Griffis, F.A. Stevie, C. Zhou, G. Ciovati, R. Myneni, M. Rigsbee
System: The UNT Digital Library
2012 MICROBIAL STRESS RESPONSE GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, JULY 20-25, 2012 (open access)

2012 MICROBIAL STRESS RESPONSE GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, JULY 20-25, 2012

The Gordon Research Conference on MICROBIAL STRESS RESPONSE was held at Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts, July 15-20, 2012. The Conference was well-attended with 180 participants. The 2012 Microbial Stress Responses Gordon Research Conference will provide a forum for the open reporting of recent discoveries on the diverse mechanisms employed by microbes to respond to stress. Approaches range from analysis at the molecular level (how are signals perceived and transmitted to change gene expression or function) to cellular and microbial community responses. Gordon Research Conferences does not permit publication of meeting proceedings.
Date: July 25, 2012
Creator: Donohue, Timothy
System: The UNT Digital Library
UV Crosslinkable Polythiophene for Nano-imprinting and Photolithography toward Ordered Bulk Heterojunction in Organic Photovoltaics (open access)

UV Crosslinkable Polythiophene for Nano-imprinting and Photolithography toward Ordered Bulk Heterojunction in Organic Photovoltaics

Exciton travel distance in organic material is on the order of 10-20 nm, thus the morphology of the organic active layer is critical to achieve high performance in OPVs. An ordered bulk heterojunction (BHJ) morphology with phase separation on the order of 10-20 nm will collect all excitons at the interface and give uninterrupted paths to all separated charges to reach the corresponding electrodes.
Date: July 25, 2010
Creator: Yang, Q.; Hlaing, H.; Ocko, B.; Black, C. & Grubbs, R.B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Global Transcriptome Response to Ionic Liquid by a Tropical Rain Forest Soil Bacterium, Enterobacter Lignolyticus scf1 (open access)

Global Transcriptome Response to Ionic Liquid by a Tropical Rain Forest Soil Bacterium, Enterobacter Lignolyticus scf1

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Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Khudyakov, J. I.; D'haeseleer, P.; Borglin, S. E.; DeAngelis, K. M.; Woo, H.; Lindquist, E. A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radoptic x-ray detection with picosecond resolution (open access)

Radoptic x-ray detection with picosecond resolution

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Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Lowry, M. E.; Vernon, S. P.; Steele, P. T.; Bennett, C. V.; Hernandez, V. J.; Moran, B. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oracle Database DBFS Hierarchical Storage Overview (open access)

Oracle Database DBFS Hierarchical Storage Overview

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory creates large numbers of images during each shot cycle for the analysis of optics, target inspection and target diagnostics. These images must be readily accessible once they are created and available for the 30 year lifetime of the facility. The Livermore Computing Center (LC) runs a High Performance Storage System (HPSS) that is capable of storing NIF's estimated 1 petabyte of diagnostic images at a fraction of what it would cost NIF to operate its own automated tape library. With Oracle 11g Release 2 database, it is now possible to create an application transparent, hierarchical storage system using the LC's HPSS. Using the Oracle DBMS-LOB and DBMS-DBFS-HS packages a SecureFile LOB can now be archived to storage outside of the database and accessed seamlessly through a DBFS 'link'. NIF has chosen to use this technology to implement a hierarchical store for its image based SecureFile LOBs. Using a modified external store and DBFS links, files are written to and read from a disk 'staging area' using Oracle's backup utility. Database external procedure calls invoke OS based scripts to manage a staging area and the transfer of the backup files …
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Rivenes, A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Superconducting 112 MHz QWR electron gun (open access)

Superconducting 112 MHz QWR electron gun

Brookhaven National Laboratory and Niowave, Inc. have designed and fabricated a superconducting 112 MHz quarter-wave resonator (QWR) electron gun. The first cold test of the QWR cryomodule has been completed at Niowave. The paper describes the cryomodule design, presents the cold test results, and outline plans to upgrade the cryomodule. Future experiments include studies of different photocathodes and use for the coherent electron cooling proof-of-principle experiment. Two cathode stalk options, one for multi-alkali photocathodes and the other one for a diamond-amplified photocathode, are discussed. A quarter-wave resonator concept of superconducting RF (SRF) electron gun was proposed at BNL for electron cooling hadron beams in RHIC. QWRs can be made sufficiently compact even at low RF frequencies (long wavelengths). The long wavelength allows to produce long electron bunches, thus minimizing space charge effects and enabling high bunch charge. Also, such guns should be suitable for experiments requiring high average current electron beams. A 112 MHz QWR gun was designed, fabricated, and cold-tested in collaboration between BNL and Niowave. This is the lowest frequency SRF gun ever tested successfully. In this paper we describe the gun design and fabrication, present the cold test results, and outline our plans. This gun will also …
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Belomestnykh, S.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Boulware, C. H.; Chang, X.; Grimm, T. L.; Rao, T. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Edge Zonal Flows and Blob Propagation in Alcator C-Mod (open access)

Edge Zonal Flows and Blob Propagation in Alcator C-Mod

Here we describe recent measurements of the 2-D motion of turbulence in the edge and scrape-off layer (SOL) of the Alcator C-Mod tokamak. This data was taken using the outer midplane gas puff imaging (GPI) camera, which views a 6 cm radial by 6 cm poloidal region near the separatrix just below the outer midplane [1]. The data were taken in Ohmic or RF heated L-mode plasmas at 400,000 frames/sec for {approx}50 msec/shot using a Phantom 710 camera in a 64 x 64 pixel format. The resulting 2-D vs. time movies [2] can resolve the structure and motion of the turbulence on a spatial scale covering 0.3-6 cm. The images were analyzed using either a 2-D cross-correlation code (Sec. 2) or a 2-D blob tracking code (Sec. 3).
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Zweben, S; Agostini, M; Davis, B; Grulke, O; Hager, R; Hughes, J et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
What Coexists with the Ferromagnetic Metallic Phase in Manganites? (open access)

What Coexists with the Ferromagnetic Metallic Phase in Manganites?

Colossal magnetoresistance, whereby the application of a magnetic field reduces the resistivity of a manganite by orders of magnitude, is generally believed to occur because of coexisting phases. Development of a complete theory to explain the phenomenon requires that the exact nature of these phases be known. We used resonant elastic soft x-ray scattering to examine the superlattice order that exists in La{sub 0.35}Pr{sub 0.275}Ca{sub 0.375}MnO{sub 3} above and below the Curie temperature. By measuring the resonance profile of the scattered x-rays at different values of q, we disentangle the contributions of orbital order and antiferromagnetism to the scattering signal above the Curie temperature. Below the Curie temperature, we see no signal from orbital order, and only antiferromagnetism coexists with the dominant ferromagnetic metallic phase.
Date: July 25, 2012
Creator: Burkhardt, Mark H.; Hossain, M.A.; Sarkar, S.; Achkar, A.J.; Hawthorn, D.G.; Sutarto, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Software solutions manage the definition, operation, maintenance and configuration control of the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Software solutions manage the definition, operation, maintenance and configuration control of the National Ignition Facility

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) is the world's largest laser composed of millions of individual parts brought together to form one massive assembly. Maintaining control of the physical definition, status and configuration of this structure is a monumental undertaking yet critical to the validity of the shot experiment data and the safe operation of the facility. The NIF business application suite of software provides the means to effectively manage the definition, build, operation, maintenance and configuration control of all components of the National Ignition Facility. State of the art Computer Aided Design software applications are used to generate a virtual model and assemblies. Engineering bills of material are controlled through the Enterprise Configuration Management System. This data structure is passed to the Enterprise Resource Planning system to create a manufacturing bill of material. Specific parts are serialized then tracked along their entire lifecycle providing visibility to the location and status of optical, target and diagnostic components that are key to assessing pre-shot machine readiness. Nearly forty thousand items requiring preventive, reactive and calibration maintenance are tracked through the System Maintenance & Reliability Tracking application to ensure proper operation. Radiological tracking applications ensure proper stewardship of radiological and hazardous materials and …
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Dobson, D.; Churby, A.; Krieger, E.; Maloy, D. & White, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of the target diagnostic control system in the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Use of the target diagnostic control system in the National Ignition Facility

The extreme physics of targets shocked by NIF's 192-beam laser are observed by a diverse suite of diagnostics including optical backscatter, time-integrated, time resolved and gated X-ray sensors, laser velocity interferometry, and neutron time of flight. Diagnostics to diagnose fusion ignition implosion and neutron emissions have been developed. A Diagnostic Control System (DCS) for both hardware and software facilitates development and eases integration. Each complex diagnostic typically uses an ensemble of electronic instruments attached to sensors, digitizers, cameras, and other devices. In the DCS architecture each instrument is interfaced to a low-cost Window XP processor and Java application. Instruments are aggregated as needed in the supervisory system to form an integrated diagnostic. The Java framework provides data management, control services and operator GUI generation. During the past several years, over thirty-six diagnostics have been deployed using this architecture in support of the National Ignition Campaign (NIC). The DCS architecture facilitates the expected additions and upgrades to diagnostics as more experiments are performed. This paper presents the DCS architecture, framework and our experiences in using it during the NIC to operate, upgrade and maintain a large set of diagnostic instruments.
Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Shelton, R; Lagin, L & Nelson, J
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Origin of Mass (open access)

The Origin of Mass

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Date: July 25, 2013
Creator: Boyle, P.; Buchoff, M.; Christ, N.; Izubuchi, T.; Jung, C.; Luu, T. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-ray imaging in an environment with high-neutron background on National Ignition Facility (open access)

X-ray imaging in an environment with high-neutron background on National Ignition Facility

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Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Smalyuk, V A; Ayers, J; Bell, P M; Bourgade, J -; Bradley, D K; Celeste, J et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The I=2 pi-pi S-wave Scattering Phase Shift from Lattice QCD (open access)

The I=2 pi-pi S-wave Scattering Phase Shift from Lattice QCD

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Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Beane, S.; Chang, E.; Detmold, W.; Lin, H. W.; Luu, T.; Orginos, K. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spectral amplitude and phase evolution in multi-petawatt laserpulses (open access)

Spectral amplitude and phase evolution in multi-petawatt laserpulses

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Date: July 25, 2011
Creator: Filip, C V
System: The UNT Digital Library