Resource Type

396 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

The Value of Open Access to Undergraduate Research (open access)

The Value of Open Access to Undergraduate Research

Article describing the importance and value of open access to undergraduate research.
Date: October 1, 2013
Creator: Waugh, Laura & Keralis, Spencer D. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron Damage in Mechanically-Cooled High-Purity Germanium Detectors for Field-Portable Prompt Gamma Neutron Activation Analysis (PGNAA) Systems (open access)

Neutron Damage in Mechanically-Cooled High-Purity Germanium Detectors for Field-Portable Prompt Gamma Neutron Activation Analysis (PGNAA) Systems

Prompt Gamma Neutron Activation (PGNAA) systems require the use of a gamma-ray spectrometer to record the gamma-ray spectrum of an object under test and allow the determination of the object’s composition. Field-portable systems, such as Idaho National Laboratory’s PINS system, have used standard liquid-nitrogen-cooled high-purity germanium (HPGe) detectors to perform this function. These detectors have performed very well in the past, but the requirement of liquid-nitrogen cooling limits their use to areas where liquid nitrogen is readily available or produced on-site. Also, having a relatively large volume of liquid nitrogen close to the detector can impact some assessments, possibly leading to a false detection of explosives or other nitrogen-containing chemical. Use of a mechanically-cooled HPGe detector is therefore very attractive for PGNAA applications where nitrogen detection is critical or where liquid-nitrogen logistics are problematic. Mechanically-cooled HPGe detectors constructed from p-type germanium, such as Ortec’s trans-SPEC, have been commercially available for several years. In order to assess whether these detectors would be suitable for use in a fielded PGNAA system, Idaho National Laboratory (INL) has been performing a number of tests of the resistance of mechanically-cooled HPGe detectors to neutron damage. These detectors have been standard commercially-available p-type HPGe detectors as …
Date: October 1, 2013
Creator: Seabury, E. H.; Wharton, C. J.; Caffrey, A. J.; McCabe, J. B. & Van Siclen, C. Dew.
System: The UNT Digital Library
GPU-optimized Code for Long-term Simulations of Beam-beam Effects in Colliders (open access)

GPU-optimized Code for Long-term Simulations of Beam-beam Effects in Colliders

We report on the development of the new code for long-term simulation of beam-beam effects in particle colliders. The underlying physical model relies on a matrix-based arbitrary-order symplectic particle tracking for beam transport and the Bassetti-Erskine approximation for beam-beam interaction. The computations are accelerated through a parallel implementation on a hybrid GPU/CPU platform. With the new code, a previously computationally prohibitive long-term simulations become tractable. We use the new code to model the proposed medium-energy electron-ion collider (MEIC) at Jefferson Lab.
Date: June 1, 2013
Creator: Roblin, Yves; Morozov, Vasiliy; Terzic, Balsa; Aturban, Mohamed A.; Ranjan, D. & Zubair, Mohammed
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Ultra High Gradient and High Q{sub 0} Superconducting Radio Frequency Cavities (open access)

Development of Ultra High Gradient and High Q{sub 0} Superconducting Radio Frequency Cavities

We report on the recent progress at Jefferson Lab in developing ultra high gradient and high Q{sub 0} superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities for future SRF based machines. A new 1300 MHz 9-cell prototype cavity is being fabricated. This cavity has an optimized shape in terms of the ratio of the peak surface field (both magnetic and electric) to the acceleration gradient, hence the name low surface field (LSF) shape. The goal of the effort is to demonstrate an acceleration gradient of 50 MV/m with Q{sub 0} of 10{sup 10} at 2 K in a 9-cell SRF cavity. Fine-grain niobium material is used. Conventional forming, machining and electron beam welding method are used for cavity fabrication. New techniques are adopted to ensure repeatable, accurate and inexpensive fabrication of components and the full assembly. The completed cavity is to be first mechanically polished to a mirror-finish, a newly acquired in-house capability at JLab, followed by the proven ILC-style processing recipe established already at JLab. In parallel, new single-cell cavities made from large-grain niobium material are made to further advance the cavity treatment and processing procedures, aiming for the demonstration of an acceleration gradient of 50 MV/m with Q{sub 0} of 2�10{sup …
Date: June 1, 2013
Creator: Geng, Rongli; Clemens, William A.; Follkie, James E.; Harris, Teena M.; Kushnick, Peter W.; Machie, Danny et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reducing Office Plug Loads through Simple and Inexpensive Advanced Power Strips: Preprint (open access)

Reducing Office Plug Loads through Simple and Inexpensive Advanced Power Strips: Preprint

This paper documents the process (and results) of applying Advanced Power Strips with various control approaches.
Date: July 1, 2013
Creator: Metzger, I.; Sheppy, M. & Cutler, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
EGS rock reactions with Supercritical CO2 saturated with water and water saturated with Supercritical CO2 (open access)

EGS rock reactions with Supercritical CO2 saturated with water and water saturated with Supercritical CO2

EGS using CO2 as a working fluid will likely involve hydro-shearing low-permeability hot rock reservoirs with a water solution. After that process, the fractures will be flushed with CO2 that is maintained under supercritical conditions (> 70 bars). Much of the injected water in the main fracture will be flushed out with the initial CO2 injection; however side fractures, micro fractures, and the lower portion of the fracture will contain connate water that will interact with the rock and the injected CO2. Dissolution/precipitation reactions in the resulting scCO2/brine/rock systems have the potential to significantly alter reservoir permeability, so it is important to understand where these precipitates form and how are they related to the evolving ‘free’ connate water in the system. To examine dissolution / precipitation behavior in such systems over time, we have conducted non-stirred batch experiments in the laboratory with pure minerals, sandstone, and basalt coupons with brine solution spiked with MnCl2 and scCO2. The coupons are exposed to liquid water saturated with scCO2 and extend above the water surface allowing the upper portion of the coupons to be exposed to scCO2 saturated with water. The coupons were subsequently analyzed using SEM to determine the location of reactions …
Date: February 1, 2013
Creator: Mattson, Earl D.; McLing, Travis L.; Smith, William & Palmer, Carl
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isospin Decomposition of the Photoproduced Sigma pi System Near the Lambda(1405) (open access)

Isospin Decomposition of the Photoproduced Sigma pi System Near the Lambda(1405)

Recent experimental results for the reaction \gamma + p \to K^+ + \Sigma + \pi\ from CLAS at Jefferson Lab are discussed. It was found that the mass distributions or "line shapes" of the three charge combinations \Sigma^+ \pi^-, \Sigma^0 \pi^0 and \Sigma^- \pi^+ differ significantly. Our results show that the \Lambda(1405), as the I=0 constituent of the reaction, must be accompanied by an I > 0 component. We discuss phenomenological fits to the data to test the possible forms and magnitudes of these amplitudes. A two-amplitude I=0 fit of Breit-Wigner form to the \Sigma^0\pi^0 channel alone works quite well. The addition of a single I=1 amplitude works fairly well to model all the line shapes simultaneously.
Date: September 1, 2013
Creator: U., Carnegie Mellon & U., Indiana
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improvements to Existing Jefferson Lab Wire Scanners (open access)

Improvements to Existing Jefferson Lab Wire Scanners

This poster will detail the augmentation of selected existing CEBAF wire scanners with commercially available hardware, PMTs, and self created software in order to improve the scanners both in function and utility.
Date: June 1, 2013
Creator: McCaughan, Michael D.; Tiefenback, Michael G. & Turner, Dennis L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SOWFA Super-Controller: A High-Fidelity Tool for Evaluating Wind Plant Control Approaches (open access)

SOWFA Super-Controller: A High-Fidelity Tool for Evaluating Wind Plant Control Approaches

This paper presents a new tool for testing wind plant controllers in the Simulator for Offshore Wind Farm Applications (SOWFA). SOWFA is a high-fidelity simulator for the interaction between wind turbine dynamics and the fluid flow in a wind plant. The new super-controller testing environment in SOWFA allows for the implementation of the majority of the wind plant control strategies proposed in the literature.
Date: January 1, 2013
Creator: Fleming, P.; Gebraad, P.; van Wingerden, J. W.; Lee, S.; Churchfield, M.; Scholbrock, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Scheme of Beam Synchronization in MEIC (open access)

The Scheme of Beam Synchronization in MEIC

Synchronizing colliding beams at single or multiple collision points is a critical R&D issue in the design of a medium energy electron-ion collider (MEIC) at Jefferson Lab. The path-length variation due to changes in the ion energy, which varies over 20 to 100 GeV, could be more than several times the bunch spacing. The scheme adopted in the present MEIC baseline is centered on varying the number of bunches (i.e., harmonic number) stored in the collider ring. This could provide a set of discrete energies for proton or ions such that the beam synchronization condition is satisfied. To cover the ion energy between these synchronized values, we further propose to vary simultaneously the electron ring circumference and the frequency of the RF systems in both collider rings. We also present in this paper the requirement of frequency tunability of SRF cavities to support the scheme.
Date: June 1, 2013
Creator: Zhang, Yuhong; Derbenev, Yaroslav S. & Hutton, Andrew M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
2013 GASEOUS IONS GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, FEBRUARY 24 - MARCH 1, 2013 (open access)

2013 GASEOUS IONS GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, FEBRUARY 24 - MARCH 1, 2013

The Gaseous Ions: Structures, Energetics and Reactions Gordon Research Conference will focus on ions and their interactions with molecules, surfaces, electrons, and light. The long-standing goal of our community is to develop new strategies for capturing complex molecular architectures as gas phase ions where they can be isolated, characterized and manipulated with great sensitivity. Emergent areas of interest include catalytic mechanisms, cryogenic processing of ions extracted from solution, ion fragmentation mechanisms, and new methods for ion formation and structural characterization. The conference will cover theoretical and experimental advances on systems ranging from model studies at the molecular scale to preparation of nanomaterials and characterization of large biological molecules.
Date: March 1, 2013
Creator: Williams, Evan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Offshore Wind Recommended Practice for U.S. Waters: Preprint (open access)

Development of Offshore Wind Recommended Practice for U.S. Waters: Preprint

This paper discusses how the American Petroleum Institute oil and gas standards were interfaced with International Electrotechnical Commission and other wind turbine and offshore industry standards to provide guidance for reliable engineering design practices for offshore wind energy systems.
Date: April 1, 2013
Creator: Musial, W. D.; Sheppard, R. E.; Dolan, D. & Naughton, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Constitutive Modeling of High Temperature Uniaxial (open access)

Constitutive Modeling of High Temperature Uniaxial

Inconel Alloy 617 is a high temperature creep and
Date: July 1, 2013
Creator: Pritchard, P.G.; Carroll, L.J. & Hassan, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Test Reactor National Scientific User Facility: Addressing advanced nuclear materials research (open access)

Advanced Test Reactor National Scientific User Facility: Addressing advanced nuclear materials research

The Advanced Test Reactor National Scientific User Facility (ATR NSUF), based at the Idaho National Laboratory in the United States, is supporting Department of Energy and industry research efforts to ensure the properties of materials in light water reactors are well understood. The ATR NSUF is providing this support through three main efforts: establishing unique infrastructure necessary to conduct research on highly radioactive materials, conducting research in conjunction with industry partners on life extension relevant topics, and providing training courses to encourage more U.S. researchers to understand and address LWR materials issues. In 2010 and 2011, several advanced instruments with capability focused on resolving nuclear material performance issues through analysis on the micro (10-6 m) to atomic (10-10 m) scales were installed primarily at the Center for Advanced Energy Studies (CAES) in Idaho Falls, Idaho. These instruments included a local electrode atom probe (LEAP), a field-emission gun scanning transmission electron microscope (FEG-STEM), a focused ion beam (FIB) system, a Raman spectrometer, and an nanoindentor/atomic force microscope. Ongoing capability enhancements intended to support industry efforts include completion of two shielded, irradiation assisted stress corrosion cracking (IASCC) test loops, the first of which will come online in early calendar year 2013, a …
Date: March 1, 2013
Creator: Jackson, John; Allen, Todd; Marshall, Frances & Cole, Jim
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Conclusions and Recommendations Drawn from the DeepCWind Scaled Floating Offshore Wind System Test Campaign: Preprint (open access)

Summary of Conclusions and Recommendations Drawn from the DeepCWind Scaled Floating Offshore Wind System Test Campaign: Preprint

The DeepCwind consortium is a group of universities, national labs, and companies funded under a research initiative by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to support the research and development of floating offshore wind power. The two main objectives of the project are to better understand the complex dynamic behavior of floating offshore wind systems and to create experimental data for use in validating the tools used in modeling these systems. In support of these objectives, the DeepCwind consortium conducted a model test campaign in 2011 of three generic floating wind systems, a tension-leg platform (TLP), a spar-buoy (spar), and a semisubmersible (semi). Each of the three platforms was designed to support a 1/50th-scale model of a 5 MW wind turbine and was tested under a variety of wind/wave conditions. The focus of this paper is to summarize the work done by consortium members in analyzing the data obtained from the test campaign and its use for validating the offshore wind modeling tool, FAST.
Date: July 1, 2013
Creator: Robertson, A. N.; Jonkman, J. M.; Masciola, M. D.; Molta, P.; Goupee, A. J.; Coulling, A. J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
GFMC calculations of electromagnetic moments and M1 transitions in A {<=} 9 nuclei (open access)

GFMC calculations of electromagnetic moments and M1 transitions in A {<=} 9 nuclei

We present recent GreenÂ’s function Monte Carlo calculations of magnetic moments and M1 transitions in A{<=}#20;9 nuclei, which include corrections arising from two-body meson-exchange electromagnetic currents. Two-body effects provide significant corrections to the calculated observables, bringing them in excellent agreement with the experimental data. In particular, we find that two body corrections are especially large in the A = 9, T = 3/2 systems, in which they account for up to ~#24; 20% (~#24; 40%) of the total predicted value for the {sup 9}Li ({sup 9}C) magnetic moment.
Date: August 1, 2013
Creator: Pastore, Saori; Pieper, Steven C.; Schiavilla, Rocco & Wiringa, Robert Bruce
System: The UNT Digital Library
New Structural-Dynamics Module for Offshore Multimember Substructures within the Wind Turbine Computer-Aided Engineering Tool FAST: Preprint (open access)

New Structural-Dynamics Module for Offshore Multimember Substructures within the Wind Turbine Computer-Aided Engineering Tool FAST: Preprint

FAST, developed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), is a computer-aided engineering (CAE) tool for aero-hydro-servo-elastic analysis of land-based and offshore wind turbines. This paper discusses recent upgrades made to FAST to enable loads simulations of offshore wind turbines with fixed-bottom, multimember support structures (e.g., jackets and tripods, which are commonly used in transitional-depth waters). The main theory and strategies for the implementation of the multimember substructure dynamics module (SubDyn) within the new FAST modularization framework are introduced. SubDyn relies on two main engineering schematizations: 1) a linear frame finite-element beam (LFEB) model and 2) a dynamics system reduction via Craig-Bampton's method. A jacket support structure and an offshore system consisting of a turbine atop a jacket substructure were simulated to test the SubDyn module and to preliminarily assess results against results from a commercial finite-element code.
Date: August 1, 2013
Creator: Song, H.; Damiani, R.; Robertson, A. & Jonkman, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acquiring Impedance Spectra From Diode-Coupled Primary Batteries to Determine Health and State of Charge (open access)

Acquiring Impedance Spectra From Diode-Coupled Primary Batteries to Determine Health and State of Charge

The U.S. Army uses BA5590 Lithium Sulfur Dioxide p
Date: March 1, 2013
Creator: Morrison, John L.; Christophersen, Jon P. & Morrison, William H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanical Properties of Nuclear Fuel Surrogates using Picosecond Laser Ultrasonics (open access)

Mechanical Properties of Nuclear Fuel Surrogates using Picosecond Laser Ultrasonics

Detailed understanding between microstructure evolution and mechanical properties is important for designing new high burnup nuclear fuels. In this presentation we discuss the use of picosecond ultrasonics to measure localize changes in mechanical properties of fuel surrogates. We develop measurement techniques that can be applied to investigate heterogeneous elastic properties caused by localize changes in chemistry, grain microstructure caused by recrystallization, and mechanical properties of small samples prepared using focused ion beam sample preparation. Emphasis is placed on understanding the relationship between microstructure and mechanical properties
Date: May 1, 2013
Creator: Hurley, David; Khafizov, Marat; Farzbod, Farhad & Burgett, Eric
System: The UNT Digital Library
NONLINEAR DIFFUSION ACCELERATION FOR THE MULTIGROU (open access)

NONLINEAR DIFFUSION ACCELERATION FOR THE MULTIGROU

Nonlinear diffusion acceleration (NDA) can improve
Date: May 1, 2013
Creator: Wang, Yaqi
System: The UNT Digital Library
A novel laser-based approach for cleaning contamin (open access)

A novel laser-based approach for cleaning contamin

We are developing a novel approach for cleaning an
Date: May 1, 2013
Creator: Fox, Robert V.; Roberts, Lauren & Frank C. DeLucia, J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessing Fatigue and Ultimate Load Uncertainty in Floating Offshore Wind Turbines Due to Varying Simulation Length (open access)

Assessing Fatigue and Ultimate Load Uncertainty in Floating Offshore Wind Turbines Due to Varying Simulation Length

With the push towards siting wind turbines farther offshore due to higher wind quality and less visibility, floating offshore wind turbines, which can be located in deep water, are becoming an economically attractive option. The International Electrotechnical Commission's (IEC) 61400-3 design standard covers fixed-bottom offshore wind turbines, but there are a number of new research questions that need to be answered to modify these standards so that they are applicable to floating wind turbines. One issue is the appropriate simulation length needed for floating turbines. This paper will discuss the results from a study assessing the impact of simulation length on the ultimate and fatigue loads of the structure, and will address uncertainties associated with changing the simulation length for the analyzed floating platform. Recommendations of required simulation length based on load uncertainty will be made and compared to current simulation length requirements.
Date: July 1, 2013
Creator: Stewart, G.; Lackner, M.; Haid, L.; Matha, D.; Jonkman, J. & Robertson, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Efficiency Retrofit Lessons for Retail from a SuperTarget: Preprint (open access)

High-Efficiency Retrofit Lessons for Retail from a SuperTarget: Preprint

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory partnered with Target under the Commercial Building Program to design and implement a retrofit of a SuperTarget in Thornton, CO. The result was a retrofit design that predicted 37% energy savings over ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2004, and 29% compared to existing (pre-retrofit) store consumption. The largest savings came from energy efficient lighting, energy efficient cooling systems, improved refrigeration, and better control of plug loads.
Date: February 1, 2013
Creator: Langner, R.; Deru, M.; Hirsch, A. & Williams, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scale/Analytical Analyses of Freezing and Convective Melting with Internal Heat Generation (open access)

Scale/Analytical Analyses of Freezing and Convective Melting with Internal Heat Generation

Using a scale/analytical analysis approach, we model phase change (melting) for pure materials which generate constant internal heat generation for small Stefan numbers (approximately one). The analysis considers conduction in the solid phase and natural convection, driven by internal heat generation, in the liquid regime. The model is applied for a constant surface temperature boundary condition where the melting temperature is greater than the surface temperature in a cylindrical geometry. The analysis also consider constant heat flux (in a cylindrical geometry).We show the time scales in which conduction and convection heat transfer dominate.
Date: July 1, 2013
Creator: Siahpush, Ali S.; Crepeau, John & Sabharwall, Piyush
System: The UNT Digital Library