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Operating experience with the ALS linac (open access)

Operating experience with the ALS linac

The linac injector for the Advanced Light Source (ALS) at LBL was recently put into operation. Energy is 50 MeV, frequency 3 GHz. The electron gun delivers up to 6nC in a 3.0-ns bunch at 120 kV. A train of bunches is injected into a 1-Hz booster and accelerated to 1.5 GHz for storage ring injection. A magnetic analysis system is used for optimizing the linac. Measured beam properties from the gun and after acceleration in the linac are described. 9 refs., 3 figs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Selph, F. & Massoletti, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser diagnostics of H sup minus formation in a magnetic multicusp ion source (open access)

Laser diagnostics of H sup minus formation in a magnetic multicusp ion source

The populations of ground electronic state atomic hydrogen and ground electronic state, vibrationally-rotationally excited hydrogen molecules in a negative hydrogen ion source discharge have been measured using vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) laser absorption spectroscopy. Vibrational states up to v=8 and rotational levels as high as J=15 have been measured. The measurements have been made under a range of discharge conditions. The complete vibrational population distribution for v=1-8, J=1 has been obtained. The vibrational distribution appears to be thermalized and does not exhibit a plateau'' at the higher vibrational levels, in contrast to most models of this system. In contrast, the high rotational states are populated suprathermally. These determinations indicate that rotationally excited molecules may play an important role in the production of H{sup minus} in these sources. 5 refs., 5 figs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Young, A. T.; Chen, P.; Kunkel, W. B.; Leung, K. N.; Li, C. Y. & Stutzin, G. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Au on the reliability of fine pitch surface mount solder joints (open access)

Effect of Au on the reliability of fine pitch surface mount solder joints

The effect of Au on the reliability of 0.65 mm pitch surface mount solder joints between plastic quad flat packs and Cu-Ni-Au FR-4 printed circuit boards was investigated. Cu-Ni-Au is a desirable printed circuit board finish for multi-chip modules or printed circuit boards that would otherwise require a selective Au finish, for example for edge connectors or wire bondable parts. However, Au is known to embrittle solder when it is present in sufficiently high concentrations, creating a concern that solder joint fatigue life in service will also be adversely affected. This paper reports the results of mechanical shock, mechanical vibration and thermal cycling testing of fine pitch solder joints containing varying amounts of Au. Tests were performed on as-soldered joints and on joints that had been heat-treated to evolve the microstructure toward equilibrium. The tests were designed to accelerate in-service conditions in a typical industrial environment. Under these conditions, the Au concentrations tested did not promote solder joint failures. Microstructural characterization of the distribution and morphology of the Au-, Ni-, and Cu-Sn intermetallics in the joint before and after accelerated testing was also performed. On the basis of these observations it is recommended that the Au concentration in solder joints …
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Glazer, J. (Hewlett-Packard Co., Palo Alto, CA (United States)); Kramer, P. & Morris, J.W. Jr. (Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical simulations of turbulent flow fields caused by spraying of water on large releases of hydrogen fluoride (open access)

Numerical simulations of turbulent flow fields caused by spraying of water on large releases of hydrogen fluoride

The effectiveness of water sprays in absorbing HF releases was recently demonstrated in extended laboratory and field tests. In this paper, computer simulations are presented of the Hawk, Nevada Test Site, series of field tests. The model used, HFSPRAY, is a Eulerean/Lagrangian model which simulates the momentum, mass and energy interactions between a water spray and a turbulent plume of HF in air; the model can predict the flow velocities, temperature, water vapor, and HF concentration fields in two-dimensional large- geometries for spraying in any direction, (i.e., down-flow, inclined-down-flow, up-flow, and co-current horizontal flow). The model was validated against recent data on spraying of water on large releases of HF. 17 refs., 11 figs., 4 tabs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Fthenakis, V.M. (Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, NY (United States)) & Schatz, K.W. (Mobil Research and Development Corp., Princeton, NJ (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
D. phi. vertex drift chamber construction and test results (open access)

D. phi. vertex drift chamber construction and test results

A jet-cell based vertex chamber has been built for the D{O} experiment at Fermilab and operated in a test beam there. Low drift velocity and diffusion properties were achieved using CO{sub 2}(95%)-ethane(5%) at atmospheric pressure. The drift velocity is found to be consistent with (9.74+8.68( E -1.25)) {mu}m/nsec where E is the electric field strength in (kV/cm < E z 1.6 kV/cm.) An intrinsic spatial resolution of 60 {mu}m or better for drift distances greater than 2 mm is measured. The track pair efficiency is estimated to be better than 90% for separations greater than 630 {mu}m. 8 refs., 6 figs., 1 tab.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Clark, A.R.; Goozen, F.; Grudberg, P.; Klopfenstein, C.; Kerth, L.T.; Loken, S.C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetic data analysis for the ALS lattice magents (open access)

Magnetic data analysis for the ALS lattice magents

The Advanced Light Source (ALS), now under construction at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, is a third-generation synchrotron radiation source designed to produce extremely bright photon beams in the UV and soft X-ray regions. The lattice magnets to be installed in the two rings, a 1--1.9 GeV storage ring, and a 1.5 GeV booster synchrotron, have been magnetically measured to ascertain their excitation curves and field uniformity. In this paper the analysis of these data is discussed, and results for measured magnets are given. 5 refs., 2 figs., 7 tabs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Keller, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Critical flow: General theory and spurious solutions (open access)

Critical flow: General theory and spurious solutions

It is hardly necessary to emphasize the importance that an accurate prediction of the parameters of critical flow plays in a number of industries, notably in nuclear reactor safety calculations and in metering. In spite of its importance, the literature of the subject still contains erroneous statements. Many of them result from an unjustified belief in the generality of certain conclusions drawn in the elementary study of one-dimensional isentropic flow of a perfect gas with constant specific heats through a convergent-divergent (de Laval) nozzle. This lecture will present a complete and consistent theory of such flows, applicable to any fluid (single- or multiphase) and any channel shape. The study is restricted to the one-dimensional approximation, and, although only adiabatic conditions are discussed, the formalism can be extended to arbitrary conditions at the boundary of the channel. A scrutiny of some of the latest critical reviews of the state of the art of modelling thermal-hydraulic phenomena, especially in the context of LWR safety analysis, reveals the persistence of some misconceptions concerning the nature of the flow and of the relation between the preferred mathematical model and its discretized equivalent. It has recently become clear that the ensemble of trajectories in phase …
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Kestin, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pulse code modulation data compression for automated test equipment (open access)

Pulse code modulation data compression for automated test equipment

Development of automated test equipment for an advanced telemetry system requires continuous monitoring of PCM data while exercising telemetry inputs. This requirements leads to a large amount of data that needs to be stored and later analyzed. For example, a data stream of 4 Mbits/s and a test time of thirty minutes would yield 900 Mbytes of raw data. With this raw data, information needs to be stored to correlate the raw data to the test stimulus. This leads to a total of 1.8 Gb of data to be stored and analyzed. There is no method to analyze this amount of data in a reasonable time. A data compression method is needed to reduce the amount of data collected to a reasonable amount. The solution to the problem was data reduction. Data reduction was accomplished by real time limit checking, time stamping, and smart software. Limit checking was accomplished by an eight state finite state machine and four compression algorithms. Time stamping was needed to correlate stimulus to the appropriate output for data reconstruction. The software was written in the C programming language with a DOS extender used to allow it to run in extended mode. A 94--98% compression in …
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Navickas, T.A. & Jones, S.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Broadband diffractive lens (open access)

Broadband diffractive lens

Significant progress has been made toward solving the century-old problem of chromatic aberrations in diffractive optics. Our approach exploits modern materials and microfabrication technology and is very different from the purely diffractive strategy,'' which is commonly employed and which results in multiple diffractive elements separated by a finite distance. We have developed a Fresnel zone plate lens comprised of a serial stack of patterned minus-filters which allows broadband radiation to be focused (or imaged) without longitudinal or transverse chromatic aberrations. 7 refs., 4 figs.
Date: May 28, 1991
Creator: Ceglio, N. M.; Hawryluk, A. M.; London, R. A.; Seppala, L. G. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)) & Gaines, D. P. (Brigham Young Univ., Provo, UT (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
W mass and W asymmetry at CDF (open access)

W mass and W asymmetry at CDF

The lepton charge asymmetry from W decaying into a lepton and a neutrino is discussed (preliminary result). This measurement gives information on parton distribution functions at low x values. The derivation of the recently published W mass value of 79.91 {plus minus} 0.39 GeV/c{sup 2} is also presented. M{sub W} is used to set an upper limit on the top quark mass. 13 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Leone, S. (Pisa Univ. (Italy) Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Pisa (Italy))
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-intensity photoionization of H sub 2 (open access)

High-intensity photoionization of H sub 2

A tunable, high-intensity picosecond dye laser system has been employed with electron energy analysis to investigate the dynamics of (3+1) resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization of H{sub 2} via different vibrational levels of its B{sub 1}{Sigma}{sub u}{sup +} and C{sup 1}{Pi}{sub u} electronic states. We observe production of molecular ions in various vibrational levels, with a shift to increased population of lower vibrational states of H{sub 2}{sup +} consistent with the a.c. Stark shift of the correspondingly lower vibrational levels of the C state into resonance with the three- photon energy of the laser. Clear evidence of direct dissociation of H{sub 2} followed by single-photon ionization of the excited H atom is observed as well. Above threshold ionization of these two processes occurs readily. We also find that dissociative ionization is an increasingly important ionization pathway as the wavelength is increased. Finally, we see evidence of a new ionization pathway, which we assign to photoionization into a transient bound state created by the avoided crossing of the first repulsive electronic state of H{sub 2}{sup +}, {vert bar}2p{sigma}{sub u}, n{r angle}, with the single-photon-dressed ground state of H{sub 2}{sup +}, {vert bar}1s{sigma}{sub g},n + 1{r angle}. 6 refs., 2 figs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Allendorf, S.W. & Szoeke, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report of the group on beam-beam effects in circular colliders (open access)

Report of the group on beam-beam effects in circular colliders

We present a summary of the discussions and conclusions of the working group on beam-beam effects for circular colliders. This group was part of the larger beam-beam dynamics group at the 7th ICFA Workshop on Beam Dynamics, on the subject Beam-Beam and Beam-Radiation Interactions,'' held at UCLA, May 13--16, 1991. 15 refs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Furman, M. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Advanced Light Source (open access)

The Advanced Light Source

The Advanced Light Source (ALS), a national user facility currently under construction at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL), is a third-generation synchrotron light source designed to produce extremely bright beams of synchrotron radiation in the energy range from a few eV to 10 keV. The design is based on a 1--1.9-GeV electron storage ring (optimized at 1.5 GeV), and utilizes special magnets, known as undulators and wigglers (collectively referred to as insertion devices), to generate the radiation. The facility is scheduled to begin operating in April 1993. In this paper we describe the progress in the design, construction, and commissioning of the accelerator systems, insertion devices, and beamlines. Companion presentations at this conference give more detail of specific components in the ALS, and describe the activities towards establishing an exciting user program. 3 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Jackson, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transport and error sensitivity in a heavy-ion recirculator (open access)

Transport and error sensitivity in a heavy-ion recirculator

An envelope code has been developed to facilitate the design of a recirculating accelerator for a heavy-ion fusion reactor. A novel feature of the model is the treatment of the beam charge density as a Lagrangian fluid in the axial direction. Transport results for a preliminary recirculator design are presented, and sensitivity of the transport to errors in the magnet strength is discussed. 4 refs., 4 figs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Sharp, W. M.; Barnard, J. J. & Yu, S. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
New design concepts for ferrite-tuned low-energy-booster cavities (open access)

New design concepts for ferrite-tuned low-energy-booster cavities

The design concepts for ferrite-tuned accelerating cavities discussed in this paper differ from conventional solutions using thick ferrite toroids for frequency tuning. Instead, tuners consisting of an array of ferrite-loaded striplines are investigated. These promise more efficient cooling and higher operational reliability. Layout examples for the SSC-LEB rf system are presented (tuning range 47.5 to 59.8 MHz, repetition frequency 10 Hz). 15 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Schaffer, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal waste treatment biotechnology (open access)

Geothermal waste treatment biotechnology

Technical feasibility of a biotechnology based on biochemical reactions for detoxification of geothermal brines has been demonstrated. Laboratory-scale studies have shown that the emerging biotechnology is versatile and is applicable to a variety of geothermal sludges and materials with similar geochemical properties. Materials suitable for treatment are those which may contain few or many metals in concentrations exceeding those allowed by regulatory agencies. Comparison of several possible types of bioreactors and processes have led to the conclusion that a number of variables have to be considered in the design and development of a biochemical plant for the detoxification of geothermal type sludges. These include reactor size, effects of agitation, mixed cultures, state of the biomass, pH and dissolved oxygen, concentration of residual sludge, residence time, and temperature. Under optimum conditions, high rates of metal removal can be achieved. Some recent studies, dealing with the process variables and their optimization, will be discussed. 6 refs., 3 figs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Premuzic, E.T. & Lin, M.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser produced plasma soft x-ray generation (open access)

Laser produced plasma soft x-ray generation

The efficiency of soft x-ray production from laser-irradiated plasmas is simulated for two different spectral regions. These two regions, 14{Angstrom} {plus minus} 15% and 130{Angstrom} {plus minus} 1%, were chosen for proximity mask or point-projection technological applications. Relatively large conversion efficiencies were obtained from irradiation of a stainless steel target using the conditions suggested by recent Hampshire Instruments' experiments for proximity masking. Pulse-width and laser frequency parameter studies were performed for point-projection applications which suggest that the conversion applications which suggest that the conversion efficiency is sensitive to pulse-width but not to laser frequency. One of the critical components of any x-ray lithographic scheme is of course the x-ray laser source. There are two primary contenders for a reliable, efficient source currently: synchrotron radiation and spectral emission from laser produced plasma. The dominant issue for laser-plasma emission is the conversion efficiency -- output in the intended operating spectral region relative the required incident laser energy. Simulations are described in the following for both high and low energy spectral regions which have been suggested by either the proximity masking or point-projection technology.
Date: May 20, 1991
Creator: Cerjan, C. & Rosen, M.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Commissioning experiences of the ALS booster synchrotron (open access)

Commissioning experiences of the ALS booster synchrotron

Installation of the ALS booster synchrotron proper was completed on April 30, 1991, and commissioning has just begun. Circulating beam around the booster was observed on the first day of operation, May 3, 1991. The beam was visible for about 400 turns. In this paper we describe the status and commissioning experience of the 1.5-GeV electron synchrotron accelerator. 14 refs., 2 figs., 4 tabs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Kim, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Power and particle balance during neutral beam injection in TFTR (open access)

Power and particle balance during neutral beam injection in TFTR

Detailed boundary plasma measurements on TFTR have been made during a NBI power scan in the range P{sub tot} {equals} 1MW--20MW in the L-mode regime. The behavior of the plasma density {l angle}n{sub e}{r angle}, radiated power P{sub rad}, carbon and deuterium fluxes {Gamma}{sub C}, {Gamma}{sub D}, and {Zeta}{sub eff} can be summarized as, {l angle}n{sub e}{r angle} {proportional to} P{sub tot}{sup {1/2}}, P{sub rad}, {Gamma}{sub C}, {Gamma}{sub D} {proportional to} P{sub tot}, and {Zeta}{sub eff} {approximately} constant. It is shown that central fuelling by the neutral beams plays a minor role in the particle balance of the discharge. More important is the NBI role in the power balance. The TFTR data during NBI originate primarily at the graphite limiter.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Pitcher, C. S.; Budny, R. V.; Hill, K. W.; Kilpatrick, S. J.; Manos, D. M.; Medley, S. S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Equation-of-state from SiO sub 2 aerogel Hugoniot data (open access)

Equation-of-state from SiO sub 2 aerogel Hugoniot data

The significance of the new aerogel data for the equation-of-state of SiO{sub 2} is discussed. On this basis the use of SiO{sub 2} aerogels as a standard witness material for Hugoniot release wave measurements is advocated. We compare the Hugoniot data of Holmes on aerogel samples of density 0.128 gm/cm{sup 3} with a multiphase EOS for quartz developed by F. Ree some 15 years ago. His tabular EOS includes compositional changes arising from both chemical and ionization equilibrium, and is found to be in excellent agreement with the Hugoniot data and its extension to higher pressures. The roles of phase and compositional changes along the aerogel Hugoniot and the close agreement with the measured linear shock velocity relation are discussed. In this connection a useful simple Grueneisen EOS model for quartz with an energy dependent gamma is derived from the linear velocity relation and is supported by the Ree EOS.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Grover, R.; Ree, F. & Holmes, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A wide band slot-coupled beam sensing electrode for the advanced light source (open access)

A wide band slot-coupled beam sensing electrode for the advanced light source

Stripline electrodes (traveling wave electrodes, directional couplers) are commonly used in particle accelerators as beam pickups and kickers. The longitudinally symmetric stripline has a constant beam coupling impedance as a function of length and has a characteristic magnitude sin(x) amplitude response in the frequency domain. An experimentally tapered stripline provides nearly constant coupling impedance vs. frequency and yields superior frequency-domain performance. In practice it is difficult to construct either of these devices for broad-band performance because of the transition from coaxial to stripline geometry. We report on the construction of an exponentially-tapered, slot-coupled stripline'' which was relatively easy to construct and has the desired frequency response. 2 refs., 6 figs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Hinkson, J. & Rex, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Misalignment study of NLC bunch compressor (open access)

Misalignment study of NLC bunch compressor

Results of computer simulations of the misalignments in the 180{degree}-bend angle second-stage bunch compressor for the NLC are described. The aim of this study was to evaluate alignment and production error tolerances. Three versions of the second stage, differing in their minimum obtainable bunch length (44 {mu}, 60 {mu}, and 86 {mu}) were studied. Simulations included orbit correction produced by errors and misalignments of the compressor elements. The orbit correction itself was done within some error margins. The effects of misalignments on transverse emittance growth were found. Recommendations for alleviating alignment tolerances are discussed. 5 refs., 6 figs., 1 tab.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Rogers, R.P. & Kheifets, S.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molten salt processing of mixed wastes with offgas condensation (open access)

Molten salt processing of mixed wastes with offgas condensation

We are developing an advanced process for treatment of mixed wastes in molten salt media at temperatures of 700--1000{degrees}C. Waste destruction has been demonstrated in a single stage oxidation process, with destruction efficiencies above 99.9999% for many waste categories. The molten salt provides a heat transfer medium, prevents thermal surges, and functions as an in situ scrubber to transform the acid-gas forming components of the waste into neutral salts and immobilizes potentially fugitive materials by a combination of particle wetting, encapsulation and chemical dissolution and solvation. Because the offgas is collected and assayed before release, and wastes containing toxic and radioactive materials are treated while immobilized in a condensed phase, the process avoids the problems sometimes associated with incineration processes. We are studying a potentially improved modification of this process, which treats oxidizable wastes in two stages: pyrolysis followed by catalyzed molten salt oxidation of the pyrolysis gases at ca. 700{degrees}C. 15 refs., 5 figs., 1 tab.
Date: May 13, 1991
Creator: Cooper, J.F.; Brummond, W.; Celeste, J.; Farmer, J.; Hoenig, C.; Krikorian, O.H. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of digital control theory state space formalism for feedback at SLC (open access)

Use of digital control theory state space formalism for feedback at SLC

The algorithms used in the database-driven SLC fast-feedback system are based on the state space formalism of digital control theory. These are implemented as a set of matrix equations which use a Kalman filter to estimate a vector of states from a vector of measurements, and then apply a gain matrix to determine the actuator settings from the state vector. The matrices used in the calculation are derived offline using Linear Quadratic Gaussian minimization. For a given noise spectrum, this procedure minimizes the rms of the states (e.g., the position or energy of the beam). The offline program also allows simulation of the loop's response to arbitrary inputs, and calculates its frequency response. 3 refs., 3 figs.
Date: May 1, 1991
Creator: Himel, T.; Hendrickson, L.; Rouse, F. & Shoaee, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library