Active Climate Stabilization: Practical Physics-Based Approaches to Prevention of Climate Change (open access)

Active Climate Stabilization: Practical Physics-Based Approaches to Prevention of Climate Change

We offer a case for active technical management of the radiative forcing of the temperatures of the Earth's fluid envelopes, rather than administrative management of atmospheric greenhouse gas inputs, in order to stabilize both the global- and time-averaged climate and its mesoscale features. We suggest that active management of radiative forcing entails negligible--indeed, likely strongly negative--economic costs and environmental impacts, and thus best complies with the pertinent mandate of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. We propose that such approaches be swiftly evaluated in sub-scale in the course of an intensive international program.
Date: April 18, 2002
Creator: Teller, E.; Hyde, T. & Wood, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Can Handheld Plastic Detectors Do Both Gamma and Neutron Isotopic Identification with Directional Source Location? (open access)

Can Handheld Plastic Detectors Do Both Gamma and Neutron Isotopic Identification with Directional Source Location?

This paper demonstrates, through MCNPX simulations, that a compact hexagonal array of detectors can be utilized to do both gamma isotopic identification (ID) along with neutron identification while simultaneously finding the direction of the source relative to the detector array. The detector array itself is composed of seven borated polyvinyl toluene (PVT) hexagonal light pipes approximately 4 inches long and with a 1.25 inch face-to-face thickness assembled in a tight configuration. The gamma ID capability is realized through judicious windowing algorithms as is the neutron spectral unfolding. By having multiple detectors in different relative positions, directional determination of the source can be realized. By further adding multiplicity counters to the neutron counts, fission events can be measured.
Date: April 18, 2008
Creator: Hayes, Robert
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Fabrication Approaches for Selectively Oxidized VCSEL Arrays (open access)

Comparison of Fabrication Approaches for Selectively Oxidized VCSEL Arrays

The impressive performance improvements of laterally oxidized VCSELs come at the expense of increased fabrication complexity for 2-dimensional arrays. Since the epitaxial layers to be wet-thermally oxidized must be exposed, non-planarity can be an issue. This is particularly important in that electrical contact to both the anode and cathode of the diode must be brought out to a package. They have investigated four fabrication sequences suitable for the fabrication of 2-dimensional VCSEL arrays. These techniques include: mesa etched polymer planarized, mesa etched bridge contacted, mesa etched oxide isolated (where the electrical trace is isolated from the substrate during the oxidation) and oxide/implant isolation (oxidation through small via holes) all of which result in VCSELs with outstanding performance. The suitability of these processes for manufacturing are assessed relative to oxidation uniformity, device capacitance, and structural ruggedness for packaging.
Date: April 18, 2000
Creator: Geib, Kent M.; Choquette, Kent D.; Allerman, Andrew A.; Briggs, Ronald D. & Hindi, Jana Jo
System: The UNT Digital Library
COMPARISON OF NOVORONEZH UNIT 5 NPP AND SOUTH UKRAINE UNIT 1 NPP LEVEL I PRA RESULTS. (open access)

COMPARISON OF NOVORONEZH UNIT 5 NPP AND SOUTH UKRAINE UNIT 1 NPP LEVEL I PRA RESULTS.

This paper describes a study undertaken to explain the risk profile differences in the results of PRAs of two similar WER-1000 nuclear power plants. The risk profile differences are particularly significant in the area of small steam/feedwater line breaks, small-small LOCAs, support system initiators and containment bypass initiators. A top level (limited depth) approach was used in which we studied design differences, major assumptions, data differences, and also compared the two PRA analyses on an element-by-element basis in order to discern the major causative factors for the risk profile differences. We conclude that the major risk profile differences are due to differences in assumptions and engineering judgment (possibly combined with some design and data differences) involved in treatment of uncertain physical phenomena (primarily sump plugging in LOCAs and turbine building steaming effects in secondary system breaks). Additional major differences are attributable to support system characteristics.
Date: April 18, 2002
Creator: MUSICKI,Z. & GINSBERG,T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF MATERIALS PROPERTIES FOR FLAW STABILITY ANALYSIS IN EXTREME ENVIRONMENT SERVICE (open access)

DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF MATERIALS PROPERTIES FOR FLAW STABILITY ANALYSIS IN EXTREME ENVIRONMENT SERVICE

Discovery of aging phenomena in the materials of a structure may arise after its design and construction that impact its structural integrity. This condition can be addressed through a demonstration of integrity with the material-specific degraded conditions. Two case studies of development of fracture and crack growth property data, and their application in development of in-service inspection programs for nuclear structures in the defense complex are presented. The first case study covers the development of fracture toughness properties in the form of J-R curves for rolled plate Type 304 stainless steel with Type 308 stainless steel filler in the application to demonstrate the integrity of the reactor tanks of the heavy water production reactors at the Savannah River Site. The fracture properties for the base, weld, and heat-affected zone of the weldments irradiated at low temperatures (110-150 C) up to 6.4 dpa{sub NRT} and 275 appm helium were developed. An expert group provided consensus for application of the irradiated properties for material input to acceptance criteria for ultrasonic examination of the reactor tanks. Dr. Spencer H. Bush played a lead advisory role in this work. The second case study covers the development of fracture toughness for A285 carbon steel in …
Date: April 18, 2007
Creator: Sindelar, R; Ps Lam, P; Andrew Duncan, A; Bruce Wiersma, B; Karthik Subramanian, K & James Elder, J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a high-power and high-energy thermal battery (open access)

Development of a high-power and high-energy thermal battery

The Li(Si)/FeS{sub 2} and Li(Si)/CoS{sub 2} couples were evaluated with a low-melting LiBr-KBr-LiF eutectic and all-Li LiCl-LiBr-LiF electrolyte for a battery application that required both high energy and high power for short duration. Screening studies were carried out with 1.25 inch-dia. triple cells and with 10-cell batteries. The Li(Si)/LiCl-LiBr-LiF/CoS{sub 2} couple performed the best under the power load and the Li(Si)/LiCl-LiBr-LiF/FeS{sub 2} was better under the energy load. The former system was selected as the best overall performer for the wide range of temperatures for both loads, because of the higher thermal stability of CoS{sub 2}.
Date: April 18, 2000
Creator: Guidotti, Ronald A.; Scharrer, Gregory L. & Reinhardt, Fredrick W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of hydrostatic pressure on degradation of CdTe/CdMgTeheterostructures grown by molecular beam epitaxy on GaAs substrates (open access)

Effect of hydrostatic pressure on degradation of CdTe/CdMgTeheterostructures grown by molecular beam epitaxy on GaAs substrates

We have shown that external hydrostatic pressure leads to the creation of structural defects, mainly in the vicinity of the II-VI/GaAs interface in the CdTe/Cd{sub 1-x}Mg{sub x}Te heterostructures grown by the molecular beam epitaxy method on GaAs substrates. These defects propagating across the epilayer cause permanent damage to the samples from the point of view of their electrical properties. In contrast, photoluminescence spectra are only weakly influenced by pressure. Our results shed light on the degradation process observed even without pressure in II-VI-based heterostructures.
Date: April 18, 2001
Creator: Wasik, D.; Baj, M.; Siwiec-Matuszyk, J.; Gronkowski, J.; Jasinski, J. & Karczewski, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effective Index Model Predicts Modal Frequencies of Vertical-Cavity Lasers (open access)

Effective Index Model Predicts Modal Frequencies of Vertical-Cavity Lasers

Previously, an effective index optical model was introduced for the analysis of lateral waveguiding effects in vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers. The authors show that the resultant transverse equation is almost identical to the one typically obtained in the analysis of dielectric waveguide problems, such as a step-index optical fiber. The solution to the transverse equation yields the lateral dependence of the optical field and, as is recognized in this paper, the discrete frequencies of the microcavity modes. As an example, they apply this technique to the analysis of vertical-cavity lasers that contain thin-oxide apertures. The model intuitively explains the experimental data and makes quantitative predictions in good agreement with a highly accurate numerical model.
Date: April 18, 2000
Creator: Serkland, Darwin K.; Hadley, G. Ronald; Choquette, Kent D.; Geib, Kent M. & Allerman, Andrew A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of annealing on self-assembled InAs quantum dots and wetting layer in GaAs matrix (open access)

Effects of annealing on self-assembled InAs quantum dots and wetting layer in GaAs matrix

Post-growth thermal annealing effects on InAs/GaAs quantum dots (QDs) near Stransky-Krastanow transformation were investigated. Self-assembled QDs of average size of about 10 nm were grown by metal organic vapour phase epitaxy. The photoluminescence (PL) due to emission from QDs as well as two peaks due to emission from the strained InAs wetting layer (WL) were observed in as-grown samples. Bimodal structure of the WL PL was attributed to WL regions of different thickness. There was almost no difference in the PL spectrum after 30 s annealing at 600 C. However, annealing at temperatures in the range between 700 C and 950 C resulted in quenching of the PL from QDs and the thinner WL. The PL peak from the new, thicker WL blue-shifted and narrowed with increasing annealing temperature. This behavior was in agreement with TEM observations. Complete dissolution of the QDs and substantial broadening of the WL was observed. All our results indicate that thermally induced modifications of the WL rather than QDs can be responsible for the blue-shift and narrowing of the PL peaks in structures containing InAs QDs.
Date: April 18, 2001
Creator: Jasinski, J.; Babinski, A.; Bozek, R.; Szepielow, A. & Baranowski, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of annealing on self-assembled InAs quantum dots and wetting layer in GaAs matrix (open access)

Effects of annealing on self-assembled InAs quantum dots and wetting layer in GaAs matrix

Post-growth thermal annealing effects on InAs/GaAs quantum dots (QDs) near Stransky-Krastanow transformation were investigated. Self-assembled QDs of average size of about 10 nm were grown by metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy. The photoluminescence (PL) due to emission from QDs as well as two peaks due to emission from the strained InAs wetting layer (WL) were observed in as-grown samples. Bimodal structure of the WL PL was attributed to WL regions of different thickness. There was almost no difference in the PL spectrum after 30 s annealing at 600 C. However, annealing at temperatures in the range between 700 C and 950 C resulted in quenching of the PL from QDs and the thinner WL. The PL peak from the new, thicker WL blue-shifted and narrowed with increasing annealing temperature. This behavior was in agreement with TEM observations. Complete dissolution of the QDs and substantial broadening of the WL was observed. All our results indicate that thermally induced modifications of the WL rather than QDs can be responsible for the blue-shift and narrowing of the PL peaks in structures containing InAs QDs.
Date: April 18, 2001
Creator: Jasinski, J.; Babinski, A.; Bozek, R.; Szepielow, A. & Baranowski, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evolution of deep centers in GaN grown by hydride vapor phaseepitaxy (open access)

Evolution of deep centers in GaN grown by hydride vapor phaseepitaxy

Deep centers and dislocation densities in undoped n GaN, grown by hydride vapor phase epitaxy (HVPE), were characterized as a function of the layer thickness by deep level transient spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy, respectively. As the layer thickness decreases, the variety and concentration of deep centers increase, in conjunction with the increase of dislocation density. Based on comparison with electron irradiation induced centers, some dominant centers in HVPE GaN are identified as possible point defects.
Date: April 18, 2001
Creator: Fang, Z.-Q.; Look, D.C.; Jasinski, J.; Benamara, M.; Liliental-Weber, Z. & Molnar, R.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The evolution of internal dosimetry bioassay methods at the Savannah River Site (open access)

The evolution of internal dosimetry bioassay methods at the Savannah River Site

This paper will concentrate on the progression of the bioassay and dose evaluation programs at Savannah River Site.
Date: April 18, 2000
Creator: Phillips, A.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exclusive Charmless Semileptonic Decays B ---> X/U L Nu From BaBar (open access)

Exclusive Charmless Semileptonic Decays B ---> X/U L Nu From BaBar

The latest results of exclusive charmless semileptonic decays B {yields} {pi}{ell}v and B {yields} {rho}{ell}v from the BABAR Collaboration are presented. They are based on samples of B{bar B} events recorded on the {Upsilon}(4S) resonance. Several different experimental techniques are compared. Measurements of partial branching fractions in intervals of q{sup 2}, the four-momentum transfer squared, allow a study of the shape of the B {yields} {pi}{ell}v form factor and a comparison with theoretical calculations. The Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix element |V{sub ub}| is determined using the measured branching fractions combined with recent form-factor predictions.
Date: April 18, 2006
Creator: Dingfelder, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental and Modeling Studies of Water-Silica-PDMS Interactions in M97-Based Stress Cushions (open access)

Experimental and Modeling Studies of Water-Silica-PDMS Interactions in M97-Based Stress Cushions

In filled PDMS based composites, such as M97XX stress cushions, significant mechanical reinforcement of the polymer component is obtained from hydrogen bonding between the silica filler surface hydroxyls and the siloxane polymer backbone. It is expected that these interactions are influenced by the amount and structure of interfacial water. We have chosen to investigate in detail the effect of chemisorbed and physisorbed water on the interfacial structure and dynamics in silica-filled PDMS-based composites. Toward this end, we have combined classical molecular dynamics simulations and experimental studies employing nanoindentation, temperature programmed desorption (TPD), Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (DMA), and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) analyses. Our TPD results suggest that moisture desorption and adsorption in M9787 can be approximated by the interaction of its silica constituents (Cab-0-Sil-M-7D and Hi-Sil-233) with moisture. Our experimental data also reveal that, in general, as heat-treated silica particles are exposed to moisture, chemisorbed states, then physisorbed states are gradually filled up in that order. Molecular modeling results suggest that the polymer-silica contact distance and the mobility of interfacial polymer chains significantly decreased as the hydration level at the interface was reduced. The reduced mobility of the PDMS chains in the interfacial domain reduced the bulk motional properties of …
Date: April 18, 2002
Creator: Maxwell, R; Dinh, L; Gee, R & Balazs, B
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploring the Fast Ignition Approach to Fusion Energy (open access)

Exploring the Fast Ignition Approach to Fusion Energy

Probably the most famous equation in physics is Einstein's E=mc{sup 2}, which was contained within his fifth and final paper that was published in 1905. It is this relationship between energy ( E) and mass ( m) that the fusion process exploits to generate energy. When two isotopes of hydrogen (normally Deuterium and Tritium (DT)) fuse they form helium and a neutron. In this process some of the mass of the hydrogen is converted into energy. In the fast ignition approach to fusion a large driver (such as the NIF laser) is used to compress the DT fuel to extremely high densities and then is ''sparked'' by a high intensity, short-pulse laser. The short-pulse laser energy is converted to an electron beam, which then deposits its energy in the DT fuel. The energy of the electrons in this beam is so large that the electron's mass is increased according to Einstein theory of relativity. Understanding the transport of this relativistic electron beam is critical to the success of fast ignition and is the subject of this poster.
Date: April 18, 2005
Creator: Town, R. J.; Chung, H.; Cottrill, L. A.; Foord, M.; Hatchett, S. P.; Key, M. H. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fiberoptics-Based Instrumentation for Storage Ring BeamDiagnostics (open access)

Fiberoptics-Based Instrumentation for Storage Ring BeamDiagnostics

In several cases, coupling synchrotron light into opticalfibers can substantially facilitate the use of beam diagnosticinstrumentation, that measures longitudinal beam properties by detectingsynchrotron radiation. It has been discussed in [1]with some detail, howfiberoptics can bring the light at relatively large distances from theaccelerator, where a variety of devices can be used to measure beamproperties and parameters. Light carried on a fiber can be easilyswitched between instruments so that each one of them has 100 percent ofthe photons available, rather than just a fraction , when simultaneousmeasurements are not indispensable. From a more general point of view,once synchrotron light is coupled into the fiber, the vast array oftechniques and optoelectronic devices, developed by the telecommunicationindustry becomes available.In this paper we present the results of ourexperiments at the Advanced Light Source, where we tried to assess thechallenges and limitations of the coupling process and determine whatlevel of efficiency one can typically expect to achieve.
Date: April 18, 2007
Creator: Byrd, John M.; De Santis, Stefano & Yin, Yan
System: The UNT Digital Library
A FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF LOCALIZED CORROSION AT THE PROPOSED YUCCA MOUNTAIN REPOSITORY (open access)

A FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF LOCALIZED CORROSION AT THE PROPOSED YUCCA MOUNTAIN REPOSITORY

Corrosion is a primary determinant of waste package performance at the proposed Yucca Mountain Repository: (1) the most likely degradation process; (2) controls the delay time for radionuclide transport from the waste package; and (3) determines when packages will be penetrated and the shape size and distribution of those penetrations. In this presentation a framework for the analysis of localized corrosion is presented and demonstrated for a scenario: (1) water chemistry of mixed salt solutions (sodium chloride-potassium nitrate); and (2) time-temperature-relative humidity profiles for a hot, mid and cool temperature waste package.
Date: April 18, 2006
Creator: Payer, Dr. J.H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hadronic B Decays at BaBar (open access)

Hadronic B Decays at BaBar

By means of hadronic B decays, the BABAR experiment aims to constrain the CKM matrix performing CP parameter measurements. It also seeks to test QCD factorization predictions and other models for B structure and decay mechanisms. We will present some of the on-going CP related analyses in the first section, while the second section will be dedicated to report on the conducted investigations on subjects as diverse as probing the gluon component in the B meson wave function, new physics and final state interactions in annihilation processes, intrinsic charm searches and first observation of strange charmed baryon production in B decays.
Date: April 18, 2007
Creator: Zghiche, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Energy Nuclear Database: A Testbed for Nuclear Data Information Technology (open access)

High Energy Nuclear Database: A Testbed for Nuclear Data Information Technology

We describe the development of an on-line high-energy heavy-ion experimental database. When completed, the database will be searchable and cross-indexed with relevant publications, including published detector descriptions. While this effort is relatively new, it will eventually contain all published data from older heavy-ion programs as well as published data from current and future facilities. These data include all measured observables in proton-proton, proton-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus collisions. Once in general use, this database will have tremendous scientific payoff as it makes systematic studies easier and allows simpler benchmarking of theoretical models for a broad range of experiments. Furthermore, there is a growing need for compilations of high-energy nuclear data for applications including stockpile stewardship, technology development for inertial confinement fusion, target and source development for upcoming facilities such as the International Linear Collider and homeland security. This database is part of a larger proposal that includes the production of periodic data evaluations and topical reviews. These reviews would provide an alternative and impartial mechanism to resolve discrepancies between published data from rival experiments and between theory and experiment. Since this database will be a community resource, it requires the high-energy nuclear physics community's financial and manpower support. This project serves as …
Date: April 18, 2007
Creator: Brown, D. A.; Vogt, R.; Beck, B. & Pruet, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A High-Order Finite-Volume Algorithm for Fokker-Planck Collisions in Magnetized Plasmas (open access)

A High-Order Finite-Volume Algorithm for Fokker-Planck Collisions in Magnetized Plasmas

A high-order finite volume algorithm is developed for the Fokker-Planck Operator (FPO) describing Coulomb collisions in strongly magnetized plasmas. The algorithm is based on a general fourth-order reconstruction scheme for an unstructured grid in the velocity space spanned by parallel velocity and magnetic moment. The method provides density conservation and high-order-accurate evaluation of the FPO independent of the choice of the velocity coordinates. As an example, a linearized FPO in constant-of-motion coordinates, i.e. the total energy and the magnetic moment, is developed using the present algorithm combined with a cut-cell merging procedure. Numerical tests include the Spitzer thermalization problem and the return to isotropy for distributions initialized with velocity space loss cones. Utilization of the method for a nonlinear FPO is straightforward but requires evaluation of the Rosenbluth potentials.
Date: April 18, 2007
Creator: Xiong, Z; Cohen, R H; Rognlien, T D & Xu, X Q
System: The UNT Digital Library
Insentropic compression of solid using pulsed magnetic loading (open access)

Insentropic compression of solid using pulsed magnetic loading

Shock loading techniques are often used to determine material response along a specific pressure loading curve referred to as the Hugoniot. However, many technological and scientific applications require accurate determination of dynamic material response that is off-Hugoniot, covering large regions of the equation-of-state surface. Unloading measurements from the shocked state provide off-Hugoniot information, but experimental techniques for measuring compressive off-Hugoniot response have been limited. A new pulsed magnetic loading technique is presented which provides previously unavailable information on isentropic loading of materials to pressures of several hundred kbar. This smoothly increasing pressure loading provides a good approximation to the high-pressure material isentrope centered at ambient conditions. The approach uses high current densities to create ramped magnetic loading to a few hundred kbar over time intervals of 100--200 ns. The method has successfully determined the isentropic mechanical response of copper to about 200 kbar and has been used to evaluate the kinetics of the alpha-epsilon phase transition occurring in iron at 130 kbar. With refinements in progress, the method shows promise for performing isentropic compression experiments to multi-Mbar pressures.
Date: April 18, 2000
Creator: Hall, Clint A.; Asay, James R.; Stygar, William A.; Spielman, Rick B.; Rosenthal, Stephen E.; Knudson, Marcus D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interference effect in elastic parton energy loss in a finitemedium (open access)

Interference effect in elastic parton energy loss in a finitemedium

Similar to the radiative parton energy loss due to gluonbremsstrahlung, elastic energy loss of a parton undergoing multiplescattering in a finite medium is demonstrated to be sensitive tointerference effect. The interference between amplitudes of elasticscattering via a gluon exchange and that of gluon radiation reduces theeffective elastic energy loss in a finite medium and gives rise to anon-trivial length dependence. The reduction is most significant for apropagation length L<4/\pi T in a medium with a temperature T. Thoughthe finite size effect is not significant for the average partonpropagation in the most central heavy-ion collisions, it will affect thecentrality dependence of its effect on jet quenching.
Date: April 18, 2005
Creator: Wang, Xin-Nian
System: The UNT Digital Library
Iterative Schemes for Time Parallelization with Application to Reservoir Simulation (open access)

Iterative Schemes for Time Parallelization with Application to Reservoir Simulation

Parallel methods are usually not applied to the time domain because of the inherit sequentialness of time evolution. But for many evolutionary problems, computer simulation can benefit substantially from time parallelization methods. In this paper, they present several such algorithms that actually exploit the sequential nature of time evolution through a predictor-corrector procedure. This sequentialness ensures convergence of a parallel predictor-corrector scheme within a fixed number of iterations. The performance of these novel algorithms, which are derived from the classical alternating Schwarz method, are illustrated through several numerical examples using the reservoir simulator Athena.
Date: April 18, 2005
Creator: Garrido, I; Fladmark, G E; Espedal, M S & Lee, B
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lambda {sup 0} polarization in 800 GeV/c pp {r_arrow} p{sub f} ({Lambda}{sup 0} K{sup +}) (open access)

Lambda {sup 0} polarization in 800 GeV/c pp {r_arrow} p{sub f} ({Lambda}{sup 0} K{sup +})

The authors report preliminary results from a study of {Lambda}{sup 0} polarization in the exclusive reaction pp {r_arrow} p{sub f} ({Lambda}{sup 0} K{sup +}) at 800 GeV/c. These data are a part of the 5 x 10{sup 9} diffractive event sample collected by Fermilab E690. They observe a large dependence of the polarization on the {Lambda}{sup 0} K{sup +} invariant mass. This observation confirms the result of the CERN ISR R608 experiment and extends the range over which the effect is observed.
Date: April 18, 2000
Creator: al., J. Felix et
System: The UNT Digital Library