Exploring novel silicon-containing polymers---From preceramic polymers to conducting polymers with nonlinear optical properties (open access)

Exploring novel silicon-containing polymers---From preceramic polymers to conducting polymers with nonlinear optical properties

Several new types of silicon-containing preceramic polymers, i.e., poly(diorganosilacetylene) and poly(diorganosilvinylene) have been synthesized with molecular weights from 10,000 to 120,000. These polymers could be thermally converted to SiC with a moderate to high char yields. Ready solubility and good processability made these types of polymers attractive in their applications to ceramics. The thermal polymerization of diethynyldiphenyl-silane, which was reported in 1968 to afford poly(diphenylsilyldiacetylene) via dehydrogenation, was reinvestigated. Spectroscopic studies showed that the polymer had a structure of polyacetylene type not diacetylene. Diphenyldiethynylgermane and a series of diorganodiethynylsilances were synthesized. These could be polymerized in the presence of MoCl{sub 5} or WCl{sub 6} to afford a soluble, violet material with Mw as high as 108,000. 100 refs., 56 figs., 16 tabs.
Date: October 7, 1991
Creator: Pang, Yi.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A miniature inexpensive, oxygen sensing element (open access)

A miniature inexpensive, oxygen sensing element

An exhaustive study was conducted to determine the feasibility of Nernst-type oxygen sensors based on ceramics containing Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3}. The basic sensor design consisted of a ceramic sensing module sealed into a metal tube. The module accommodated an internal heater and thermocouple. Thermal-expansion-matched metals, adhesives, and seals were researched and developed, consistent with sequential firings during sensor assembly. Significant effort was devoted to heater design/testing and to materials' compatibility with Pt electrodes. A systematic approach was taken to develop all sensor components which led to several design modifications. Prototype sensors were constructed and exhaustively tested. It is concluded that development of Nerst-type oxygen sensors based on Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3} will require much further effort and application of specialized technologies. However, during the course of this 3-year program much progress was reported in the literature on amperometric-type oxygen sensors, and a minor effort was devoted here to this type of sensor based on Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3}. These studies were made on Bi{sub 2}O{sub 3}-based ceramic samples in a multilayer-capacitor-type geometry and amperometric-type oxygen sensing was demonstrated at very low temperatures ({approximately} 160{degree}C). A central advantage here is that these types of sensors can be mass-produced very inexpensively ({approximately} 20--50 cents …
Date: October 7, 1991
Creator: Arenz, R. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceleration using total internal reflection (open access)

Acceleration using total internal reflection

This report considers the use of a dielectric slab undergoing total internal reflection as an accelerating structure for charged particle beams. We examine the functional dependence of the electromagnetic fields above the surface of the dielectric for polarized incident waves. We present an experimental arrangement for testing the performance of the method, using apparatus under construction for the Grating Acceleration experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory. 13 refs., 4 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: June 7, 1991
Creator: Fernow, R.C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Positron lifetimes in solids from first principles calculations (open access)

Positron lifetimes in solids from first principles calculations

We present a first principles method for calculating positron lifetimes in solids, based on self-consistent calculations using the Linear Muffin-Tin Orbital method. Local density approximations are used for both electron-electron and electron-positron interactions. Results are presented for a variety of elemental metals and vacancies to demonstrate the reliability of this approach. Theoretical calculations of positron lifetimes can be used to interpret experimental data. As an examples of this, we interpret our experimental lifetime data for the oxide superconductor Ba{sub 1-x}K{sub x}BiO{sub 3} using calculations based on this method. 12 refs., 3 figs.
Date: August 7, 1991
Creator: Sterne, P. A.; O'Brien, J. C.; Howell, R. H. & Kaiser, J. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrodynamick instabilities on ICF capsules (open access)

Hydrodynamick instabilities on ICF capsules

This article summarizes our current understanding of hydrodynamic instabilities as relevant to ICF. First we discuss classical, single mode Rayleigh-Taylor instability, and nonlinear effects in the evolution of a single mode. Then we discuss multimode systems, considering: (1) the onset of nonlinearity; (2) a second order mode coupling theory for weakly nonlinear effects, and (3) the fully nonlinear regime. Two stabilization mechanisms relevant to ICF are described next: gradient scale length and convective stabilization. Then we describe a model which is meant to estimate the weakly nonlinear evolution of multi-mode systems as relevant to ICF, given the short-wavelength stabilization. Finally, we discuss the relevant code simulation capability, and experiments. At this time we are quite optimistic about our ability to estimate instability growth on ICF capsules, but further experiments and simulations are needed to verify the modeling. 52 refs.
Date: June 7, 1991
Creator: Haan, S.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effective theories and thresholds in particle physics (open access)

Effective theories and thresholds in particle physics

The role of effective theories in probing a more fundamental underlying theory and in indicating new physics thresholds is discussed, with examples from the standard model and more speculative applications to superstring theory. 38 refs.
Date: June 7, 1991
Creator: Gaillard, M. K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Savannah River Site's Groundwater Monitoring Program, second quarter 1990 (open access)

The Savannah River Site's Groundwater Monitoring Program, second quarter 1990

The Environmental Protection Department/Environmental Monitoring Section (EPD/EMS) administers the Savannah River Site's (SRS) Groundwater Monitoring Program. During second quarter 1990 (April through June) EPD/EMS conducted routine sampling of monitoring wells and drinking water locations. EPD/EMS established two sets of flagging criteria in 1986 to assist in the management of sample results. The flagging criteria aid personnel in sample scheduling, interpretation of data, and trend identification. The flagging criteria are based on detection limits, background levels in SRS groundwater, and drinking water standards. An explanation of flagging criteria for the second quarter is presented in the Flagging Criteria section of this document. All analytical results from second quarter 1990 are listed in this report.
Date: February 7, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relativistic shock waves and the excitation of plerions (open access)

Relativistic shock waves and the excitation of plerions

The shock termination of a relativistic magnetohydrodynamic wind from a pulsar is the most interesting and viable model for the excitation of the synchrotron sources observed in plerionic supernova remnants. We have studied the structure of relativistic magnetosonic shock waves in plasmas composed purely of electrons and positrons, as well as those whose composition includes heavy ions as a minority constituent by number. We find that relativistic shocks in symmetric pair plasmas create fully thermalized distributions of particles and fields downstream. Therefore, such shocks are not good candidates for the mechanism which converts rotational energy lost from a pulsar into the nonthermal synchrotron emission observed in plerions. However, when the upstream wind contains heavy ions which are minority constituent by number density, but carry the bulk of the energy density, much of the energy of the shock goes into a downstream, nonthermal power law distribution of positrons with energy distribution N(E)dE {proportional to}E{sup {minus}s}. In a specific model presented in some detail, s = 3. These characteristics are close to those assumed for the pairs in macroscopic MHD wind models of plerion excitation. The essential mechanism is collective synchrotron emission of left-handed extraordinary modes by the ions in the shock …
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: Arons, J. (California Univ., Berkeley, CA (USA)); Gallant, Y.A. (California Univ., Berkeley, CA (USA). Dept. of Physics); Hoshino, Masahiro; Max, C.E. (California Univ., Livermore, CA (USA). Inst. of Geophysics and Planetary Physics) & Langdon, A.B. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogen-like recombination x-ray laser experiments using a 20 picosecond laser pulse at the Nova facility (open access)

Hydrogen-like recombination x-ray laser experiments using a 20 picosecond laser pulse at the Nova facility

Hydrogen-like recombination X-ray lasers are currently under investigation as an alternative candidate to collisional pumped soft X-ray amplifiers. Efforts are being concentrated on the n = 3 to n = 2 transitions in H-like Mg and NaF. 5 refs., 1 fig.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: Shephard, R.; Fields, D.; DaSilva, L.; Keane, C.; MacGowen, B.; Matthews, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Short wavelength nickel-like x-ray laser development (open access)

Short wavelength nickel-like x-ray laser development

Ni-like x-ray lasers have been produced at wavelengths near to, and below the carbon K edge (43.76-{Angstrom}). Recent work has concentrated on the development of the Ni-like Ta amplifier at 44.83-{Angstrom}. Amplification occurs in a laser produced plasma created by irradiating a thin foil of Ta with two beams of the Nova laser. Up to 8 gainlengths have been demonstrated so far, with a gain coefficient of 3.2 cm{sup {minus}1} and a gain duration of 250 psec. The wavelength of 44.83-{Angstrom} is close to optimal for holographic imaging of live cells. It remains to optimize the coherent output power of the amplifier to use it as a source for future x-ray holography experiments. 19 refs., 10 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: MacGowan, B. J.; Da Silva, L. B.; Fields, D. J.; Fry, A. R.; Keane, C. J.; Koch, J. A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Particle physics and superstrings (open access)

Particle physics and superstrings

Implications of recent precision measurements of the standard model gauge coupling constants are discussed in the context of superstring theory. 40 refs.
Date: June 7, 1991
Creator: Gaillard, M.K. (California Univ., Berkeley, CA (United States). Dept. of Physics Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA (United States))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Even- and odd-parity finite-element transport solutions in the thick diffusion limit (open access)

Even- and odd-parity finite-element transport solutions in the thick diffusion limit

We analyze the behavior of odd-parity continuous finite-element methods (CFEMs) for problems that contain diffusive regions. We find that each of these method produces a solution that, to leading order inside diffusive regions, satisfies a discretization of the diffusion equation. We find further that these leading-order solutions satisfy boundary conditions that can lead to large errors in the interior solution. We recognize, however, that we can combine an odd-purity CFEM solution and an even-parity CFEM solution and obtain a solution that satisfies very accurate boundary conditions. Our analysis holds in three-dimensional Cartesian geometry, with an arbitrary spatial grid. We give numerical results from slab-geometry; these invariably agree with the predictions of the analysis. Finally, we introduce a rapidly-convergent diffusion-synthetic acceleration scheme for the odd-parity CFEMs, which we believe is new. 18 refs., 3 figs.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: Adams, M.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of longitudinal coupled-bunch instabilities (open access)

Simulation of longitudinal coupled-bunch instabilities

The purpose of this note is to document some work done as part of the effort directed at designing and simulating a bunch-by-bunch feedback system to control longitudinal coupled bunch instabilities in the B-factory. In particular, I discuss the ring model used in the simulation program developed to study this feedback system. Basically the simulation is a simple tracking program in which the rf drive voltage, the wakefields due to all the bunches, the synchrotron radiation losses, and the kicks applied to the bunches by the bunch-by-bunch feedback are all modelled as voltages applied at a single, discrete point in the ring. The computation of the bunch-by-bunch feedback voltages may of course be done by any desired algorithms. An example and discussion of the general behavior without bunch-by-bunch feedback is given at the end of this report.
Date: February 7, 1991
Creator: Thompson, K.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Petroleum marketing monthly, November 1991. [Contains glossary] (open access)

Petroleum marketing monthly, November 1991. [Contains glossary]

The Petroleum Marketing Monthly is designed to give information and statistical data about a variety of crude oils and refined petroleum products. The publication provides statistics on crude oil costs and refined petroleum products sales for use by industry, government, private sector analysts, educational institutions, and consumers. Data on crude oil include the domestic first purchase price, the f.o.b. and landed cost of imported crude oil, and the refiners' acquisition cost of crude oil. Sales data for motor gasoline, distillates, residuals, aviation fuels, kerosene, and propane are presented. 12 figs., 53 tabs.
Date: November 7, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extending the alias Monte Carlo sampling method to general distributions (open access)

Extending the alias Monte Carlo sampling method to general distributions

The alias method is a Monte Carlo sampling technique that offers significant advantages over more traditional methods. It equals the accuracy of table lookup and the speed of equal probable bins. The original formulation of this method sampled from discrete distributions and was easily extended to histogram distributions. We have extended the method further to applications more germane to Monte Carlo particle transport codes: continuous distributions. This paper presents the alias method as originally derived and our extensions to simple continuous distributions represented by piecewise linear functions. We also present a method to interpolate accurately between distributions tabulated at points other than the point of interest. We present timing studies that demonstrate the method's increased efficiency over table lookup and show further speedup achieved through vectorization. 6 refs., 12 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: Edwards, A. L.; Rathkopf, J. A. & Smidt, R. K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetospheric structure of rotation powered pulsars (open access)

Magnetospheric structure of rotation powered pulsars

I survey recent theoretical work on the structure of the magnetospheres of rotation powered pulsars, within the observational constraints set by their observed spindown, their ability to power synchrotron nebulae and their ability to produce beamed collective radio emission, while putting only a small fraction of their energy into incoherent X- and gamma radiation. I find no single theory has yet given a consistent description of the magnetosphere, but I conclude that models based on a dense outflow of pairs from the polar caps, permeated by a lower density flow of heavy ions, are the most promising avenue for future research. 106 refs., 4 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: Arons, J. (California Univ., Berkeley, CA (USA) California Univ., Livermore, CA (USA). Inst. of Geophysics and Planetary Physics)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discontinuous finite-element transport solutions in the thick diffusion limit in Cartesian geometry (open access)

Discontinuous finite-element transport solutions in the thick diffusion limit in Cartesian geometry

We analyze the behavior of discontinuous finite-element methods (DFEMs) for problems that contain diffusive regions. We find that in slab geometry most of these methods perform quite well, but that the same is not true in XY or XYZ geometry. In these geometries, we find that there are two distinct sets of DFEMS. Methods in one set produce unphysical solutions in diffusive regions; the other leading-order solutions that satisfy discretizations of the correct diffusion equation. We show that two simple properties of the finite-element weight functions are sufficient to guarantee that a DFEM belongs to the latter set. We show, however, that even these DFEMs suffer from several defects: their leading-order solutions are in general discontinuous, they satisfy diffusion discretizations that can be ill-behaved, and they may not be accurate given boundary layers that are not resolved by the spatial mesh. We discuss the practical significance of these defects, and we show that liberal modification of some DFEMs can eliminate the defects. We present numerical results from simple test problems; these fully agree with our analysis. 15 refs., 6 figs., 1 tab.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: Adams, M.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Colorado State University program for developing, testing, evaluating and optimizing solar heating and cooling systems (open access)

Colorado State University program for developing, testing, evaluating and optimizing solar heating and cooling systems

This report discusses the following tasks; solar heating with isothermal collector operation and advanced control strategy; solar cooling with solid desiccant; liquid desiccant cooling system development; solar house III -- development and improvement of solar heating systems employing boiling liquid collectors; generic solar domestic water heating systems; advanced residential solar domestic hot water (DHW) systems; management and coordination of Colorado State/DOE program; and field monitoring workshop.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trace gas emission data bases for atmospheric chemistry studies (open access)

Trace gas emission data bases for atmospheric chemistry studies

Global data bases of trace gas emissions to the atmosphere have been compiled for the use in atmospheric chemistry studies. The resolution provided is a 1{degree} latitude by 1{degree} longitude. A series of 3 data bases has been provided. The first is an inventory of emissions of NO{sub x} from fossil fuel combustion, while the second is an inventory of SO{sub 2} emissions from the same anthropogenic source. The third database includes a global inventory of the emissions of NO{sub x} from terrestrial biomass burning and is given seasonally for the globe. The units of emission for the inventories are given as the mass in metric tons of N for the NO{sub x} inventories and metric tons of S for the SO{sub 2} inventory for each 1{degree} {times} 1{degree} grid. The emissions are expected to represent the emissions for the year 1980. The biomass burning source is given for 2 seasons where XXXXjul represents an ascii file containing the cumulated emissions for the months from April to September, and XXXXjan represents October to March. The grid for these data bases, (i,j) arrays, is (360,180), which represents 1 degree (lon,lat) resolution. The Table shows a description of each data base and …
Date: October 7, 1991
Creator: Dignon, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Systematic preparation of selective heterogeneous catalysts (open access)

Systematic preparation of selective heterogeneous catalysts

The Single Turnover (STO) procedure, involving pulses of hydrogen and 1-butene, was developed for studying the types of active sites present on supported metal catalysts. The STO procedure was used to study direct saturated sites and other topics. Frontier molecular orbital studies were also made.
Date: November 7, 1991
Creator: Augustine, R.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reactor Restart Division trend analysis report, second quarter 1991 (open access)

Reactor Restart Division trend analysis report, second quarter 1991

This document provides a trend analysis for the Savannah River Reactor Restart Program. The data contained in this report is comprised of Nonconformance Report (NCR), Surveillance Reports, and Corrective Action Reports (CAR). The data trended now includes six quarters and provides the capability of looking at changing patterns in the various performance categories over time.
Date: October 7, 1991
Creator: Castles, R.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental study of filamentation in laser-plasma interactions (open access)

Experimental study of filamentation in laser-plasma interactions

The filamentation instability can lead to regions of increased laser intensity when a spatially nonuniform laser beam interacts with a plasma. An experimental technique will be described which identifies the density perturbation produced by filaments. The growth of filaments has been investigated and, when the laser intensity is large enough, the transverse density profile of the filament can be measured. Evidence of filament growth influenced by plasma flow and density gradients is presented. 19 refs., 4 figs.
Date: January 7, 1991
Creator: Young, P.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
(Centralized reliability data organization for liquid metal reactor components) (open access)

(Centralized reliability data organization for liquid metal reactor components)

The Centralized Reliability Data Organization is a data bank and data analysis center, focusing on reliability, availability, and maintainability (RAM) data for components (e.g., valves, pumps, etc.) operating in liquid metal reactors and test facilities. PNC staff are using the CREDO data base as a resource for their development of a probabilistic safety assessment (PSA) for the MONJU fast breeder reactor now under construction. The meeting was held to discuss: (a) progress in FY 1989, (b) resolution of data base deficiencies and inconsistencies, (c) clarification of definitions for failure mode and failure cause, (d) component boundary definitions, (e) goals and objectives for the remainder of the fiscal year, and (f) proposals for future work. General agreement was reached on the need for improvements to the data base: resolution of data deficiencies and inconsistencies, reduction of the number of failure modes and causes, inclusion of failure severity, and a specific delineation of the boundary for each of the generic components. A schedule will be provided to PNC by 1 March 1991 addressing these issues. A proposal to develop a hybrid mainframe/PC reliability data base to improve user access was declined. A second proposal to develop a reliability data base for PNC's …
Date: February 7, 1991
Creator: Smith, M.S. & Manneschmidt, J.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reactor Restart Division trend analysis report, second quarter 1991 (open access)

Reactor Restart Division trend analysis report, second quarter 1991

This document provides a trend analysis for the Savannah River Reactor Restart Program. The data contained in this report is comprised of Nonconformance Report (NCR), Surveillance Reports, and Corrective Action Reports (CAR). The data trended now includes six quarters and provides the capability of looking at changing patterns in the various performance categories over time.
Date: October 7, 1991
Creator: Castles, R. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library