States

74 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

Synthesis of Sol-Gel Matrices for Encapsulation of Enzymes Using an Aqueous Route (open access)

Synthesis of Sol-Gel Matrices for Encapsulation of Enzymes Using an Aqueous Route

Sol-gel matrices are promising host materials for potential chemical and biosensor applications. Previous studies have focused on modified sol-gel routes using alkoxides for encapsulation of enzymes. However the formation of alcohol as a byproduct during hydrolysis and condensation reactions poses limitations. We report the immobilization of glucose oxidase and peroxidase in silica prepared by an aqueous route which may provide a more favorable environment for the biomolecules. A two step aqueous sol-gel procedure using sodium silicate as the precursor was developed to encapsulate the enzymes and the dye precursor, o-dianisidine. Glucose oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of glucose to give gluconic acid and hydrogen peroxide. Peroxidase then catalyzes the reaction of the dye precursor with hydrogen peroxide to produce a colored product. The kinetics of the coupled enzymatic reactions were monitored by optical spectroscopy and compared to those occurring in tetramethyl orthosilicate (TMOS) derived silica matrices developed by Yamanaka. Enhanced kinetics in the aqueous silicate matrices were related to differences in the host microstructure as elucidated by microstructural comparisons of the corresponding aerogels.
Date: November 23, 1998
Creator: Ashley, C. S.; Bhatia, R. B.; Brinker, C. J. & Harris, T. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The behavior of silicon and boron in the surface of corroded nuclear waste glasses : an EFTEM study. (open access)

The behavior of silicon and boron in the surface of corroded nuclear waste glasses : an EFTEM study.

Using electron energy-loss filtered transmission electron microscopy (EFTEM), we have observed the formation of silicon-rich zones on the corroded surface of a West Valley (WV6) glass. This layer is approximately 100-200 nm thick and is directly underneath a precipitated smectite clay layer. Under conventional (C)TEM illumination, this layer is invisible; indeed, more commonly used analytical techniques, such as x-ray energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), have failed to describe fully the localized changes in the boron and silicon contents across this region. Similar silicon-rich and boron-depleted zones were not found on corroded Savannah River Laboratory (SRL) borosilicate glasses, including SRL-EA and SRL-51, although they possessed similar-looking clay layers. This study demonstrates a new tool for examining the corroded surfaces of materials.
Date: November 23, 1999
Creator: Buck, E. C.; Smith, K. L. & Blackford, M. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Decay rates of spherical and deformed proton emitters (open access)

Decay rates of spherical and deformed proton emitters

Using Green's function techniques, the authors derive expressions for the width of a proton decaying state in spherical and deformed nuclei. The authors show that the proton decay widths calculated by the exact expressions of Maglione et al. are equivalent to the distorted wave expressions of Bugrov et al., and that of {angstrom} berg et al. in the spherical case.
Date: November 23, 1999
Creator: Davids, C. N. & Esbensen, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Excavation and Remediation of the Sandia National Laboratories Chemical Waste Landfill (open access)

The Excavation and Remediation of the Sandia National Laboratories Chemical Waste Landfill

The Chemical Waste Landfill (CWL) at Sandia National Laboratories/New Mexico (SNL/NM) is a 1.9-acre disposal site that was used for the disposal of chemical wastes generated by many of SNL/NM research laboratories from 1962 until 1985. These laboratories were primarily involved in the design, research and development of non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons and the waste generated by these labs included small quantities of a wide assortment of chemical products. A Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Closure Plan for the Chemical Waste Landfill was approved by the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) in 1992. Subsequent site characterization activities identified the presence of significant amounts of chromium in the soil as far as 80 feet below ground surface (fbgs) and the delineation of a solvent plume in the vadose zone that extends to groundwater approximately 500 fbgs. Trichloroethylene (TCE) was detected in some groundwater samples at concentrations slightly above the drinking water limit of 5 parts per billion. In 1997 an active vapor extraction system reduced the size of the TCE vapor plume and for the last six quarterly sampling events groundwater samples have not detected TCE above the drinking water standard. A source term removal, being conducted as a …
Date: November 23, 1999
Creator: Kwiecinski, Daniel Albert; Methvin, Rhonda Kay; Schofield, Donald P. & Young, Sharissa G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isospin-Forbidden B-Delayed Proton Emission (open access)

Isospin-Forbidden B-Delayed Proton Emission

The effects of isospin-symmetry breaking on proton emission following {beta}-decay to the isobaric analog state are discussed in detail. Of particular importance is the mixing with a dense background of lower isospin states, whose properties are not well known. The possibility of observing T=4 states in even-even, N=Z nuclei, which is viable if the decay proceeds via isospin-forbidden particle emission, is also discussed.
Date: November 23, 1999
Creator: Ormand, W. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ninth workshop on crystalline silicon solar cell materials and processes: Summary discussion sessions (open access)

Ninth workshop on crystalline silicon solar cell materials and processes: Summary discussion sessions

This report is a summary of the panel discussions included with the Ninth Workshop on Crystalline Silicon Solar Cell Materials and Processes. The theme for the workshop was ``R and D Challenges and Opportunities in Si Photovoltaics.'' This theme was chosen because it appropriately reflects a host of challenges that the growing production of Si photovoltaics will be facing in the new millennium. The anticipated challenges will arise in developing strategies for cost reduction, increased production, higher throughput per manufacturing line, new sources of low-cost Si, and the introduction of new manufacturing processes for cell production. At the same time, technologies based on CdTe and CIS will come on line posing new competition. With these challenges come new opportunities for Si PV to wean itself from the microelectronics industry, to embark on a more aggressive program in thin-film Si solar cells, and to try new approaches to process monitoring.
Date: November 23, 1999
Creator: Sopori, B.; Tan, T.; Swanson, D.; Rosenblum, M. & Sinton, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shock Timing and Yield Sensitivity Studies for NIF Ignition Capsules (open access)

Shock Timing and Yield Sensitivity Studies for NIF Ignition Capsules

A cryogenic, {beta}-layered NIF ignition capsule with a beryllium ablator that employs a BeO dopant (2% O) for opacity control is described. The design has an optimized yield of 12 MJ and uses a ''reduced drive'' hohlraum temperature pulse shape that peaks at {approx}250 eV. Shock timing sensitivity calculations have been performed for this capsule design. Individual uncertainties of (1) {approx}200 ps in the timing of the ''footpulse; (2) {approx}5% in the x-ray flux of the foot pulse and first step; (3) {approx}10% in the ablator EOS; or (4) {approx} 5 {micro}m in the DT ice layer thickness each have a significant impact on thermonuclear yield. Combined uncertainties have greater impact than isolated, individual issues. For example, a combination of uncertainties of: 200 ps in the foot + 2 eV in the foot + 5 pm in the DT thickness results in a calculation that produces only {approx}1% of the original design yield. A second, more speculative, capsule concept utilizing a liquid DT ablator is also discussed. This design produces a 5 MJ yield in a 250 eV peak drive calculation.
Date: November 23, 1999
Creator: OLSON,RICHARD E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Short-range order types in binary alloys: A reflection of coherent phase stability (open access)

Short-range order types in binary alloys: A reflection of coherent phase stability

The short-range order (SRO) present in disordered solid solutions is classified according to three characteristic system-dependent energies: (1) formation enthalpies of ordered compounds, (2) enthalpies of mixing of disordered alloys, and (3) the energy of coherent phase separation, (the composition-weighted energy of the constituents each constrained to maintain a common lattice constant along an A/B interface). These energies are all compared against a common reference, the energy of incoherent phase separation (the composition-weighted energy of the constituents each at their own equilibrium volumes). Unlike long-range order (LRO), short-range order is determined by energetic competition between phases at a fixed composition, and hence only coherent phase-separated states are of relevance for SRO. The authors find five distinct SRO types, and show examples of each of these five types, including Cu-Au, Al-Mg, GaP-InP, Ni-Au, and Cu-Ag. The SRO is calculated from first-principles using the mixed-space cluster expansion approach combined with Monte Carlo simulations. Additionally, they examine the effect of inclusion of coherency strain in the calculation of SRO, and specifically examine the appropriate functional form for accurate SRO calculations.
Date: November 23, 1999
Creator: Wolverton, W.; Ozolins, V. & Zunger, Alex
System: The UNT Digital Library

Solvation descriptors for pesticides from the solubility of solids: diuron as an example

Access: Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Article on the solvation descriptors for pesticides from the solubility of solids and diuron as an example.
Date: November 23, 2000
Creator: Green, Caroline E.; Abraham, M. H. (Michael H.); Acree, William E. (William Eugene); De Fina, Karina M. & Sharp, Tina L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
DUNE - a granular flow code (open access)

DUNE - a granular flow code

DUNE was designed to accurately model the spectrum of granular. Granular flow encompasses the motions of discrete particles. The particles are macroscopic in that there is no Brownian motion. The flow can be thought of as a dispersed phase (the particles) interacting with a fluid phase (air or water). Validation of the physical models proceeds in tandem with simple experimental confirmation. The current development team is working toward the goal of building a flexible architecture where existing technologies can easily be integrated to further the capability of the simulation. We describe the DUNE architecture in some detail using physics models appropriate for an imploding liner experiment.
Date: November 23, 2004
Creator: Slone, D M; Cottom, T L & Bateson, W B
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Evaluation of the Difference Formulation for Photon Transport in a Two Level System (open access)

An Evaluation of the Difference Formulation for Photon Transport in a Two Level System

In this paper we extend the difference formulation for radiation transport to the case of a single atomic line. We examine the accuracy, performance and stability of the difference formulation within the framework of the Symbolic Implicit Monte Carlo method. The difference formulation, introduced for thermal radiation by some of the authors, has the unique property that the transport equation is written in terms that become small for thick systems. We find that the difference formulation has a significant advantage over the standard formulation for a thick system. The correct treatment of the line profile, however, requires that the difference formulation in the core of the line be mixed with the standard formulation in the wings, and this may limit the advantage of the method. We bypass this problem by using the gray approximation. We develop three Monte Carlo solution methods based on different degrees of implicitness for the treatment of the source terms, and we find only conditional stability unless the source terms are treated fully implicitly.
Date: November 23, 2004
Creator: Daffin, F C; McKinley, M S; Brooks, E D & Szoke, A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial scientific uses of coherent synchrotron radiation inelectron storage rings (open access)

Initial scientific uses of coherent synchrotron radiation inelectron storage rings

The production of stable, high power, coherent synchrotron radiation at sub-terahertz frequency at the electron storage ring BESSY opens a new region in the electromagnetic spectrum to explore physical properties of materials. Just as conventional synchrotron radiation has been a boon to x-ray science, coherent synchrotron radiation may lead to many new innovations and discoveries in THz physics. With this new accelerator-based radiation source we have been able to extend traditional infrared measurements down into the experimentally poorly accessible sub-THz frequency range. The feasibility of using the coherent synchrotron radiation in scientific applications was demonstrated in a series of experiments: We investigated shallow single acceptor transitions in stressed and unstressed Ge:Ga by means of photoconductance measurements below 1 THz. We have directly measured the Josephson plasma resonance in optimally doped Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub 8} for the first time and finally we succeeded to confine the sub-THz radiation for spectral near-field imaging on biological samples such as leaves and human teeth.
Date: November 23, 2004
Creator: Basov, D. N.; Feikes, J.; Fried, D.; Holldack, K.; Hubers, H. W.; Kuske, P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Local indium segregation and band structure in high efficiencygreen light emitting InGaN/GaN diodes (open access)

Local indium segregation and band structure in high efficiencygreen light emitting InGaN/GaN diodes

GaN/InGaN light emitting diodes (LEDs) are commercialized for lighting applications because of the cost efficient way that they produce light of high brightness. Nevertheless, there is significant room for improving their external emission efficiency from typical values below 10 percent to more than 50 percent, which are obtainable by use of other materials systems that, however, do not cover the visible spectrum. In particular, green-light emitting diodes fall short in this respect, which is troublesome since the human eye is most sensitive in this spectral range. In this letter advanced electron microscopy is used to characterize indium segregation in InGaN quantum wells of high-brightness, green LEDs (with external quantum efficiency as high as 15 percent at 75 A/cm2). Our investigations reveal the presence of 1-3 nm wide indium rich clusters in these devices with indium concentrations as large as 0.30-0.40 that narrow the band gap locally to energies as small as 2.65 eV.
Date: November 23, 2004
Creator: Jinschek, Joerg R.; Erni, Rolf; Gardner, Nathan F.; Kim, AndrewY. & Kisielowski, Christian
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Effect of Local Grain-Boundary Chemistry on the Macroscopic Mechanical Properties of a High Purity Y2O3-Al2O3-Containing Silicon Nitride Ceramic: Role of Oxygen (open access)

On the Effect of Local Grain-Boundary Chemistry on the Macroscopic Mechanical Properties of a High Purity Y2O3-Al2O3-Containing Silicon Nitride Ceramic: Role of Oxygen

The effects of grain-boundary chemistry on the mechanical properties were investigated on high-purity silicon nitride ceramics, specifically involving the role of oxygen. Varying the grain-boundary oxygen content, by control of oxidizing heat treatments and sintering additives, was found to result in a transition in fracture mechanism from transgranular to intergranular fracture, with an associated increase in fracture toughness. This phenomenon is correlated to an oxygen-induced change in grain-boundary chemistry that appears to affect fracture by ''weakening'' the interface, facilitating debonding and crack advance along the boundaries, and consequently toughening by grain bridging. It is concluded that if the oxygen content in the thin grain-boundary films exceeds a lower limit, which is {approx}0.87 equiv% oxygen content, then the interfacial structure and bonding characteristics favor intergranular debonding during crack propagation; otherwise, transgranular fracture ensues.
Date: November 23, 2004
Creator: Ziegler, A; McNaney, J M; Hoffman, M J & Ritchie, R O
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical injection probing of single ZnO tetrapod lasers (open access)

Optical injection probing of single ZnO tetrapod lasers

The properties of zinc oxide (ZnO) nanotetrapod lasers are characterized by a novel ultrafast two-color pump/stimulated emission probe technique. Single legs of tetrapod species are isolated by a microscope objective, pumped by 267 nm pulses, and subjected to a time-delayed 400 nm optical injection pulse, which permits investigation of the ultrafast carrier dynamics in the nanosize materials. With the optical injection pulse included, a large increase in the stimulated emission at 400 nm occurs, which partially depletes the carriers at this wavelength and competes with the normal 390 nm lasing. At the 390 nm lasing wavelengths, the optical injection causes a decrease in the stimulated emission due to the energetic redistribution of the excited carrier depletion, which occurs considerably within the time scale of the subpicosecond duration of the injection pulse. The effects of the optical injection on the spectral gain are employed to probe the lasing dynamics, which shows that the full width at half maximum of the lasing time is 3 ps.
Date: November 23, 2004
Creator: Szarko, Jodi M.; Song, Jae Kyu; Blackledge, Charles Wesley; Swart, Ingmar; Leone, Stephen R.; Li, Shihong et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Secular Trends and Climate Drift in Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere General Circulation Models (open access)

Secular Trends and Climate Drift in Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere General Circulation Models

Coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation models (coupled GCMs) with interactive sea ice are the primary tool for investigating possible future global warming and numerous other issues in climate science. A long-standing problem with such models is that when different components of the physical climate system are linked together, the simulated climate can drift away from observations unless constrained by ad hoc adjustments to interface fluxes. However, eleven modern coupled GCMs--including three that do not employ flux adjustments--behave much better in this respect than the older generation of models. Surface temperature trends in control run simulations (with external climate forcing such as solar brightness and atmospheric carbon dioxide held constant) are small compared with observed trends, which include 20th century climate change due to both anthropogenic and natural factors. Sea ice changes in the models are dominated by interannual variations. Deep ocean temperature and salinity trends are small enough for model control runs to extend over 1000 simulated years or more, but trends in some regions, most notably the Arctic, are inconsistent among the models and may be problematic.
Date: November 23, 2004
Creator: Covey, C C; Gleckler, P J; Phillips, T J & Bader, D C
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence for the Spectroscopic Signature of Aging in (delta)-Pu(Ga) (open access)

Evidence for the Spectroscopic Signature of Aging in (delta)-Pu(Ga)

Plutonium, because of its radioactive nature, ages from the 'inside out' by means of self-irradiation damage and thus produces nanoscale internal defects. The self-irradiation induced defects come in the form of Frenkel-type defects (vacancies and self-interstitial atoms), helium in-growth, and defect clusters. At present there are neither experimental nor theoretical models describing the changes in the electronic structure caused by the aging in Pu. This fact appears to be associated primarily with the absence of reasonably convincing spectroscopic evidence of the changes. This paper demonstrates that Resonant Photoemission, a variant of Photoelectron Spectroscopy, has strong sensitivity to aging of Pu samples. The spectroscopic results are correlated with an extra-atomic screening model [1], and are shown to be the fingerprint of mesoscopic or nanoscale internal damage in the Pu physical structure. This means that a spectroscopic signature of internal damage due to aging in Pu has been established.
Date: November 23, 2005
Creator: Chung, B. W.; Schwartz, A. J.; Ebbinghaus, B. B.; Fluss, M. J.; Haslam, J. J.; Blobaum, K. M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Last Annotation of Fugu rubripes at JGI (open access)

Last Annotation of Fugu rubripes at JGI

None
Date: November 23, 2005
Creator: Salamov, A.; Putnam, N.; Terry, A.; Grigoriev, I.; Rokhsar, D.; Loh, E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Linear Response to Perturbation of Nonexponential Renewal Processes (open access)

Linear Response to Perturbation of Nonexponential Renewal Processes

This article discusses the linear response to perturbation of nonexponential renewal processes.
Date: November 23, 2005
Creator: Barbi, Francesco; Bologna, Mauro & Grigolini, Paolo
System: The UNT Digital Library
OpWise: Operons aid the identification of differentially expressedgenes in bacterial microarray experiments (open access)

OpWise: Operons aid the identification of differentially expressedgenes in bacterial microarray experiments

Differentially expressed genes are typically identified by analyzing the variation between replicate measurements. These procedures implicitly assume that there are no systematic errors in the data even though several sources of systematic error are known. Results-OpWise estimates the amount of systematic error in bacterial microarray data by assuming that genes in the same operon have matching expression patterns. OpWise then performs a Bayesian analysis of a linear model to estimate significance. In simulations, OpWise corrects for systematic error and is robust to deviations from its assumptions. In several bacterial data sets, significant amounts of systematic error are present, and replicate-based approaches overstate the confidence of the changers dramatically, while OpWise does not. Finally, OpWise can identify additional changers by assigning genes higher confidence if they are consistent with other genes in the same operon. Although microarray data can contain large amounts of systematic error, operons provide an external standard and allow for reasonable estimates of significance. OpWise is available at http://microbesonline.org/OpWise.
Date: November 23, 2005
Creator: Price, Morgan N.; Arkin, Adam P. & Alm, Eric J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stephen Moser lets me take my little turn on the catwalk (open access)

Stephen Moser lets me take my little turn on the catwalk

Article about Jean Scheidnes' experience walking the runway for Stephen Moser's clothing line, Made in Heaven.
Date: November 23, 2006
Creator: Scheidnes, Jean
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of cDNA libraries from developing seeds of guar (Cyamopsis tetragonoloba (L.) Taub) (open access)

Analysis of cDNA libraries from developing seeds of guar (Cyamopsis tetragonoloba (L.) Taub)

Article on the analysis of cDNA libraries from developing seeds of guar (Cyamopsis tetragonoloba (L.) Taub).
Date: November 23, 2007
Creator: Naoumkina, Marina A.; Torres-Jerez, Ivone; Allen, Stacy N.; He, Ji; Zhao, Patrick Xuechun; Dixon, R. A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Constraints on Inelastic Dark Matter from XENON10 (open access)

Constraints on Inelastic Dark Matter from XENON10

It has been suggested that dark matter particles which scatter inelastically from detector target nuclei could explain the apparent incompatibility of the DAMA modulation signal (interpreted as evidence for particle dark matter) with the null results from CDMS-II and XENON10. Among the predictions of inelastically interacting dark matter are a suppression of low-energy events, and a population of nuclear recoil events at higher nuclear recoil equivalent energies. This is in stark contrast to the well-known expectation of a falling exponential spectrum for the case of elastic interactions. We present a new analysis of XENON10 dark matter search data extending to E{sub nr} = 75 keV nuclear recoil equivalent energy. Our results exclude a significant region of previously allowed parameter space in the model of inelastically interacting dark matter. In particular, it is found that dark matter particle masses m{sub x} {approx}> 150 GeV are disfavored.
Date: November 23, 2009
Creator: Angle, J; Aprile, E; Arneodo, F; Baudis, L; Bernstein, A; Bolozdynya, A et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
CONTROL TESTING OF THE UK NATIONAL NUCLEAR LABORATORY'S RADBALL TECHNOLOGY AT SAVANNAH RIVER NATIONAL LABORATORY (open access)

CONTROL TESTING OF THE UK NATIONAL NUCLEAR LABORATORY'S RADBALL TECHNOLOGY AT SAVANNAH RIVER NATIONAL LABORATORY

The UK National Nuclear Laboratory (NNL) has developed a remote, non-electrical, radiation-mapping device known as RadBall (patent pending), which offers a means to locate and quantify radiation hazards and sources within contaminated areas of the nuclear industry. To date, the RadBall has been deployed in a number of technology trials in nuclear waste reprocessing plants at Sellafield in the UK. The trials have demonstrated the successful ability of the RadBall technology to be deployed and retrieved from active areas. The positive results from these initial deployment trials and the anticipated future potential of RadBall have led to the NNL partnering with the Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) to further underpin and strengthen the technical performance of the technology. RadBall consists of a colander-like outer shell that houses a radiation-sensitive polymer sphere. It has no power requirements and can be positioned in tight or hard-to reach places. The outer shell works to collimate radiation sources and those areas of the polymer sphere that are exposed react, becoming increasingly less transparent, in proportion to the absorbed dose. The polymer sphere is imaged in an optical-CT scanner which produces a high resolution 3D map of optical attenuation coefficients. Subsequent analysis of the optical …
Date: November 23, 2009
Creator: Farfan, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library