Self-Organized Growth of Alloy Superlattices (open access)

Self-Organized Growth of Alloy Superlattices

We predict theoretically and demonstrate experimentally the spontaneous formation of a superlattice during crystal growth. When a strained alloy grows by "step flow", the steps at the surface form periodic bunches. The resulting modulated strain biases the incorporation of the respective alloy components at different steps in the bunch, leading to the formation of a superlattice. X-ray diffraction and electron microscopy for SiGe grown on Si give clear evidence for such spontaneous superlattice formation.
Date: October 19, 1998
Creator: Chason, E.; Floro, J. A.; Follstaedt, D. M.; Lagally, M. G.; Liu, F.; Tersoff, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of plasma flow in the DIII-D Tokamak (open access)

Simulation of plasma flow in the DIII-D Tokamak

The importance of the parallel flow of primary and impurity ions in the Scrape-Off layer (SOL) of divertor tokamaks has been recognized recently. Impurity accumulation on the closed flux surfaces is determined in part by their parallel flow in the SOL. In turn, the parallel transport of the impurity ions is determined in part by drag from the primary ion flow. Measurement of flow in the DIII-D tokamak has begun recently. We describe initial results of modeling plasma ion flow using the 2-D code UEDGE in this paper. We assume the impurity (carbon) arises from chemical and physical sputtering from the walls surrounding the DIII-D plasma. We include six charge states of carbon in our simulations. We make detailed compaison with a multitude of SOL plasma diagnostics, including the flow measurement, to verify the UEDGE physics model. We begin the paper with a brief description of the plasma and neutral models in the UEDGE code in Section 2. We then present initial results of flow simulations and compare them with experimental measurement in Section 3. We conclude with a discussion of the dominant physics processes identified in the modeling in Section 4.
Date: June 19, 1998
Creator: Porter, G. D., LLNL
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
SITE COMMUNICATIONS AND CONTROL SYSTEMS TECHNICAL REPORT (open access)

SITE COMMUNICATIONS AND CONTROL SYSTEMS TECHNICAL REPORT

None
Date: February 19, 1998
Creator: United States. Department of Energy.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SLURRY PHASE IRON CATALYSTS FOR INDIRECT COAL LIQUEFACTION (open access)

SLURRY PHASE IRON CATALYSTS FOR INDIRECT COAL LIQUEFACTION

This report describes research conducted to support the DOE program in indirect coal liquefaction. Specifically, they have studied the attrition behavior of iron Fischer-Tropsch catalysts, their interaction with the silica binder and the evolution of iron phases in a synthesis gas conversion process. The results provide significant insight into factors that should be considered in the design of catalysts for converting coal based syngas into liquid fuels.
Date: November 19, 1998
Creator: Datye, Abhaya K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solid State Power Amplifier for 805 MegaHertz at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (open access)

Solid State Power Amplifier for 805 MegaHertz at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center

Particle accelerators for protons, electrons, and other ion species often use high-power vacuum tubes for RF amplification, due to the high RF power requirements to accelerate these particles with high beam currents. The final power amplifier stages driving large accelerators are unable to be converted to solid-state devices with the present technology. In some instances, radiation levels preclude the use of transistors near beamlines. Work is being done worldwide to replace the RF power stages under about ten kilowatts CW with transistor amplifiers, due to the lower maintenance costs and obsolescence of power tubes in these ranges. This is especially practical where the stages drive fifty Ohm impedance and are not located in high radiation zones. The authors are doing this at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) proton linear accelerator (linac) in New Mexico. They replaced a physically-large air-cooled UHF power amplifier using a tetrode electron tube with a compact water-cooled unit based on modular amplifier pallets developed at LANSCE. Each module uses eight push-pull bipolar power transistor pairs operated in class AB. Four pallets can easily provide up to 2,800 watts of continuous RF at 805 MHz. A radial splitter and combiner parallels the modules. This amplifier …
Date: October 19, 1998
Creator: Davis, J.L. & Lyles, J.T.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solution exchange corrosion testing with the glass-zeolite ceramic waste form in demineralized water at 90{degree}C. (open access)

Solution exchange corrosion testing with the glass-zeolite ceramic waste form in demineralized water at 90{degree}C.

A ceramic waste form of glass-bonded zeolite is being developed for the long-term disposition of fission products and transuranic elements in wastes from the U.S. Department of Energy's spent nuclear fuel conditioning activities. Solution exchange corrosion tests were performed on the ceramic waste form and its potential base constituents of glass, zeolite 5A, and sodalite as part of an effort to qualify the ceramic waste form for acceptance into the Civilian Radioactive Waste Management System. Solution exchange tests were performed at 90 C by replacing 80 to 90% of the leachate with fresh demineralized water after set time intervals. The results from these tests provide information about corrosion mechanisms and the ability of the ceramic waste form and its constituent materials to retain waste components. The results from solution exchange tests indicate that radionuclides will be preferentially retained in the zeolites without the glass matrix and in the ceramic waste form, with respect to cations like Li, K, and Na. Release results have been compared for simulated waste from candidate ceramic waste forms with zeolite 5A and its constituent materials to determine the corrosion behavior of each component.
Date: May 19, 1998
Creator: Simpson, L. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Statement of work for the immobilized low-activity waste transportation system -- Project W-465 (open access)

Statement of work for the immobilized low-activity waste transportation system -- Project W-465

The objective of this Statement of Work (SOW) is to present the scope, the deliverables, the organization, the technical and schedule expectations for the development of a Package Design Criteria (PDC), cost and schedule estimate for the acquisition of a transportation system for the Immobilized Low-Activity Waste (ILAW).
Date: June 19, 1998
Creator: Mouette, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of the MCNP{trademark}/LCS{trademark} merger project (open access)

Status of the MCNP{trademark}/LCS{trademark} merger project

The MCNPX code is now in limited release in a beta-test version. We provide a brief status report on the physics modules now in the code and of the enhanced capabilities to use new evaluated neutron data. We also present new benchmark calculations in which LAHET and MCNPX are compared with experimental results from the Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute.
Date: April 19, 1998
Creator: Hughes, H. G.; Adams, K. J.; Chadwick, M. B.; Comly, J. C.; Frankle, S. C.; Hendricks, J. S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Alpha Particle Transport (open access)

Summary of Alpha Particle Transport

This paper summarizes the talks on alpha particle transport which were presented at the 5th International Atomic Energy Agency's Technical Committee Meeting on "Alpha Particles in Fusion Research" held at the Joint European Torus, England in September 1997.
Date: August 19, 1998
Creator: Medley, S. S.; White, R. B. & Zweben, S. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Tritium Tracking and Groundwater Monitoring at the Hanford Site 200 Area SALDS - FY 1998 (open access)

Summary of Tritium Tracking and Groundwater Monitoring at the Hanford Site 200 Area SALDS - FY 1998

Treated water from the 200 Area Effluent Treatment Facility (ETF) is discharged to a disposal site in accordance with the State Waste Discharge Permit ST-4500. This disposal site is referred to as the State-Approved Land Disposal Site (SALDS). In accordance with the discharge permit, the groundwater at the SALDS is routinely sampled. The results of the groundwater sampling are reported in quarterly discharge monitoring reports. In 1997, the USDOE also committed to the issuance of an annual summary report of groundwater monitoring results and evaluation with updates to the groundwater monitoring plan as appropriate. This report summarizes the groundwater information for FY 1998.
Date: October 19, 1998
Creator: DB Barnett, MP Bergeron, CR Cole, MD Freshley, SK Wurstner
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supporting large-scale computational science (open access)

Supporting large-scale computational science

Business needs have driven the development of commercial database systems since their inception. As a result, there has been a strong focus on supporting many users, minimizing the potential corruption or loss of data, and maximizing performance metrics like transactions per second, or TPC-C and TPC-D results. It turns out that these optimizations have little to do with the needs of the scientific community, and in particular have little impact on improving the management and use of large-scale high-dimensional data. At the same time, there is an unanswered need in the scientific community for many of the benefits offered by a robust DBMS. For example, tying an ad-hoc query language such as SQL together with a visualization toolkit would be a powerful enhancement to current capabilities. Unfortunately, there has been little emphasis or discussion in the VLDB community on this mismatch over the last decade. The goal of the paper is to identify the specific issues that need to be resolved before large-scale scientific applications can make use of DBMS products. This topic is addressed in the context of an evaluation of commercial DBMS technology applied to the exploration of data generated by the Department of Energy`s Accelerated Strategic Computing …
Date: February 19, 1998
Creator: Musick, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Surface Analytical Study of CuInSe2 Treated in Cd-Containing Partial Electrolyte Solution (open access)

Surface Analytical Study of CuInSe2 Treated in Cd-Containing Partial Electrolyte Solution

Junction formation in CuInSe2 (CIS) has been studied by exposing thin films and single-crystal samples to solutions containing NH4OH and CdSO4. The treated samples were analyzed by secondary ion mass spectrometry to determine the amount and distribution of Cd deposited on the surface of the films. Cadmium is found to react with the surface for all the solution exposure times and temperatures studied. The reaction rapidly approaches the endpoint and remains relatively unchanged for subsequent solution exposure. Cadmium in-diffusion, as measured by secondary ion mass spectrometry, is obscured by topography effects in the thin-film samples and by ion-beam mixing and topography in the single-crystal sample.
Date: November 19, 1998
Creator: Asher, S. E.; Ramanathan, K.; H., Wiesner; Moutinho, H. (National Renewable Energy Laboratory) & Niles, D. W. (Hewlett-Packard Corporation)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank 241-TX-118, core 236 analytical results for the final report (open access)

Tank 241-TX-118, core 236 analytical results for the final report

This document is the analytical laboratory report for tank 241-TX-118 push mode core segments collected between April 1, 1998 and April 13, 1998. The segments were subsampled and analyzed in accordance with the Tank 241-TX-118 Push Mode Core sampling and Analysis Plan (TSAP) (Benar, 1997), the Safety Screening Data Quality Objective (DQO) (Dukelow, et al., 1995), the Data Quality Objective to Support Resolution of the Organic Complexant Safety Issue (Organic DQO) (Turner, et al, 1995) and the Historical Model Evaluation Data Requirements (Historical DQO) (Sipson, et al., 1995). The analytical results are included in the data summary table (Table 1). None of the samples submitted for Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) and Total Organic Carbon (TOC) exceeded notification limits as stated in the TSAP (Benar, 1997). One sample exceeded the Total Alpha Activity (AT) analysis notification limit of 38.4{micro}Ci/g (based on a bulk density of 1.6), core 236 segment 1 lower half solids (S98T001524). Appropriate notifications were made. Plutonium 239/240 analysis was requested as a secondary analysis. The statistical results of the 95% confidence interval on the mean calculations are provided by the Tank Waste Remediation Systems Technical Basis Group in accordance with the Memorandum of Understanding (Schreiber, 1997) and are …
Date: November 19, 1998
Creator: Esch, Ruth A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank characterization report for single-shell tanks 241-T-201, 241-T-202, 241-T-203, and 241-T-204 (open access)

Tank characterization report for single-shell tanks 241-T-201, 241-T-202, 241-T-203, and 241-T-204

A major function of the Tank Waste Remediation System (TWRS) is to characterize waste in support of waste management and disposal activities at the Hanford Site. Analytical data from sampling and analysis, in addition to other available information about a tank are compiled and maintained in a tank characterization report (TCR). This report and its appendices serve as the TCR for the single-shell tank series consisting of 241-T-201, -T-202, -T-203, and -T-204. The objectives of this report are: (1) to use characterization data in response to technical issues associated with T-200 series tank waste and (2) to provide a standard characterization of this waste in terms of a best-basis inventory estimate. Section 2.0 summarizes the response to technical issues, Section 3.0 shows the best-basis inventory estimate, Section 4.0 makes recommendations about the safety status of the tank and additional sampling needs. The appendices contain supporting data and information. Appendix A contains historical information for 241-T-201 to T-204, including surveillance information, records pertaining to waste transfers and tank operations, and expected tank contents derived from a process knowledge-based computer program. Appendix B summarizes sampling events, sample data obtained before 1989, and the most current sampling results. Appendix C reports the statistical …
Date: February 19, 1998
Creator: Simpson, B.C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tank waste remediation system privatization phase 1 infrastructure project, systems engineering implementation plan (open access)

Tank waste remediation system privatization phase 1 infrastructure project, systems engineering implementation plan

This Systems Engineering Implementation Plan (SEIP) describes the processes, products, and organizational responsibilities implemented by Project W-519 to further define how the project`s mission, defined initially by the Tank Waste Remediation System Phase 1 Privatization Infrastructure Project W-503 Mission Analysis Report (Hoertkorn 1997), will be accomplished using guidance provided by the Tank Waste Remediation System Systems Engineering Management Plan (SEMP) (Peck 1998). This document describes the implementation plans for moving from a stated mission to an executable cost, schedule, and technical baseline and to help ensure its successful completion of those baselines.
Date: August 19, 1998
Creator: Schaus, P.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal and Cold Neutron Computed Tomography at the Los Alamos Neutron Scattering Center Using an Amorphous Silicon Detector Array (open access)

Thermal and Cold Neutron Computed Tomography at the Los Alamos Neutron Scattering Center Using an Amorphous Silicon Detector Array

The use of the EG and G-Heimann RTM 128 or dpiX FS20 amorphous silicon (a-Si) detector array for thermal neutron radiography/computed tomography has proven to be a quick and efficient means of producing high quality digital radiographic images. The resolution, although not as good as film, is about 750 pm with the RTM and 127 pm with the dpiX array with a dynamic range in excess of 2,800. In many respects using an amorphous silicon detector is an improvement over other techniques such as imaging with a CCD camera, using a storage phosphor plate or film radiography. Unlike a CCD camera, which is highly susceptible to radiation damage, a-Si detectors can be placed in the beam directly behind the object under examination and do not require any special optics or turning mirrors. The amorphous silicon detector also allows enough data to be acquired to construct a digital image in just a few seconds (minimum gate time 40 ms) whereas film or storage plate exposures can take many minutes and then need to be digitized with a scanner. The flat panel can therefore acquire a complete 3D computed tomography data set in just a few tens of minutes. While a-Si detectors …
Date: July 19, 1998
Creator: Claytor, T. N.; Schwab, M. J.; Farnum, E. H.; McDonald, T. E.; Summa, D. A.; Sheats, M. J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thin Film Photovoltaics (open access)

Thin Film Photovoltaics

The motivation to develop thin film technologies dates back to the inception of photovoltaics. It is an idea based on achieving truly low-cost photovoltaics appropriate for mass production and energy significant markets. The key to the idea is the use of pennies worth of active materials. Since sunlight carries relatively little energy in comparison with combustion-based energy sources, photovoltaic (PV) modules must be cheap to produce energy that can be competitive. Thin films are presumed to be the answer to that low-cost requirement. But how cheap do they have to be? The following is an oversimplified analysis that allows some insight into this question.
Date: November 19, 1998
Creator: Zweibel, K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trace, isotopic analysis of micron-sized grains -- Mo, Zr analysis of stardust (SiC and graphite grains). (open access)

Trace, isotopic analysis of micron-sized grains -- Mo, Zr analysis of stardust (SiC and graphite grains).

Secondary Neutral Mass Spectrometry using resonant laser ionization can provide for both high useful yields and high discrimination while maintaining high lateral and depth resolutions. An example of the power of the method is measurement of the isotopic composition of Mo and Zr in 1-5 {micro}m presolar SiC and graphite grains isolated from the Murchison CM2 meteorite for the first time. These grains have survived the formation of the Solar System and isotopic analysis reveals a record of the stellar nucleosynthesis present during their formation. Mo and Zr, though present at less than 10 ppm in some grains, are particularly useful in that among their isotopes are members that can only be formed by distinct nucleosynthetic processes known as s-, p-, and r-process. Successful isotopic analysis of these elements requires both high selectivity (since these are trace elements) and high efficiency (since the total number of atoms available are limited). Resonant Ionization Spectroscopy is particularly useful and flexible in this application. While the sensitivity of this t.edmique has often been reported in the past, we focus hereon the very low noise properties of the technique. We further demonstrate the efficacy of noise removal by two complimentary methods. First we use …
Date: February 19, 1998
Creator: Pellin, M. J. & Nicolussi, G. K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tritium Production from Palladium Alloys (open access)

Tritium Production from Palladium Alloys

A number of palladium alloys have been loaded with deuterium or hydrogen under low energy bombardment in a system that allows the continuous measurement of tritium. Long run times (up to 200 h) result in an integration of the tritium and this, coupled with the high intrinsic sensitivity of the system ({approximately}0.1 nCi/l), enables the significance of the tritium measurement to be many sigma (>10). We will show the difference in tritium generation rates between batches of palladium alloys (Rh, Co, Cu, Cr, Ni, Be, B, Li, Hf, Hg and Fe) of various concentrations to illustrate that tritium generation rate is dependent on alloy type as well as within a specific alloy, dependent on concentration.
Date: April 19, 1998
Creator: Claytor, T. N.; Schwab, M. J.; Thoma, D. J.; Teter, D. F. & Tuggle, D. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Unipolar Complementary Circuits Using Double Electron Layer Tunneling Tansistors (open access)

Unipolar Complementary Circuits Using Double Electron Layer Tunneling Tansistors

We demonstrate unipolar complementary circuits consisting of a pair of resonant tunneling transistors based on the gate control of 2D-2D interlayer tunneling, where a single transistor - in addition to exhibiting a welldefined negative-differential-resistance can be operated with either positive or negative transconductance. Details of the device operation are analyzed in terms of the quantum capacitance effect and band-bending in a double quantum well structure, and show good agreement with experiment. Application of resonant tunneling complementary logic is discussed by demonstrating complementary static random access memory using two devices connected in series.
Date: October 19, 1998
Creator: Blount, M. A.; Hafich, M. J.; Moon, J. S.; Reno, J. L. & Simmons, J. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of X-Ray Microbeams for Depth Profiling of MeV Ion Implantation Induced Defect Clusters in Si (open access)

Use of X-Ray Microbeams for Depth Profiling of MeV Ion Implantation Induced Defect Clusters in Si

None
Date: October 19, 1998
Creator: Yoon, M.; Larson, B. C.; Tischler, J. Z.; Haynes, T. E.; Chung, J.-S.; Ice, G. E. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Validation of a Model for a Two-Bladed Flexible Rotor System: Progress to Date (open access)

Validation of a Model for a Two-Bladed Flexible Rotor System: Progress to Date

At the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, we tested a very flexible wind turbine. This machine, the Cannon Wind Eagle turbine, exhibited an ability to significantly reduce the rotor flap-wise bending moments through a unique combination of a flexible rotor and hub design. In parallel to this testing effort, we developed analytical models of this machine using our simulation codes. The goal of this work was to validate the analytical models of this machine by comparing analytical predictions to measured results from the real machine. We first describe briefly the simulation codes used in this study. We then describe the wind turbine we analyzed. We then describe analytical model validation progress for this flexible rotor and show preliminary validation results. Finally, we make conclusions and state our plans for future studies.
Date: November 19, 1998
Creator: Wright, A. D.; Kelley, N. D. & Osgood, R. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
WRAP low level waste (LLW) glovebox operational test report (open access)

WRAP low level waste (LLW) glovebox operational test report

The Low Level Waste (LLW) Process Gloveboxes are designed to: receive a 55 gallon drum in an 85 gallon overpack in the Entry glovebox (GBIOI); and open and sort the waste from the 55 gallon drum, place the waste back into drum and relid in the Sorting glovebox (GB 102). In addition, waste which requires further examination is transferred to the LLW RWM Glovebox via the Drath and Schraeder Bagiess Transfer Port (DO-07-201) or sent to the Sample Transfer Port (STC); crush the drum in the Supercompactor glovebox (GB 104); place the resulting puck (along with other pucks) into another 85 gallon overpack in the Exit glovebox (GB 105). The status of the waste items is tracked by the Data Management System (DMS) via the Plant Control System (PCS) barcode interface. As an item is moved from the entry glovebox to the exit glovebox, the Operator will track an items location using a barcode reader and enter any required data on the DMS console. The Operational Test Procedure (OTP) will perform evolution`s (described below) using the Plant Operating Procedures (POP) in order to verify that they are sufficient and accurate for controlled glovebox operation.
Date: February 19, 1998
Creator: Kersten, J.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library