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OPTIMUM ENERGY ABSORPTION OF A SHORT-PULSE LASER IN A DOPED DIELECTRIC SLAB (open access)

OPTIMUM ENERGY ABSORPTION OF A SHORT-PULSE LASER IN A DOPED DIELECTRIC SLAB

A model is used to calculate energy absorption efficiency when a short-pulse laser impinges on a dielectric slab doped with an impurity for which the electrons have a resonant line at the laser wavelength. The amount of the energy resonant absorption is due to the overlapping between laser spectrum and resonance spectrum. The energy absorption efficiency can be maximized for a certain degree of doping concentration (at a given pulselength) and also for a certain pulselength (at a given doping concentration). For a modest amount of impurity, the resonant absorption may increase the fraction of energy absorption up to tens of percent of laser energy at 100s optical cycles when the laser wavelength is tuned within 1% of the resonant line. Dimensionless parameters are constructed so that the scaling to various parameters: laser wavelength, laser pulselength, dielectric constant, slab thickness, impurity concentration, resonant linewidth, and separation between the laser wavelength and the line resonance, could easily be obtained.
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: ANG, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
HCCl Combustion: Analysis and Experiments (open access)

HCCl Combustion: Analysis and Experiments

Homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) is a new combustion technology that may develop as an alternative to diesel engines with high efficiency and low NOx and particulate matter emissions. This paper describes the HCCI research activities being currently pursued at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and at the University of California Berkeley. Current activities include analysis as well as experimental work. On analysis, we have developed two powerful tools: a single zone model and a multi-zone model. The single zone model has proven very successful in predicting start of combustion and providing reasonable estimates for peak cylinder pressure, indicated efficiency and NOX emissions. This model is being applied to develop detailed engine performance maps and control strategies, and to analyze the problem of engine startability. The multi-zone model is capable of very accurate predictions of the combustion process, including HC and CO emissions. The multi-zone model has applicability to the optimization of combustion chamber geometry and operating conditions to achieve controlled combustion at high efficiency and low emissions. On experimental work, we have done a thorough evaluation of operating conditions in a 4-cylinder Volkswagen TDI engine. The engine has been operated over a wide range of conditions by adjusting the intake …
Date: May 4, 2001
Creator: Aceves, S. M.; Flowers, D. L.; Martinez-Frias, J.; Smith, J. R.; Dibble, R.; Au, M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
HCCI Combustion: Analysis and Experiments (open access)

HCCI Combustion: Analysis and Experiments

Homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) is a new combustion technology that may develop as an alternative to diesel engines with high efficiency and low NOx and particulate matter emissions. This paper describes the HCCI research activities being currently pursued at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and at the University of California Berkeley. Current activities include analysis as well as experimental work. On analysis, we have developed two powerful tools: a single zone model and a multi-zone model. The single zone model has proven very successful in predicting start of combustion and providing reasonable estimates for peak cylinder pressure, indicated efficiency and NOX emissions. This model is being applied to develop detailed engine performance maps and control strategies, and to analyze the problem of engine startability. The multi-zone model is capable of very accurate predictions of the combustion process, including HC and CO emissions. The multi-zone model h as applicability to the optimization of combustion chamber geometry and operating conditions to achieve controlled combustion at high efficiency and low emissions. On experimental work, we have done a thorough evaluation of operating conditions in a 4-cylinder Volkswagen TDI engine. The engine has been operated over a wide range of conditions by adjusting the …
Date: May 14, 2001
Creator: Aceves, Salvador M.; Flowers, Daniel L.; Martinez-Frias, Joel; Smith, J. Ray; Dibble, Robert; Au, Michael et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solubility of Anthracene in Binary Alcohol + Methyl Acetate Solvent Mixtures at 298.2 K (open access)

Solubility of Anthracene in Binary Alcohol + Methyl Acetate Solvent Mixtures at 298.2 K

Article on the solubility of anthracene in binary alcohol + methyl acetate solvent mixtures at 298.2 K.
Date: May 19, 2001
Creator: Acree, William E. (William Eugene)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multicell CDMA Network Design (open access)

Multicell CDMA Network Design

This article discusses multicell CDMA network design.
Date: May 2001
Creator: Akl, Robert G.; Hegde, Manju V.; Naraghi-Pour, Mort & Min, Paul S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The CLAS Forward Electromagnetic Calorimeter (open access)

The CLAS Forward Electromagnetic Calorimeter

The CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) at Jefferson Lab utilizes six iron-free superconducting coils to provide an approximately toroidal magnetic field. The six sectors are instrumented individually to form six independent spectrometers. The forward region (8deg < (theta) < 45deg) of each sector is equipped with a lead-scintillator electromagnetic sampling calorimeter (EC), 16 radiation lengths thick, using a novel triangular geometry with stereo readout. With its good energy and position resolution, the EC is used to provide the primary electron trigger for CLAS. It is also used to reject pions, reconstruct pi-0 and eta decays and detect neutrons, This paper treats the design, construction and performance of the calorimeter.
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: Amarian, M.; Asryan, Geram; Beard, Kevin; Brooks, Will; Burkert, Volker; Carstens, Tom et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Probabilistic Assessment of Weld Quality in Steel Piping Under Seismic Conditions (open access)

Probabilistic Assessment of Weld Quality in Steel Piping Under Seismic Conditions

Seismic stress analyses of plant piping systems usually ignore the possibility of reduced joint strength due to weld imperfections. This paper presents a method that might be used to assess the impact of weld imperfections in a piping system, provided that limited destructive examination of welded joints is possible. A probability distribution function of weld quality is developed from the destructive examination, and this is combined with an experimentally determined relationship between weld quality and reduced strength. This latter is the result of uniaxial tensile testing of specimens with controlled imperfections. A seismic stress probability distribution function is determined by conventional seismic analysis. The above quantities are used to quantify the conditional failure probability of the imperfect weld. Effect of imperfection distribution within a given weld on the probability of failure is discussed.
Date: May 29, 2001
Creator: Awadalla, N.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
MINIMIZING WASTE AND COST IN DISPOSITION OF LEGACY RESIDUES (open access)

MINIMIZING WASTE AND COST IN DISPOSITION OF LEGACY RESIDUES

Research is being conducted at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) which is directed toward development of a quantitative basis for disposition of actinide-bearing process residues (both legacy residues and residues generated from ongoing programmatic operations). This research is focused in two directions: (1) identifying minimum negative consequence (waste, dose, cost) dispositions working within regulatory safeguards termination criteria, and (2) evaluating logistics/consequences of across-the-board residue discards such as authorized at Rocky Flats under a safeguards termination variance. The first approach emphasizes Laboratory commitments to environmental stewardship, worker safety, and fiscal responsibility. This approach has been described as the Plutonium Disposition Methodology (PDM) in deference to direction provided by DOE Albuquerque. The second approach is born of the need to expedite removal of residues from storage for programmatic and reasons and residue storage safety concerns. Any disposition path selected must preserve the legal distinction between residues as Special Nuclear Material (SNM) and discardable materials as waste in order to insure the continuing viability of Laboratory plutonium processing facilities for national security operations.
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: BALKEY, J. & ROBINSON, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF ALGORITHMS FOR BILATERAL-CONTRACT CLEARING MECHANISMS ARISING IN DEREGULATED POWER INDUSTRY (open access)

EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF ALGORITHMS FOR BILATERAL-CONTRACT CLEARING MECHANISMS ARISING IN DEREGULATED POWER INDUSTRY

None
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: BARRETT, C.; COOK, D. & AL, ET
System: The UNT Digital Library
UTILIZATION OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY FIRE DYNAMICS SIMULATION COMPUTER MODEL (open access)

UTILIZATION OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY FIRE DYNAMICS SIMULATION COMPUTER MODEL

The objective of this report is to provide a methodology for utilization of the NIST FDS code to evaluate the effects of radiant and convective heating from single and multiple fire sources, on heat sensitive targets as Special Nuclear Materials (SNM), and High Explosives (HE). The presentation will demonstrate practical applications of the FDS computer program in fire hazards analysis, and illustrate the advantages over hand calculations for radiant heat and convective transfer and fire progression. The ''visualization'' of radiant and convective heat effects will be demonstrated as a tool for supporting conclusions of fire hazards analysis and TSR development.
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: BARTLEIN, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
STUDYING THE ROLE OF NUCLEAR STRUCTURE EFFECTS IN NEUTRON-INDUCED REACTIONS USING GEANIE AT LANSCE (open access)

STUDYING THE ROLE OF NUCLEAR STRUCTURE EFFECTS IN NEUTRON-INDUCED REACTIONS USING GEANIE AT LANSCE

None
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: BERNSTEIN, L.; ARCHER, D. & AL, ET
System: The UNT Digital Library
A PERSPECTIVE ON RELIABILITY: PROBABILITY THEORY AND BEYOND (open access)

A PERSPECTIVE ON RELIABILITY: PROBABILITY THEORY AND BEYOND

Reliability assessment in the coming era is inclined to be characterized by a difficult dilemma. On the one hand units and systems will be required to be ultra reliable; on the other hand, it may not be possible to subject them to a full-scale testing. A case in point occurs where testing is limited is one-of-a-kind complex systems, such as space exploration vehicles or where severe testing constraints are imposed such as full scale testing of strategic nuclear weapons prohibited by test ban treaties and international agreements. Decision makers also require reliability assessments for problems with terabytes of data, such as from complex simulations of system performance. Quantitative measures of reliability and their associated uncertainties will remain integral to system monitoring and tactical decision making. The challenge is to derive these defensible measures in light of these dilemmas. Because reliability is usually defined as a probability that the system performs to its required specification, probability enters into the heart of these dilemmas, both philosophically and practically. This paper provides an overview of the several interpretations of probability as they relate to reliability and to the uncertainties involved. The philosophical issues pertain to the interpretation and the quantification of reliability. For …
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: BOOKER, J. M. & SINGPURWALLA, N. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
GENETIC PROGRAMMING APPROACH TO EXTRACTING FEATURES FROM REMOTELY SENSED IMAGERY (open access)

GENETIC PROGRAMMING APPROACH TO EXTRACTING FEATURES FROM REMOTELY SENSED IMAGERY

None
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: BRUMBY, S. P.; THEILER, J.; PERKINS, S. J. & AL, ET
System: The UNT Digital Library
DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY INDEPENDENT SAR REVIEW PROCESS. (open access)

DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY INDEPENDENT SAR REVIEW PROCESS.

Contractor independent review of contractor prepared safety documents has ceased as a requirement under DOE orders. However, a recent study to determine root causes of the poor quality and extremely long approval times for Los Alamos National Laboratory nuclear safety document has identified such a review as a crucial step in ensuring quality. LANL has teamed with the DOE Field Office to reinstate an independent review process modeled after DOE-STD-1104. A review guide has been prepared predicated on the content of DOE-STD-3009. Discipline has been enforced to ensure that comments reflect important issues and that resolution of the comment is possible. Safety management at both LANL and DOE have embraced this concept. This process has been exercised and has resulted in improvements in safety analysis quality and a degree of uniformity between DOE and LANL reviews.
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: BUECK, J. & MARTH, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ga-66: a standard for high-energy calibration of Ge detectors (open access)

Ga-66: a standard for high-energy calibration of Ge detectors

None
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: Baglin, C. M.; Browne, E.; Norman, E. B.; Molnar, G. L.; Belgya, T.; Revay, Zs. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effective field theory for the small-x evolution (open access)

Effective field theory for the small-x evolution

The small-x behavior of structure functions in the saturation region is determined by the non-linear generalization of the BFKL equation. I suggest the effective field theory for the small-x evolution which solves formally this equation. The result is the 2+1 functional integral for the structure functions at small x.
Date: May 1, 2001
Creator: Balitsky, Ian
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparative experimental study of media access protocols for wireless radio networks (open access)

A Comparative experimental study of media access protocols for wireless radio networks

We conduct a comparative experimental analysis of three well known media access protocols: 802.11, CSMA, and MACA for wireless radio networks. Both fixed and ad-hoc networks are considered. The experimental analysis was carried out using GloMoSim: a tool for simulating wireless networks. The main focus of experiments was to study how (i) the size of the network, (ii) number of open connections, (iii) the spatial location of individual connections, (iv) speed with which individual nodes move and (v) protocols higher up in the protocol stack (e,g. routing layer) affect the performance of the media access sublayer protocols. The performance of the protocols was measured w.r.t. three important parameters: (1) number of received packets, (2) average latency of each packet, and (3) throughput. The following general qualitative conclusions were obtained; some of the conclusions reinforce the earlier claims by other researchers. (1) Although 802.11 performs better than the other two protocols with respect to fairness of transmission, packets dropped, and latency, its performance is found to (i) show a lot of variance with changing input parameters and (ii) the overall performance still leaves a lot of room for improvement. (2) CSMA does not perform too well under the fairness criteria, however, …
Date: May 24, 2001
Creator: Barrett, C. L. (Christopher L.); Drozda, M. (Martin) & Marathe, M. V. (Madhav V.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Free Acid by Standard Addition with Potassium Thiocyanate as Complexant (open access)

Determination of Free Acid by Standard Addition with Potassium Thiocyanate as Complexant

A method is described for determination of free acid in solutions containing the hydrolyzable ions Al (III), Cr(III), Fe(III), Hg(II), Ni(II), Th(IV), and U(VI). The concentration of the sample is calculated either by solving three simultaneous Nernst equations, by the Gran plot procedure, or by means of a microprocessor pH meter. Molar concentrations of metal ion up to 2.5 times that of the acid can be tolerated. The method has been applied to analysis of nuclear processing solutions that contain Pu(III), in addition to the ions listed above.
Date: May 29, 2001
Creator: Baumann, E. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Tritiated-Water Detector with U-232/Th-228 Source (open access)

A Tritiated-Water Detector with U-232/Th-228 Source

The detection capabilities of the new U-232/Th-228 source are comparable to those of the Na-24 source. The main benefit in using the new source is the ease of operation. Elimination of the neutron activation step required for Na-24 sources saves about 24 hours in planning, scheduling, and executing. With the new U-232/Th-228 source, the monitor can be put in operation in less than 15 minutes. The long half-life of the U-232/Th-228 source also eliminates the need to record calibration and measurement times, as required for decay corrections when using a Na-24 source.
Date: May 29, 2001
Creator: Baumann, N.P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron Cooling for Rhic. (open access)

Electron Cooling for Rhic.

The Accelerator Collider Department (CAD) at Brookhaven National Laboratory is operating the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), which includes the dual-ring, 3.834 km circumference superconducting collider and the venerable AGS as the last part of the RHIC injection chain. CAD is planning on a luminosity upgrade of the machine under the designation RHIC II. One important component of the RHIC II upgrade is electron cooling of RHIC gold ion beams. For this purpose, BNL and the Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics in Novosibirsk entered into a collaboration aimed initially at the development of the electron cooling conceptual design, resolution of technical issues, and finally extend the collaboration towards the construction and commissioning of the cooler. Many of the results presented in this paper are derived from the Electron Cooling for RHIC Design Report [1], produced by the, BINP team within the framework of this collaboration. BNL is also collaborating with Fermi National Laboratory, Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility and the University of Indiana on various aspects of electron cooling.
Date: May 13, 2001
Creator: Ben-Zvi, Ilan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Searches for supersymmetry at the Tevatron (open access)

Searches for supersymmetry at the Tevatron

We review current experimental results of searches for Supersymmetry (SUSY) at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider using the Run I data collected during 1992-1996. New results from the CDF detector in the jets + missing E{sub t} and lepton-photon channels are presented. Recent results from model independent searches at D0 using the SLEUTH algorithm are reviewed. We discuss the prospects for supersymmetry searches at Run II of the Tevatron, scheduled to start in March, 2001.
Date: May 15, 2001
Creator: Bishai, Mary R. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Digital Radiography of a Drop Tested 9975 Radioactive Materials Packaging (open access)

Digital Radiography of a Drop Tested 9975 Radioactive Materials Packaging

This paper discusses the use of radiography as a tool for evaluating damage to radioactive material packaging subjected to regulatory accident conditions. The Code of Federal Regulations, 10 CFR 71, presents the performance based requirements that must be used in the development (design, fabrication and testing) of a radioactive material packaging. The use of various non-destructive examination techniques in the fabrication of packages is common. One such technique is the use of conventional radiography in the examination of welds. Radiography is conventional in the sense that images are caught one at a time on film stock. Most recently, digital radiography has been used to characterize internal damage to a package subjected to the 30-foot hypothetical accident conditions (HAC) drop. Digital radiography allows for real time evaluation of the item being inspected. This paper presents a summary discussion of the digital radiographic technique and an example of radiographic results of a 9975 package following the HAC 30-foot drop.
Date: May 30, 2001
Creator: Blanton, P.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Long-Term Cathodoluminescent Characterization of Thin-Film Oxide Phosphors in a Wide Range of Electron Excitation Densities (open access)

Long-Term Cathodoluminescent Characterization of Thin-Film Oxide Phosphors in a Wide Range of Electron Excitation Densities

Long-term processes of cathodoluminescence degradation of thin film phosphors Zn{sub 2}SiO{sub 4}:Ti and Zn{sub 2}GeO{sub 4}:Mn were investigated in a wide range of e-beam energies, current and power densities. The time dependencies describing decreasing of emission intensity have been found. At high-level densities of e-beam irradiation the specific behavior of long-term degradation processes was observed, which is characteristic with rapid degradation at initial stage and slow consequent decrease of intensity. The most probable mechanisms responsible for long-term processes of degradation in investigated phosphors are proposed.
Date: May 6, 2001
Creator: Bondar, V D; Felter, T E; Hunt, C E; Dubov, Y G & Chakhovskoi, A G
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Temperature Technology and Physical Processes in Green Thin-Film Phosphor Zn2GeO4-Mn (open access)

Low-Temperature Technology and Physical Processes in Green Thin-Film Phosphor Zn2GeO4-Mn

Thin-film Zn{sub 2}GeO{sub 4}:Mn phosphors with lower temperature of crystallization, and potentially compatible with industrial technologies were investigated. The technology of thin films synthesis has been developed, as well as their structure and crystal parameters have been investigated. Photoluminescence excitation spectra, photoconductivity, temperature dependencies and ESR-spectra determined by manganese ions were studied. The mechanism of luminescence in this phosphor has been proposed. Cathodo- and electroluminescent parameters of thin film structures based on Zn{sub 2}GeO{sub 4}:Mn are presented.
Date: May 6, 2001
Creator: Bondar, V.; Popovich, S.; Felter, T. & Wager, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library