Advanced NMR-based techniques for pore structure analysis of coal (open access)

Advanced NMR-based techniques for pore structure analysis of coal

One of the main problems in coal utilization is the inability to properly characterize its complex pore structure. Coals typically have micro/ultra-micro pores but they also exhibit meso and macroporosity. We believe that measurement of the NMR parameters of various gas phase and adsorbed phase NMR active probes can provide the resolution to this problem. We will investigate the dependence of the common NMR parameters such as chemical shifts and relaxation times of several different nuclei and compounds on the pore structure of model microporous solids, carbons, and coals. In particular, we will study the interaction between several small molecules ({sup 129}Xe, {sup 3}He, {sup 2}H{sub 2}, {sup 14}N{sub 2}, {sup 14}NH{sub 3}, {sup 15}N{sub 2}, {sup 13}CH{sub 4}, {sup 13}CO{sub 2}) and the pore surfaces in coals. These molecules have been selected for their chemical and physical properties. A special NMR probe will be constructed which will allow the concurrent measurement of NMR properties and adsorption uptake at a variety of temperatures. All samples will be subjected to a suite of conventional'' pore structure analyses. These include nitrogen adsorption at 77 K with BET analysis, C0{sub 2} and CH{sub 4} adsorption at 273 K with D-R (Dubinin-Radushkevich) analysis, helium …
Date: January 1, 1992
Creator: Smith, D. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhancement of DIII-D neutral beam system for higher performance (open access)

Enhancement of DIII-D neutral beam system for higher performance

The DIII-D tokamak employs eight neutral beam systems for plasma heating and current drive experiments. These positive ion source neutral beam systems have gone through several improvements in operational technique and in system hardware since the start of conditioning of the first long pulse ion source in December 1986. These improvements have led to the routine operation in deuterium at beam power levels of 20 MW. The improvements in operational technique include filament power supply operating mode, accelerator grid voltage holding capability, mid changes in grid potential gradients. The hardware improvements include installation of arc notching, arc discharge density regulation, and control of neutralizer gas puffing. Each of these improvements are discussed in this paper. Successful testing and operation of the ion source at 93 kV deuterium beam energy, well above the design value of 80 kV, also led to the possibility of enhancing system capability to 28 MW power level, nearly twice the original design value. Upgrading of the beam system to 60 second pulse duration at the currently achieved power level is under consideration. Studies have shown that this pulse length extension can be achieved with improvements in beamline heat handling components and auxiliary systems, especially the power …
Date: September 1, 1992
Creator: Hong, R.; Colleraine, A. P.; Kellman, D. H.; Kim, J.; Luxon, J. L.; Nerem, A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of the US Department of Energy Classified Visits Program (open access)

Review of the US Department of Energy Classified Visits Program

This review examines the US Department of Energy (DOE) Classified Visits Program, which is administered by the Office of Safeguards and Security. The overall purpose of this analysis is to (1) ensure that DOE policy and implementing procedures are appropriate to maintain US national security intentions; (2) evaluate the effectiveness of the process used across the DOE complex; and (3) recommend changes which will enhance the overall efficiency of the process while maintaining the program's integrity.
Date: July 1, 1992
Creator: Martin, S. W.; Killinger, M. H. & Segura, M. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering, maintenance, and new initiatives to improve LAMPF beam availability and system reliability (open access)

Engineering, maintenance, and new initiatives to improve LAMPF beam availability and system reliability

Two different requirements are driving engineering studies and hardware development to improve LAMPF. The first is concerned with component and system improvements to increase beam availability during the LAMPF production cycle. Hardware changes in RF, power supplies, and magnets are being implemented to increase mean time between failure and reduce time to replace or repair failed units. A joint LAMPF-Industry project is on-going to improve reliability of RF components. A component test stand is being refurbished to include significant development capability. The second approach includes several changes that will increase the duty factor of the existing accelerator. Major changes are being evaluated for replacing the front end of the accelerator. Other changes improving high brightness capability could result in a new performance plateau for LAMPF.
Date: January 1, 1992
Creator: Harris, H. W.; DeHaven, R. A.; Hart, V. E.; Parsons, W. M. & Sturrock, J. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling and sensitivity analysis study of the reduction of NO sub x by HNCO. [RAPRENOx process] (open access)

Modeling and sensitivity analysis study of the reduction of NO sub x by HNCO. [RAPRENOx process]

A chemical mechanism for the reduction of NO{sub x} by HNCO has been constructed to allow for the modeling of NO{sub x} in exhausts typical of natural gas combustion (RAPRENOx process). The reduction was modeled assuming plug flow, and either isothermal combustion or constant pressure adiabatic combustion. Variables were initial concentrations of NO, NO{sub 2}, CO, CH{sub 4}, H{sub 2}, and HNCO as well as initial temperatures. Exhaust residence time was nominally 1 s. Reduction was not achieved for prototypical natural gas exhaust'' for a reasonable residence time. Radical generation is crucial for reduction. H{sub 2} addition enhanced ignition and reduction. The final combustion temperature determines where NO{sub x} reduction ceases and NO{sub x} production increases. Reduction increases with HNCO, and breakthrough of NH{sub 3} and HNCO increses as well. N{sub 2}O production is due to NCO + NO, but the reduction of NO also occurs through reactions associated with the Thermal De-NOx chemistry. NH{sub 3} production and reactions are important to the reduction of NO. Sensitivity analysis under easy ignition conditions indicated that the same reactions involving nitrogen species, NH{sub 2} and NNH, important in De-NOx, are important when HNCO is used to reduce NO{sub x}. A real combustion …
Date: May 1, 1992
Creator: Brown, N. J. & Garay, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spin structures of Fe/Gd and Fe/Cr multilayers determined by polarized neutron reflectometry (open access)

Spin structures of Fe/Gd and Fe/Cr multilayers determined by polarized neutron reflectometry

Polarized neutron reflection was used to determine the magnetic structure of two different antiferromagnetically coupled multilayer systems, Fe/Gd and Fe/Cr. In Fe/Gd, the Fe and Gd moments are coupled antiparallel at the interface. At low temperatures a surface induced magnetic phase transition was found. In Fe/Cr, annealing at temperatures of up to 425{degrees}C, resulted in the degrading of antiferromagnetic coupling between Fe layers and in the formation of ferromagnetically coupled regions.
Date: August 1, 1992
Creator: Loewenhaupt, M.; Hahn, W. (Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH (Germany). Inst. fuer Festkoerperforschung); Huang, Y. Y.; Felcher, G. P. (Argonne National Lab., IL (United States)) & Parkin, S. S. P. (IBM Research Div., San Jose, CA (United States). Almaden Research Center)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of jet breakup mechanisms observed from simulant experiments of molten fuel penetrating coolant (open access)

Characterization of jet breakup mechanisms observed from simulant experiments of molten fuel penetrating coolant

The goal of this research program has been to add to our understanding of the breakup of molten fuel jets penetrating reactor coolant. Easily handled working fluids are used to simulate fuel jet breakup, so that detailed observations may be obtained from a relatively large number of experiments. The tools used for observing this behavior are high speed notion picture photography, Flash X-radiography, and X-ray cine. Jet breakup lengths are determined from motion pictures; the mechanisms by which the jets are fragmented may be inferred from radiographs.
Date: January 1, 1992
Creator: Jones, B. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Actuator system history of safety rod lower latch problems review of latch inspection video tapes (open access)

Actuator system history of safety rod lower latch problems review of latch inspection video tapes

During pre-restart testing the safety rod at position X26-YlO bound after being driven approximately two (2) feet out of the reactor. Subsequently, the rod was manually returned to it's seated position. Inspection of the lower latch showed that the latch locking plunger button (screwed on to the bottom of the plunger shaft and retained by a pin through a hole drilled through the button and the plunger shaft) was missing. The shaft failed through the hole drilled for the retaining pin. The button, with the retaining pin intact, was found lodged between the safety rod upper adapter collar and the top of the safety rod thimble top fitting. Analysis of the safety rod latch and accompanying forest guide tube design provided assurance that this type of failure would not cause binding during the scramming'' of the safety rods. Inspection of all of the K'' safety rod lower latches revealed six other latches with missing plunger buttons, and nine with other non-conformances which required latch replacement. A history search conducted by Reactor Engineering Design, Components Handling Group, is included in this report. The history search shows that latch design modifications, as a part of initial development of the latch system and …
Date: June 24, 1992
Creator: Banks, J. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inhibition of retrogressive reactions in coal/petroleum co-processing (open access)

Inhibition of retrogressive reactions in coal/petroleum co-processing

The overall objective of this project is to develop a fundamental understanding of the reactions occurring at the onset of coke formation during the CO-processing of coals with action of chemical components, or groups of components, in coals and petroleum feedstocks to quantify and rank the effects of these components in retarding or enhancement of coke formation. The work involves bench scale reactions in microautoclaves, supplemented by studies of the carbonaceous residues by such techniques as diffuse reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and {sup 13}C nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry.
Date: May 1, 1992
Creator: Schobert, H. H. & Tomic, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of S-101 course Supervisors Orientation to Occupational Safety Compliance in DOE'' taught in Upton, New York, July 14--17, 1992 (open access)

Evaluation of S-101 course Supervisors Orientation to Occupational Safety Compliance in DOE'' taught in Upton, New York, July 14--17, 1992

This report summarizes trainee evaluations for the Safety Training Section course, Supervisors' Orientation to Occupational Safety in DOE,'' (S101) which was conducted July 14--17 at Brookhaven National Laboratory, in Upton, New York. Sections 1.1 and 1.2 summarize the quantitative course evaluations that trainees provided upon completion of the course. Appendix A provides a transcript of the trainees' written comments. Numeric course ratings were generally positive and show that the course material and instruction were very effective. Written comments supported the positive numeric ratings. The course content and knowledge gained by the trainees exceeded most of the students' expectations of the course. Results from the final examination showed that students gained significant knowledge from the course.
Date: September 1, 1992
Creator: Wright, T S
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of wakefields generated in accelerator test structures using the SLC (open access)

Measurement of wakefields generated in accelerator test structures using the SLC

Research is underway at SLAC to develop accelerator structures for the next generation linear collider. An important feature of the design is a detuning of the dipole modes of the cells to suppress the long-range transverse wakefield by two orders of magnitude. This paper describes a facility, called ASSET, that will be incorporated into the SLAC Linear Collider (SLC) to test the long-range wakefield suppression and also to measure the other components of the wakefields generated in accelerator test structures.
Date: October 1, 1992
Creator: Adolphsen, C.; Bane, K.; Loew, G.; Ruth, R.; Thompson, K. & Wang, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
South Fork Clearwater River Habitat Enhancement, Nez Perce National Forest. (open access)

South Fork Clearwater River Habitat Enhancement, Nez Perce National Forest.

In 1984, the Nez Perce National forest and the Bonneville Power Administration entered into a contractual agreement which provided for improvement of spring chinook salmon and summer steelhead trout habitat in south Fork Clearwater River tributaries. Project work was completed in seven main locations: Crooked River, Red River, Meadow Creek Haysfork Gloryhole, Cal-Idaho Gloryhole, Fisher Placer and Leggett Placer. This report describes restoration activities at each of these sites.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Siddall, Phoebe
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Influence of surface defects and local structure on oxygenate reaction pathways over metal oxide surfaces (open access)

Influence of surface defects and local structure on oxygenate reaction pathways over metal oxide surfaces

Work during the last year (August 1991 to July 1992) has concentrated on completing the previously initiated studies of the surface chemistry of C{sub 1} oxygenates on particularly methanol SnO{sub 2}(110) and beginning studies of C{sub 2}oxygenate surface chemistry. During the remaining six months of the second budget period, the C{sub 2} studies will be continued.
Date: July 1992
Creator: Cox, David F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status report: A hydrologic framework for the Oak Ridge Reservation (open access)

Status report: A hydrologic framework for the Oak Ridge Reservation

This first status report on the Hydrologic Studies Task of the Oak Ridge Reservation Hydrology and Geology Study (ORRHAGS) revises earlier concepts of subsurface hydrology and hydrogeochemistry of the ORR. A new classification of hydrogeologic units is given, as well as new interpretations of the gydrogeologic properties and processes that influence contaminant migration. The conceptual hydrologic framework introduced in this report is based primarily on reinterpretations of data acquired during earlier hydrologic investigations of waste areas at and near the three US Department of Energy Oak Ridge (DOE-OR) plant facilities. In addition to describing and interpreting the properties and processes of the groundwater systems as they are presently understood, this report describes surface water-subsurface water relations, influences on contaminant migration,and implications to environmental restoration, environmental monitoring, and waste management.
Date: May 1, 1992
Creator: Solomon, D. K.; Toran, L. E.; Dreier, R. B.; Moore, G. K. & McMaster, W. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High beta and second stability region transport and stability analysis (open access)

High beta and second stability region transport and stability analysis

This report describes ideal and resistive studies of high-beta plasmas and of the second stability region. Emphasis is focused on supershot'' plasmas in TFIR where MHD instabilities are frequently observed and which spoil their confinement properties. Substantial results are described from the analysis of these high beta poloidal plasmas. During these studies, initial pressure and safety factor profiles were obtained from the TRANSP code, which is used extensively to analyze experimental data. Resistive MBD stability studies of supershot equilibria show that finite pressure stabilization of tearing modes is very strong in these high {beta}p plasmas. This has prompted a detailed re-examination of linear tearing mode theory in which we participated in collaboration with Columbia University and General Atomics. This finite pressure effect is shown to be highly sensitive to small scale details of the pressure profile. Even when an ad hoc method of removing this stabilizing mechanism is implemented, however, it is shown that there is only superficial agreement between resistive MBD stability computation and the experimental data. While the mode structures observed experimentally can be found computationally, there is no convincing correlation with the experimental observations when the computed results are compared with a large set of supershot data. …
Date: September 1, 1992
Creator: Hughes, M. H.; Phillps, M. W.; Todd, A. M. M.; Krishnaswami, J. & Hartley, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of SAES St198 zirconium-iron-tin alloy (open access)

Characterization of SAES St198 zirconium-iron-tin alloy

A waste minimization program to develop a non-oxidative stripper system based on metallic getters is being conducted. Initial development is being performed using a Zr-Fe-Sn intermetallic alloy getter procured as Stl98 from SAES Gefters/USA., Inc. This memorandum describes characterizations of physical and compositional properties of SAES Stl98. SAES Stl98 getter was supplied as very durable, cylindrical pellets made by compaction of. granules of Zr-Fe-Sn alloy up to 150 [mu]m in size. Pellet density was 5.2 g/mL corresponding to 24.8% open porosity and very little closed porosity. Bulk composition of Stl98 was 73.6 weight percent (w/o) Zr, 23.3 w/o Fe and 1.2 w/o Sn. Stl98 consists of Zr[sub 2]Fe primary phase along with four secondary phases (ZrFe[sub 2], Zr[sub 5]FeSn, [alpha]-zirconium, and [eta]-Zr[sub 4]Fe[sub 2]O[sub 0.6]). Hydriding characteristics of Stl98 are expected to differ slightly from those of Zr[sub 2]Fe because [alpha]-zirconium and, possibly, Zr[sub 5]FeSn also react with hydrogen.
Date: October 13, 1992
Creator: Mosley, W. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Understanding of carbonate fuel cell resistance issues for performance improvement (open access)

Understanding of carbonate fuel cell resistance issues for performance improvement

The overall objective of the current Task 6 under Contract AC21-90MC27168 is to develop understanding as well as quantification of cell ohmic resistance in carbonate fuel cell. The important resistance-contributing interfaces and elements are being investigated in high-temperature out-of-cell resistance experiments, using an AC-impedance technique. Ohmic resistance loss in a state-of-the-art carbonate fuel cell contributes about 65 mV loss at BOL (beginning-of-life). It may increase to about as much as 145 mV after 40,000 hours. Its reduction will offer further improvement in fuel cell power plant efficiency. The important resistance contributing elements/interfaces are illustrated in Figure 1. The majority of the ohmic loss attributed to electrolyte matrix (ionic) and cathode-side hardware (electronic). The ohmic loss due to anode-side hardware can generally be neglected because the anode-side hardware is surface protected resulting in very little surface oxide formation. The ohmic resistance of the electrodes is also negligible. The matrix ionic resistance is influenced by many factors: electrolyte conductivity, matrix porosity, tortuosity, electrolyte fill level and matrix thickness. At present, matrix contributes to > 300 m{Omega}cm{sup 2} (>70% of the total cell ohmic resistance) and is the major resistance contributor.
Date: January 1, 1992
Creator: Yuh, C. Y.; Farooque, M. & Johnsen, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion-channeling observation of correlated atomic displacements below Tc in YBa sub 2 Cu sub 3 O sub 7-x and Pb-doped Bi sub 2 Sr sub 2 CaCu sub 2 O sub x (open access)

Ion-channeling observation of correlated atomic displacements below Tc in YBa sub 2 Cu sub 3 O sub 7-x and Pb-doped Bi sub 2 Sr sub 2 CaCu sub 2 O sub x

Temperature dependent studies of ion channeling in high-quality, high-Tc single-crystals are summarized. The measurements revealed an abrupt change across Tc in displacements in the a-b plane of the Cu(I and 2) and 0(4) atoms; normal Debye-like'' vibrations were found for the Y and Ba atoms. The anomalous atomic displacements were found for both proton and He channeling, and manifested themselves as an abrupt increase in the critical angle and a simultaneous decrease in the minimum yield. The anomalous change in Cu-0 displacements shifted directly with stoichiometry-induced changes in Tc, implying a causal fink between the observed phonon anomaly and the superconducting state. An apparently identical anomaly was found in (Bi{sub 1.7}Pb{sub 0.3})Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub x}, indicating that it is a general feature of high-T, superconductivity. A comparison with other experimental measurements in YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub 7-x}, including a detailed neutron diffraction study, indicates that the anomaly is not due to an overall reduction in average vibrational amplitude, but arises instead from a strongly correlated sequence of Cu(1 and 2) and 04 displacements that appears with the onset of superconductivity. These strongly correlated displacements are either dynamic, or they are static distortions that fail to preserve the overall crystal symmetry.
Date: July 1, 1992
Creator: Rehn, L. E.; Sharma, R. P. & Baldo, P. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Radiobiology Archives Distributed Access User's Manual, Version 1. 1 (open access)

National Radiobiology Archives Distributed Access User's Manual, Version 1. 1

This supplement to the NRA Distributed Access User's manual (PNL-7877), November 1991, describes installation and use of Version 1.1 of the software package; this is not a replacement of the previous manual. Version 1.1 of the NRA Distributed Access Package is a maintenance release. It eliminates several bugs, and includes a few new features which are described in this manual. Although the appearance of some menu screens has changed, we are confident that the Version 1.0 User's Manual will provide an adequate introduction to the system. Users who are unfamiliar with Version 1.0 may wish to experiment with that version before moving on to Version 1.1.
Date: June 1, 1992
Creator: Smith, S. K.; Prather, J. C.; Ligotke, E. K. & Watson, C. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integration of Transients in Axisymmetrical Cavities for Accelerators: Formulation and applications to BNL Photocathode Gun (open access)

Integration of Transients in Axisymmetrical Cavities for Accelerators: Formulation and applications to BNL Photocathode Gun

This note provides a sketch of the formalism used for the Integration of Transients in Axisymmetrical Cavities for Accelerators, (ITACA). Application to study the BNL Photocathode Gun via the code ITACA is also included.
Date: April 1, 1992
Creator: Parsa, Z. (Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, NY (United States)) & Serafini, L. (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Milan (Italy) Milan Univ. (Italy))
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Boronization in DIII-D (open access)

Boronization in DIII-D

A thin boron film has been applied to the DIII-D tokamak plasma facing surfaces to reduce impurity influx, particularly oxygen and carbon. A direct result of this surface modification was the observation of a regime of very high energy confinement, VH-mode, with confinement times from 1.5 to 2 times greater than predicted by H-mode scaling relation for the same set of parameters. VH-mode discharges are characterized by low ohmic target densities, low edge neutral pressure, and reduced cycling. These conditions have reduced the collisionality, {nu}*, in the edge region producing a higher edge pressure gradient and a significant bootstrap current, up to 30% of the total current. We will describe the edge plasma properties after boronization including reductions in recycling inferred from measurements of {tau}{sup p}*. In particular we will discuss the edge plasma conditions necessary for access to VH-mode including the boronization process and properties of the deposited film.
Date: May 1, 1992
Creator: Jackson, G. L.; Burrell, K. H.; DeBoo, J. C.; Greenfield, C. M.; Groebner, R. J.; Hodapp, T. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ISOCELL trademark proof-of-concept for retrieval of wastes and contaminated soil (open access)

ISOCELL trademark proof-of-concept for retrieval of wastes and contaminated soil

ISOCELL{sup TM} cryogenic technology is designed to immobilize buried hazardous, radioactive, and mixed waste and contaminated soil by creating a block of frozen waste and soil that can be safely retrieved, stored, transported, and treated with a minimum of dust or aerosol production. A proof-of-concept'' test of the ISOCELL process was conducted in clean soil by RKK, Ltd., for the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL). Results indicate ISOCELL technology successfully froze moist soil into a solid block capable of being lifted and retrieved. Test conditions were compared to characteristics of possible buried waste sites in the INEL.
Date: January 1, 1992
Creator: Chatwin, T. D. (EG and G Idaho, Inc., Idaho Falls, ID (United States)) & Krieg, R. K. (RKK, Ltd., Bellevue WA (United States))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence for alpha-particle chain configurations in sup 24 Mg (open access)

Evidence for alpha-particle chain configurations in sup 24 Mg

Many theoretical models have been employed to described the structure of the nucleus {sup 24}Mg. Among these are the Cranked Shell model (CSM), the Cranked Cluster Model (CCM), and calculations have also been performed using the Hartree-Fock formalism. One very striking prediction of these calculations is that in this nucleus there exist very unusual configurations, with structures reminiscent of linear chains of alpha particles. In the CSM, for instance, such a configuration is identified with a pronounced minimum in the potential energy energy at very large prolate deformation. In the CCM, several very different alpha-particle duster configurations are identified, many having rather large deformations. These cluster configurations can be associated with the different potential-energy minima obtained in the CSM results. In the case of the CCM, a 6{alpha} chain-like configuration is predicted to occur at excitation energies between 40 and 50 MeV, with predicted rotational spacing given by {Dirac h}{sup 2}/2I=22 keV. At this excitation energy, such a chain configuration would lie well above the threshold for the decay of {sup 24}Mg into 6 alpha particles, and its identification poses a difficult experimental challenge. This report discusses this challenge.
Date: January 1, 1992
Creator: Wuosmaa, A. H.; Back, B. B.; Betts, R. R.; Ferre, M.; Gehring, J.; Glagola, P. G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-terminal devices of high- Tc superconductors: A status report and future challenges (open access)

Three-terminal devices of high- Tc superconductors: A status report and future challenges

A study has been conducted on the recent progress of the three-terminal devices with transistor-like characteristics fabricated from the high-{Tc} superconducting materials. This study explored the operating principles and characteristics of these devices in relation to the relevant materials and techniques. A comparison of a variety of techniques for superconducting thin film deposition will be given. This study indirates that the feasibility of fabricating hybrid devices composed of semiconductors and superconductors appear to be the key issue to push forward the applications of high-{Tc} superconductors in microelectronics. The junction field-effect transistors with a semiconductor base controlled by the proximity effect are likely to be more manufacturable. The factors that influence the operating reliability of devices and the problems arising from integrating and packaging the devices will also be discussed.
Date: January 1, 1992
Creator: Kung, Pang-Jen (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (United States) Carnegie-Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA (United States). Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library