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Experimental X-Ray Characterization of Gekko XII Laser Propagation Through Very Low Density Aerogels (2-5 mg/cc) Creating Multi-keV Photons from a Titanium Solid Foil (open access)

Experimental X-Ray Characterization of Gekko XII Laser Propagation Through Very Low Density Aerogels (2-5 mg/cc) Creating Multi-keV Photons from a Titanium Solid Foil

Describes measurements of laser propagations through low density aerogels.
Date: January 31, 2011
Creator: Girard, F; Primout, M; Villette, B; Brebion, D; Nishimura, H & Fournier, K B
System: The UNT Digital Library
Image processing and control of a programmable spatial light modulator (open access)

Image processing and control of a programmable spatial light modulator

None
Date: January 31, 2011
Creator: Awwal, A.; Leach, R.; Brunton, G.; Tse, E.; Matone, J. & Heebner, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Origin of the anomalous long lifetime of 14C (open access)

Origin of the anomalous long lifetime of 14C

None
Date: January 31, 2011
Creator: Maris, P.; Vary, J. P.; Navratil, P.; Ormand, W. E. & Nam, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ferrimagnetism and disorder of epitaxial Mn2-xCoxVAl Heusler compound thin films (open access)

Ferrimagnetism and disorder of epitaxial Mn2-xCoxVAl Heusler compound thin films

The quaternary full Heusler compound Mn{sub 2-x}Co{sub x}VAl with x = 1 is predicted to be a half-metallic antiferromagnet. Thin films of the quaternary compounds with x = 0-2 were prepared by dc and RF magnetron co-sputtering on heated MgO (0 0 1) substrates. The magnetic structure was examined by x-ray magnetic circular dichroism and the chemical disorder was characterized by x-ray diffraction. Ferrimagnetic coupling of V to Mn was observed for Mn{sub 2}VAl (x = 0). For x = 0.5, we also found ferrimagnetic order with V and Co antiparallel to Mn. The observed reduced magnetic moments are interpreted with the help of band structure calculations in the coherent potential approximation. Mn{sub 2}VAl is very sensitive to disorder involving Mn, because nearest-neighbour Mn atoms couple antiferromagnetically. Co{sub 2}VAl has B2 order and has reduced magnetization. In the cases with x {ge} 0.9 conventional ferromagnetism was observed, closely related to the atomic disorder in these compounds.
Date: January 29, 2011
Creator: Meinert, Markus; Schmalhorst, Jan-Michael; Reiss, Gunter & Arenholz, Elke
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploiting Data Similarity to Reduce Memory Footprints (open access)

Exploiting Data Similarity to Reduce Memory Footprints

Memory size has long limited large-scale applications on high-performance computing (HPC) systems. Since compute nodes frequently do not have swap space, physical memory often limits problem sizes. Increasing core counts per chip and power density constraints, which limit the number of DIMMs per node, have exacerbated this problem. Further, DRAM constitutes a significant portion of overall HPC system cost. Therefore, instead of adding more DRAM to the nodes, mechanisms to manage memory usage more efficiently - preferably transparently - could increase effective DRAM capacity and thus the benefit of multicore nodes for HPC systems. MPI application processes often exhibit significant data similarity. These data regions occupy multiple physical locations across the individual rank processes within a multicore node and thus offer a potential savings in memory capacity. These regions, primarily residing in heap, are dynamic, which makes them difficult to manage statically. Our novel memory allocation library, SBLLmalloc, automatically identifies identical memory blocks and merges them into a single copy. SBLLmalloc does not require application or OS changes since we implement it as a user-level library. Overall, we demonstrate that SBLLmalloc reduces the memory footprint of a range of MPI applications by 32.03% on average and up to 60.87%. Further, …
Date: January 28, 2011
Creator: Biswas, S; de Supinski, B R; Schulz, M; Franklin, D; Sherwood, T & Chong, F T
System: The UNT Digital Library
A high-order finite-volume method for hyperbolic conservation laws on locally-refined grids (open access)

A high-order finite-volume method for hyperbolic conservation laws on locally-refined grids

We present a fourth-order accurate finite-volume method for solving time-dependent hyperbolic systems of conservation laws on Cartesian grids with multiple levels of refinement. The underlying method is a generalization of that in [5] to nonlinear systems, and is based on using fourth-order accurate quadratures for computing fluxes on faces, combined with fourth-order accurate Runge?Kutta discretization in time. To interpolate boundary conditions at refinement boundaries, we interpolate in time in a manner consistent with the individual stages of the Runge-Kutta method, and interpolate in space by solving a least-squares problem over a neighborhood of each target cell for the coefficients of a cubic polynomial. The method also uses a variation on the extremum-preserving limiter in [8], as well as slope flattening and a fourth-order accurate artificial viscosity for strong shocks. We show that the resulting method is fourth-order accurate for smooth solutions, and is robust in the presence of complex combinations of shocks and smooth flows.
Date: January 28, 2011
Creator: McCorquodale, Peter & Colella, Phillip
System: The UNT Digital Library
Identifying the Sources of Nitrate to a Deep Municipal Water Supply Well Using Stable Isotopes of Nitrate, Groundwater Age Dating, and Depth-Specific Sampling (open access)

Identifying the Sources of Nitrate to a Deep Municipal Water Supply Well Using Stable Isotopes of Nitrate, Groundwater Age Dating, and Depth-Specific Sampling

None
Date: January 28, 2011
Creator: Singleton, M J; Gailey, R M; Moran, J E; Sutton, M C; Heller, N; Esser, B K et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
LR: Compact connectivity representation for triangle meshes (open access)

LR: Compact connectivity representation for triangle meshes

We propose LR (Laced Ring) - a simple data structure for representing the connectivity of manifold triangle meshes. LR provides the option to store on average either 1.08 references per triangle or 26.2 bits per triangle. Its construction, from an input mesh that supports constant-time adjacency queries, has linear space and time complexity, and involves ordering most vertices along a nearly-Hamiltonian cycle. LR is best suited for applications that process meshes with fixed connectivity, as any changes to the connectivity require the data structure to be rebuilt. We provide an implementation of the set of standard random-access, constant-time operators for traversing a mesh, and show that LR often saves both space and traversal time over competing representations.
Date: January 28, 2011
Creator: Gurung, T; Luffel, M; Lindstrom, P & Rossignac, J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Momentum transfer resolved memory in a magnetic system with perpendicular anisotropy (open access)

Momentum transfer resolved memory in a magnetic system with perpendicular anisotropy

We have used resonant, coherent soft x-ray scattering to measure wave vector re- solved magnetic domain memory in Co/Pd multilayers. The technique uses angular cross correlation functions and can be applied to any system with circular annuli of constant values of scattering wave vector q. In our Co/Pd film, the memory exhibits a maximum at q = 0.0384 nm-1 near initial reversal that decreases in magnitude as the magnetization is further reversed. The peak is attributed to bubble domains that nucleate reproducibly near initial reversal and which grow into a labyrinth domain structure that is not reproduced from one magnetization cycle to the next.
Date: January 28, 2011
Creator: Seu, Keoki; Roy, Sujoy; Su, Run; Parks, Daniel; Shipton, Erik; Fullerton, Eric et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Towards laboratory produced relativistic electron-positron pair plasmas (open access)

Towards laboratory produced relativistic electron-positron pair plasmas

None
Date: January 28, 2011
Creator: Chen, H
System: The UNT Digital Library
FRMAC Interactions During a Radiological or Nuclear Event (open access)

FRMAC Interactions During a Radiological or Nuclear Event

During a radiological or nuclear event of national significance the Federal Radiological Emergency Monitoring and Assessment Center (FRMAC) assists federal, state, tribal, and local authorities by providing timely, high-quality predictions, measurements, analyses and assessments to promote efficient and effective emergency response for protection of the public and the environment from the consequences of such an event.
Date: January 27, 2011
Creator: Wong, C T
System: The UNT Digital Library
The orientation and morphology of Pt precipitates within sapphire (open access)

The orientation and morphology of Pt precipitates within sapphire

None
Date: January 27, 2011
Creator: Santala, M K; Radmilovic, V R; Giulian, R; Ridgway, M C; Gronsky, R & Glaeser, A M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reconciling sampling and direct instrumentation for unintrusive call-path profiling of MPI programs (open access)

Reconciling sampling and direct instrumentation for unintrusive call-path profiling of MPI programs

None
Date: January 27, 2011
Creator: Szebenyi, Z; Gamblin, T; Schulz, M; de Supinski, B; Wolf, F & Wylie, B
System: The UNT Digital Library
Suppression of probe background signals via B1 field inhomogeneity (open access)

Suppression of probe background signals via B1 field inhomogeneity

A new approach combining a long pulse with the DEPTH sequence (Cory and Ritchey, Journal of Magnetic Resonance, 1988) greatly improves the efficiency for suppressing probe background signals arising from spinning modules. By applying a long initial excitation pulse in the DEPTH sequence, instead of a {pi}/2 pulse, the inhomogeneous B{sub 1} fields outside the coil can dephase the background coherence in the nutation frame. The initial long pulse and the following two consecutive EXORCYCLE {pi} pulses function complementarily and prove most effective in removing background signals from both strong and weak B{sub 1} fields. Experimentally, the length of the long pulse can be optimized around odd multiples of the {pi}/2 pulse, depending on the individual probe design, to preserve signals inside the coil while minimizing those from probe hardware. This method extends the applicability of the DEPTH sequence to probes with small differences in B{sub 1} field strength between the inside and outside of the coil, and can readily combine with well-developed double resonance experiments for quantitative measurement. In general, spin systems with weak internal interactions are required to attain efficient and uniform excitation for powder samples, and the principles to determine the applicability are discussed qualitatively in terms …
Date: January 27, 2011
Creator: Feng, Jian & Reimer, Jeffrey
System: The UNT Digital Library
Egg Yolk Environment Differentially Influences Physiological and Morphological Development of Broiler and Layer Chicken Embryos (open access)

Egg Yolk Environment Differentially Influences Physiological and Morphological Development of Broiler and Layer Chicken Embryos

This article investigates the effect of breed-specific yolk composition on embryonic broiler and layer chicken phenotypes, using an ex ovo, xenobiotic technique that allows the transfer of broiler and layer chicken embryos from their natural yolks to novel yolk environments.
Date: January 26, 2011
Creator: Ho, Dao H.; Reed, Wendy L. & Burggren, Warren W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser Safety: A Laser Alignment Practical Training Course (open access)

Laser Safety: A Laser Alignment Practical Training Course

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory has developed a Laser Alignment Practical Training Course as one of its core laser safety classes. The course is taught to small groups of up to three students and takes 1-3 hours to complete. This practical course is not a substitute for site-specific On-the-Job Training; it does, however, provide a good introduction in core laser safety practices that can be broadly applied. Alignment and diagnostic tasks are performed with low power lasers. Students learn safe alignment and diagnostic techniques and how to avoid common mistakes that might lead to an accident. The class is taught by laser supervisors, enabling them to assess the skill level of new laser personnel and determine the subsequent level of supervision needed. The course has six alignment tasks. For each task, discussion points are given for the instructor to review with the students. The optics setup includes different wavelength lasers, a beam expander, mirrors, irises, a periscope, a beam-splitting polarizer and a diffraction grating. Diagnostic tools include viewing cards, an IR viewer and a ccd camera. Laser eyewear is available to block some laser wavelengths in the setup.
Date: January 26, 2011
Creator: Woods, Michael & Edstrom, Steve
System: The UNT Digital Library
LESSONS LEARNED FROM A RECENT LASER ACCIDENT (open access)

LESSONS LEARNED FROM A RECENT LASER ACCIDENT

A graduate student received a laser eye injury from a femtosecond Ti:sapphire laser beam while adjusting a polarizing beam splitter optic. The direct causes for the accident included failure to follow safe alignment practices and failure to wear the required laser eyewear protection. Underlying root causes included inadequate on-the-job training and supervision, inadequate adherence to requirements, and inadequate appreciation for dimly visible beams outside the range of 400-700nm. This paper describes how the accident occurred, discusses causes and lessons learned, and describes corrective actions being taken.
Date: January 26, 2011
Creator: Woods, Michael
System: The UNT Digital Library
Validity of the thin mask approximation in extreme ultraviolet mask roughness simulations (open access)

Validity of the thin mask approximation in extreme ultraviolet mask roughness simulations

In the case of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography, modeling has shown that reflector phase roughness on the lithographic mask is a significant concern due to the image plan speckle it causes and the resulting line-edge roughness on imaged features. Modeling results have recently been used to determine the requirements for future production worthy masks yielding the extremely stringent specification of 50 pm rms roughness. Owing to the scale of the problem in terms of memory requirements, past modeling results have all been based on the thin mask approximation. EUV masks, however, are inherently three dimensional in nature and thus the question arises as to the validity of the thin mask approximation. Here we directly compare image plane speckle calculation results using the fast two dimensional thin mask model to rigorous finite-difference time-domain results and find the two methods to be comparable.
Date: January 26, 2011
Creator: Naulleau, Patrick & George, Simi
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electronic Structure of CeFeAsO1-xFx (x=0, 0.11/x=0.12) compounds (open access)

Electronic Structure of CeFeAsO1-xFx (x=0, 0.11/x=0.12) compounds

We report an extensive study on the intrinsic bulk electronic structure of the high-temperature superconductor CeFeAsO{sub 0.89}F{sub 0.11} and its parent compound CeFeAsO by soft and hard x-ray photoemission, x-ray absorption and soft-x-ray emission spectroscopies. The complementary surface/bulk probing depth, and the elemental and chemical sensitivity of these techniques allows resolving the intrinsic electronic structure of each element and correlating it with the local structure, which has been probed by extended-x-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy. The measurements indicate a predominant 4f{sup 1} (i.e. Ce{sup 3+}) initial state configuration for Cerium and an effective valence-band-to-4f charge-transfer screening of the core hole. The spectra also reveal the presence of a small Ce f{sup 0} initial state configuration, which we assign to the occurrence of an intermediate valence state. The data reveal a reasonably good agreement with the partial density of states as obtained in standard density functional calculations over a large energy range. Implications for the electronic structure of these materials are discussed.
Date: January 25, 2011
Creator: Bondino, F.; Magnano, E.; Booth, C. H.; Offi, F.; Panaccione, G.; Malvestuto, M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finite size effect on spread of resonance frequencies in arrays of coupled vortices (open access)

Finite size effect on spread of resonance frequencies in arrays of coupled vortices

Dynamical properties of magnetic vortices in arrays of magnetostatically coupled ferromagnetic disks are studied by means of a broadband ferromagnetic-resonance (FMR) setup. Magnetic force microscopy and magnetic transmission soft X-ray microscopy are used to image the core polarizations and the chiralities which are both found to be randomly distributed. The resonance frequency of vortex-core motion strongly depends on the magnetostatic coupling between the disks. The parameter describing the relative broadening of the absorption peak observed in the FMR transmission spectra for a given normalized center-to-center distance between the elements is shown to depend on the size of the array.
Date: January 25, 2011
Creator: Vogel, Andreas; Drews, André; Im, Mi-Young; Fischer, Peter & Meier, Guido
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intermediate-Valence Tautomerism in Decamethylytterbocene Complexes of Methyl-Substituted Bipyridines (open access)

Intermediate-Valence Tautomerism in Decamethylytterbocene Complexes of Methyl-Substituted Bipyridines

Multiconfigurational, intermediate valent ground states are established in several methyl-substituted bipyridine complexes of bispentamethylcyclopentadienylytterbium, Cp*{sub 2} Yb(Me{sub x}-bipy). In contrast to Cp*{sub 2} Yb(bipy) and other substituted-bipy complexes, the nature of both the ground state and the first excited state are altered by changing the position of the methyl or dimethyl substitutions on the bipyridine rings. In particular, certain substitutions result in multiconfigurational, intermediate valent open-shell singlet states in both the ground state and the first excited state. These conclusions are reached after consideration of single-crystal x-ray diffraction (XRD), the temperature dependence of x-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES), extended x-ray absorption fine-structure (EXAFS), and magnetic susceptibility data, and are supported by CASSCF-MP2 calculations. These results place the various Cp*{sub 2}Yb(bipy) complexes in a new tautomeric class, that is, intermediate-valence tautomers.
Date: January 25, 2011
Creator: Booth, Corwin H.; Kazhdan, Daniel; Werkema, Evan L.; Walter, Marc D.; Lukens, Wayne W.; Bauer, Eric D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Observations of the Temperature Dependent Response of Ozone to NOx Reductions in an Urban Plume (open access)

Observations of the Temperature Dependent Response of Ozone to NOx Reductions in an Urban Plume

Observations of NO{sub x} in the Sacramento, CA region show that mixing ratios decreased by 30% between 2001 and 2008. Here we use an observation-based method to quantify net ozone production rates in the outflow from the Sacramento metropolitan region and examine the O{sub 3} decrease resulting from reductions in NO{sub x} emissions. This observational method does not rely on assumptions about detailed chemistry of ozone production, rather it is an independent means to verify and test these assumptions. We use an instantaneous steady-state model as well as a detailed 1-D plume model to aid in interpretation of the ozone production inferred from observations. In agreement with the models, the observations show that early in the plume, the NO{sub x} dependence for O{sub x} (O{sub x} = O{sub 3}+NO{sub 2}) production is strongly coupled with temperature, suggesting that temperature dependent biogenic VOC emissions can drive O{sub x} production between NO{sub x}-limited and NO{sub x}-suppressed regimes. As a result, NO{sub x} reductions were found to be most effective at higher temperatures over the 7 year period. We show that violations of the California 1-hour O{sub 3} standard (90 ppb) in the region have been decreasing linearly with decreases in NO{sub x} …
Date: January 25, 2011
Creator: LaFranchi, B W; Goldstein, A H & Cohen, R C
System: The UNT Digital Library
PILOT SCALE TESTING OF MONOSODIUM TITANATE MIXING FOR THE SRS SMALL COLUMN ION EXCHANGE PROCESS - 11224 (open access)

PILOT SCALE TESTING OF MONOSODIUM TITANATE MIXING FOR THE SRS SMALL COLUMN ION EXCHANGE PROCESS - 11224

The Small Column Ion Exchange (SCIX) process is being developed to remove cesium, strontium, and select actinides from Savannah River Site (SRS) Liquid Waste using an existing waste tank (i.e., Tank 41H) to house the process. Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) is conducting pilot-scale mixing tests to determine the pump requirements for suspending monosodium titanate (MST), crystalline silicotitanate (CST), and simulated sludge. The purpose of this pilot scale testing is to determine the requirements for the pumps to suspend the MST particles so that they can contact the strontium and actinides in the liquid and be removed from the tank. The pilot-scale tank is a 1/10.85 linear scaled model of SRS Tank 41H. The tank diameter, tank liquid level, pump nozzle diameter, pump elevation, and cooling coil diameter are all 1/10.85 of their dimensions in Tank 41H. The pump locations correspond to the proposed locations in Tank 41H by the SCIX program (Risers B5 and B2 for two pump configurations and Risers B5, B3, and B1 for three pump configurations). The conclusions from this work follow: (i) Neither two standard slurry pumps nor two quad volute slurry pumps will provide sufficient power to initially suspend MST in an SRS waste …
Date: January 25, 2011
Creator: Poirier, M.; Restivo, M.; Williams, M.; Herman, D. & Steeper, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nanocrystal bilayer for tandem catalysis (open access)

Nanocrystal bilayer for tandem catalysis

Supported catalysts are widely used in industry and can be optimized by tuning the composition and interface of the metal nanoparticles and oxide supports. Rational design of metal-metal oxide interfaces in nanostructured catalysts is critical to achieve better reaction activities and selectivities. We introduce here a new class of nanocrystal tandem catalysts that have multiple metal-metal oxide interfaces for the catalysis of sequential reactions. We utilized a nanocrystal bilayer structure formed by assembling platinum and cerium oxide nanocube monolayers of less than 10 nm on a silica substrate. The two distinct metal-metal oxide interfaces, CeO2-Pt and Pt-SiO2, can be used to catalyse two distinct sequential reactions. The CeO2-Pt interface catalysed methanol decomposition to produce CO and H2, which were subsequently used for ethylene hydroformylation catalysed by the nearby Pt-SiO2 interface. Consequently, propanal was produced selectively from methanol and ethylene on the nanocrystal bilayer tandem catalyst. This new concept of nanocrystal tandem catalysis represents a powerful approach towards designing high-performance, multifunctional nanostructured catalysts
Date: January 24, 2011
Creator: Yamada, Yusuke; Tsung, Chia Kuang; Huang, Wenyu; Huo, Ziyang; E.Habas, Susan E.; Soejima, Tetsuro et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library