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Micromechanics of Transformation Superplasticity in Ti-6Al-4V/TiBw Composites (open access)

Micromechanics of Transformation Superplasticity in Ti-6Al-4V/TiBw Composites

Transformation superplasticity is a deformation mechanism induced by thermally-cycling a polymorphic material through the phase transformation range while simultaneously applying an external biasing stress. Unlike microstructural superplasticity, which requires a fine, equiaxed grain structure, this mechanism can be applied to coarse-grained alloys and composites. In this article, we review our research on transformation superplasticity of Ti-6Al-4V/TiB-whisker reinforced composites, during thermal cycling through the titanium {alpha}/{beta} transformation range. The composites exhibit Newtonian flow and superplastic extension under these conditions. We describe the constitutive behavior of composites containing 0, 5 and 10 vol% reinforcing whiskers, and consider the effects of load transfer from matrix to whisker on superplastic deformation using existing rheological models. Additionally, strain hardening due to gradual whisker alignment is observed, and rationalized in terms of increased load transfer for aligned whiskers.
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: Schuh, C & Dunand, D C
System: The UNT Digital Library
In-situ Studies of Highly Charged Ions at the LLNL EBIT (open access)

In-situ Studies of Highly Charged Ions at the LLNL EBIT

The properties of highly charged ions and their interaction with electrons and atoms is being studied in-situ at the LLNL electron beam ion traps, EBIT-II and SuperEBIT. Spectroscopic measurements provide data on electron-ion and ion-atom interactions as well as accurate transition energies of lines relevant for understanding QED, nuclear magnetization, and the effects of relativity on complex, state-of-the-art atomic calculations.
Date: August 16, 2001
Creator: Beiersdorfer, P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anomalies on orbifolds (open access)

Anomalies on orbifolds

We discuss the form of the chiral anomaly on an S1/Z2 orbifold with chiral boundary conditions. We find that the 4-divergence of the higher-dimensional current evaluated at a given point in the extra dimension is proportional to the probability of finding the chiral zero mode there. Nevertheless the anomaly, appropriately defined as the five dimensional divergence of the current, lives entirely on the orbifold fixed planes and is independent of the shape of the zero mode. Therefore long distance four dimensional anomaly cancellation ensures the consistency of the higher dimensional orbifold theory.
Date: March 16, 2001
Creator: Arkani-Hamed, Nima; Cohen, Andrew G. & Georgi, Howard
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mixed metal films with switchable optical properties (open access)

Mixed metal films with switchable optical properties

Thin, Pd-capped metallic films containing magnesium and first row transition metals (Mn, Fe, Co) switch reversibly from their initial reflecting state to visually transparent states when exposed to gaseous hydrogen or following cathodic polarization in an alkaline electrolyte. Reversion to the reflecting state is achieved by exposure to air or by anodic polarization. The films were prepared by co-sputtering from one magnesium target and one manganese, iron, or cobalt target. Both the dynamic optical switching range and the speed of the transition depend on the magnesium-transition metal ratio. Infrared spectra of films in the transparent, hydrided (deuterided) states support the presence of the intermetallic hydride phases Mg3MnH7, Mg2FeH6, and Mg2CoH5.
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: Richardson, Thomas J.; Slack, Jonathan L.; Farangis, Baker & Rubin, Michael D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Products of pertechnetate radiolysis in highly alkaline solution: structure of TcO2(dot)xH2O (open access)

Products of pertechnetate radiolysis in highly alkaline solution: structure of TcO2(dot)xH2O

None
Date: August 16, 2001
Creator: Lukens, Wayne; Bucher, Jerome; Edelstein, Norman & Shuh, David
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of damping wigglers on beam dynamics in the NLC damping rings (open access)

Effects of damping wigglers on beam dynamics in the NLC damping rings

To achieve the required damping time in the main damping rings for the Next Linear Collider (NLC), a wiggler will be required in each ring with integrated squared field strength up to 110 T{sup 2}m. There are concerns that nonlinear components of the wiggler field will damage the dynamic aperture of the ring, leading to poor injection efficiency. Severe effects from an insertion device have been observed and corrected in SPEAR 2. In this paper, we describe a model that we have developed to study the effects of the damping wiggler, compare the predictions of the model with actual experience in the case of the SPEAR 2 wiggler, and consider the predicted effects of current damping wiggler design on the NLC main damping rings.
Date: June 16, 2001
Creator: Wolski, Andrzej & Wu, Ying
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron-capture delayed fission properties of 244Es (open access)

Electron-capture delayed fission properties of 244Es

Electron-capture delayed fission was observed in {sup 244}Es produced via the {sup 237}Np({sup 12}C,5n){sup 244}Es reaction at 81 MeV (on target) with a production cross section of 0.31{+-}0.12 {micro}b. The mass-yield distribution of the fission fragments is highly asymmetric. The average preneutron-emission total kinetic energy of the fragments was measured to be 186{+-}19 MeV. Based on the ratio of the number of fission events to the measured number of {alpha} decays from the electron-capture daughter {sup 244}Cf (100% {alpha} branch), the probability of delayed fission was determined to be (1.2{+-}0.4) x 10{sup -4}. This value for the delayed fission probability fits the experimentally observed trend of increasing delayed fission probability with increasing Q value for electron-capture.
Date: March 16, 2001
Creator: Shaughnessy, Dawn A.; Gregorich, Kenneth E.; Adams, Jeb L.; Lane, Michael R.; Laue, Carola A.; Lee, Diana M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
ON THE THEORY OF COLLISIONS BETWEEN ATOMS AND ELECTRICALLY CHARGED PARTICLES. (open access)

ON THE THEORY OF COLLISIONS BETWEEN ATOMS AND ELECTRICALLY CHARGED PARTICLES.

None
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: White, S. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A decision support system for adaptive real-time management ofseasonal wetlands in California (open access)

A decision support system for adaptive real-time management ofseasonal wetlands in California

This paper describes the development of a comprehensive flow and salinity monitoring system and application of a decision support system (DSS) to improve management of seasonal wetlands in the San Joaquin Valley of California. The Environmental Protection Agency regulates salinity discharges from non-point sources to the San Joaquin River using a procedure known as the Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) to allocate the assimilative capacity of the River for salt among watershed sources. Management of wetland sources of salt load will require the development of monitoring systems, more integrative management strategies and coordination with other entities. To obtain local cooperation the Grassland Water District, whose primary function is to supply surface water to private duck clubs and managed wetlands, needs to communicate to local landowners the likely impacts of salinity regulation on the long term health and function of wildfowl habitat. The project described in this paper will also provide this information. The models that form the backbone of the DSS develop salinity balances at both a regional and local scale. The regional scale concentrates on deliveries to and exports from the Grasland Water District while the local scale focuses on an individual wetland unit where more intensive monitoring is …
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: Quinn, Nigel W.T. & Hanna, W. Mark
System: The UNT Digital Library
Specific energy for laser removal of rocks. (open access)

Specific energy for laser removal of rocks.

Application of advanced high power laser technology into oil and gas well drilling has been attracting significant research interests recently among research institutes, petroleum industries, and universities. Potential laser or laser-aided oil and gas well drilling has many advantages over the conventional rotary drilling, such as high penetration rate, reduction or elimination of tripping, casing, and bit costs, and enhanced well control, perforating and side-tracking capabilities. The energy required to remove a unit volume of rock, namely the specific energy (SE), is a critical rock property data that can be used to determine both the technical and economic feasibility of laser oil and gas well drilling.
Date: August 16, 2001
Creator: Xu, Z.; Kornecki, G.; Reed, C. B.; Gahan, B. C.; Parker, R. A.; Batarseh, S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam Diagnostics Systems for the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Beam Diagnostics Systems for the National Ignition Facility

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) laser focuses 1.8 megajoules of ultraviolet light (wavelength 351 nanometers) from 192 beams into a 600-micrometer-diameter volume. Effective use of this output in target experiments requires that the power output from all of the beams match within 8% over their entire 20-nanosecond waveform. The scope of NIF beam diagnostics systems necessary to accomplish this task is unprecedented for laser facilities. Each beamline contains 110 major optical components distributed over a 510-meter path, and diagnostic tolerances for beam measurement are demanding. Total laser pulse energy is measured with 2.8% precision, and the interbeam temporal variation of pulse power is measured with 4% precision. These measurement goals are achieved through use of approximately 160 sensor packages that measure the energy at five locations and power at three locations along each beamline using 335 photodiodes, 215 calorimeters, and 36 digitizers. Successful operation of such a system requires a high level of automation of the widely distributed sensors. Computer control systems provide the basis for operating the shot diagnostics with repeatable accuracy, assisted by operators who oversee system activities and setup, respond to performance exceptions, and complete calibration and maintenance tasks.
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: Demaret, R D; Boyd, R D; Bliss, E S; Gates, A J & Severyn, J R
System: The UNT Digital Library
Partial Data Traces: Efficient Generation and Representation (open access)

Partial Data Traces: Efficient Generation and Representation

Binary manipulation techniques are increasing in popularity. They support program transformations tailored toward certain program inputs, and these transformations have been shown to yield performance gains beyond the scope of static code optimizations without profile-directed feedback. They even deliver moderate gains in the presence of profile-guided optimizations. In addition, transformations can be performed on the entire executable, including library routines. This work focuses on program instrumentation, yet another application of binary manipulation. This paper reports preliminary results on generating partial data traces through dynamic binary rewriting. The contributions are threefold. First, a portable method for extracting precise data traces for partial executions of arbitrary applications is developed. Second, a set of hierarchical structures for compactly representing these accesses is developed. Third, an efficient online algorithm to detect regular accesses is introduced. These efforts are part of a larger project to counter the increasing gap between processor and main memory speeds by means of software optimization and hardware enhancements.
Date: July 16, 2001
Creator: Mueller, F.; Mohan, T.; de R. Supinski, B.; McKee, S. A. & Yoo, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Efficient Error Calculation for Multiresolution Texture-Based Volume Visualization (open access)

Efficient Error Calculation for Multiresolution Texture-Based Volume Visualization

Multiresolution texture-based volume visualization is an excellent technique to enable interactive rendering of massive data sets. Interactive manipulation of a transfer function is necessary for proper exploration of a data set. However, multiresolution techniques require assessing the accuracy of the resulting images, and re-computing the error after each change in a transfer function is very expensive. They extend their existing multiresolution volume visualization method by introducing a method for accelerating error calculations for multiresolution volume approximations. Computing the error for an approximation requires adding individual error terms. One error value must be computed once for each original voxel and its corresponding approximating voxel. For byte data, i.e., data sets where integer function values between 0 and 255 are given, they observe that the set of error pairs can be quite large, yet the set of unique error pairs is small. instead of evaluating the error function for each original voxel, they construct a table of the unique combinations and the number of their occurrences. To evaluate the error, they add the products of the error function for each unique error pair and the frequency of each error pair. This approach dramatically reduces the amount of computation time involved and allows …
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: LaMar, E.; Hamann, B. & Joy, K. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Large-Scale CORBA-Distributed Software Framework for NIF Controls (open access)

Large-Scale CORBA-Distributed Software Framework for NIF Controls

The Integrated Computer Control System (ICCS) is based on a scalable software framework that is distributed over some 325 computers throughout the NIF facility. The framework provides templates and services at multiple levels of abstraction for the construction of software applications that communicate via CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture). Various forms of object-oriented software design patterns are implemented as templates to be extended by application software. Developers extend the framework base classes to model the numerous physical control points, thereby sharing the functionality defined by the base classes. About 56,000 software objects each individually addressed through CORBA are to be created in the complete ICCS. Most objects have a persistent state that is initialized at system start-up and stored in a database. Additional framework services are provided by centralized server programs that implement events, alerts, reservations, message logging, database/file persistence, name services, and process management. The ICCS software framework approach allows for efficient construction of a software system that supports a large number of distributed control points representing a complex control application.
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: Carey, R W; Fong, K W; Sanchez, R J; Tappero, J D & Woodruff, J P
System: The UNT Digital Library
The kinetics of the reaction of H atoms with C₄F₆ (open access)

The kinetics of the reaction of H atoms with C₄F₆

Article on the kinetics of the reaction of H atoms with C₄F₆.
Date: November 16, 2001
Creator: Hu, Xiaohua; Goumri, Abdellatif & Marshall, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hot Topics in Ultra-Peripheral Ion Collisions (open access)

Hot Topics in Ultra-Peripheral Ion Collisions

Ultra-peripheral collisions of relativistic heavy ions involve long-ranged electromagnetic interactions at impact parameters too large for hadronic interactions to occur. The nuclear charges are large; with the coherent enhancement, the cross sections are also large. Many types of photonuclear and purely electromagnetic interactions are possible. We present here an introduction to ultra-peripheral collisions, and present four of the most compelling physics topics.
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: Baur, G.; Bertulani, C. A.; Chiu, M.; Ginzburg, I. F.; Hencken, K.; Klein, S. R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Femtosecond x-rays from relativistic electrons: New tools for probing structural dynamics (open access)

Femtosecond x-rays from relativistic electrons: New tools for probing structural dynamics

None
Date: October 16, 2001
Creator: Schoenlein, R. W.; Chong, H. H. W.; Glover, T. E.; Heimann, P. A.; Leemans, W. P.; Padmore, H. A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Equations for Gas Releasing Process From Pressurized Vessels in Odh Evaluation. (open access)

Equations for Gas Releasing Process From Pressurized Vessels in Odh Evaluation.

IN THE EVALUATION OF ODH, THE CALCULATION OF THE SPILL RATE FROM THE PRESSURIZED VESSEL IS THE CENTRAL TASK. THE ACCURACY OF THE ENGINEERING ESTIMATION BECOMES ONE OF THE SAFETY DESIGN ISSUES. THIS PAPER SUMMARIZES THE EQUATIONS FOR THE OXYGEN CONCENTRATION CALCULATION IN DIFFERENT CASES, AND DISCUSSES THE EQUATIONS FOR THE GAS RELEASE PROCESS CALCULATION BOTH FOR THE HIGH-PRESSURE GAS TANK AND THE LOW-TEMPERATURE LIQUID CONTAINER.
Date: July 16, 2001
Creator: Jia, L. X. & Wang, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
QCD at the Tevatron: Status and prospects (open access)

QCD at the Tevatron: Status and prospects

None
Date: January 16, 2001
Creator: Womersley, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The stability of the scalar {chi}{sup 2}{phi} interaction (open access)

The stability of the scalar {chi}{sup 2}{phi} interaction

A scalar field theory with a {chi}{dagger}{chi}{phi} interaction is known to be unstable. Yet it has been used frequently without any sign of instability in standard text book examples and research articles. In order to reconcile these seemingly conflicting results, we show that the theory is stable if the Fock space of all intermediate states is limited to a finite number of {chi}{bar {chi}} loops associated with field {chi} that appears quadradically in the interaction, and that instability arises only when intermediate states include these loops to all orders.
Date: February 16, 2001
Creator: Gross, Franz; Savkli, Cetin & Tjon, John
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of small radius gradient magnets using ion beams (open access)

Measurement of small radius gradient magnets using ion beams

Several small and precise 90{degree}, 20-inch-radius bending and focusing magnet systems will be needed for the transport line of the Fermilab Electron Cooling Project to transport 4.36 MeV electrons. Originally, it was anticipated that these magnets would have a gradient index of {minus}1/2. To measure these magnets and complete achromatic bend modules, a well defined beam transport system was developed to determine the transfer matrix knowing the position and angle of several input and output beam rays passing through the magnet. The beam for this was a 12.5 keV proton beam that has the same magnetic rigidity as the electron beam in the final setup. The magnetic field is approximately 300 Gauss. For this purpose a high-brightness proton source was used and the beam collimated to give a low emittance ({approximately}10{sup {minus}8} m rad) pencil beam of {approximately}1 mm diameter with a current of {approximately}100 nA. Details of the system and results of measuring a magnet will be presented.
Date: July 16, 2001
Creator: al., Charles W. Schmidt et
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-power testing of 11.424 GHz dielectric-loaded accelerating structures. (open access)

High-power testing of 11.424 GHz dielectric-loaded accelerating structures.

The design, construction, and bench testing of an X-band travelling-wave accelerating structure loaded with a permittivity=20 dielectric has been published recently by the Argonne Advanced Accelerator Group [1]. Here we describe a new program to build a test accelerator using this structure. The accelerator will be powered using high-power 11.424-GHz radiation available at the Magnicon Facility at the Naval Research Lab [2]. The magnicon is expected to provide up to 30 MW from each of two WR-90 output waveguide arms in pulses of up to 1-{micro}s duration, permitting tests of the dielectric-loaded X-band device at gradients of {approximately}40 MV/m. The use of higher power pulses (100-500 MW) eventually available at the output of an active pulse compressor [3] driven by the magnicon will permit gradients in excess of 100 MV/m to be achieved.
Date: July 16, 2001
Creator: Gold, S. H. & Gai, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
CKM--Charged Kaons at the Main Injector (open access)

CKM--Charged Kaons at the Main Injector

The CKM experiment is a proposal to measure the branching ratio of the rare decay K{sup +} {r_arrow} {pi}{sup +} {nu}{bar {nu}} at the Main Injector at Fermilab using a decay in flight technique. The goal is to observe {approx}100 events, for a Standard Model branching ratio of 1 x 10{sup {minus}10} with a background of less than 10 events.
Date: January 16, 2001
Creator: Cooper, P.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Reaction Rate Uncertainties and Their Effects on Nova Nucleosynthesis Modeling (open access)

Nuclear Reaction Rate Uncertainties and Their Effects on Nova Nucleosynthesis Modeling

None
Date: January 16, 2001
Creator: Hix, W. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library