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3-D Finite Element Analysis of Induction Logging in a Dipping Formation (open access)

3-D Finite Element Analysis of Induction Logging in a Dipping Formation

Electromagnetic induction by a magnetic dipole located above a dipping interface is of relevance to the petroleum well-logging industry. The problem is fully three-dimensional (3-D) when formulated as above, but reduces to an analytically tractable one-dimensional (1-D) problem when cast as a small tilted coil above a horizontal interface. The two problems are related by a simple coordinate rotation. An examination of the induced eddy currents and the electric charge accumulation at the interface help to explain the inductive and polarization effects commonly observed in induction logs from dipping geological formations. The equivalence between the 1-D and 3-D formulations of the problem enables the validation of a previously published finite element solver for 3-D controlled-source electromagnetic induction.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Everett, Mark E.; Badea, Eugene A,; Shen, Liang, C.; Merchant, Gulamabbas A. & Weiss, Chester J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ab-Initio Step- and Kink-Formation Energies on Pb(111) (open access)

Ab-Initio Step- and Kink-Formation Energies on Pb(111)

Ab-initio formation energies for (100)- and (111)-microfacet steps on Pb(111) are in satisfactory agreement with measured values, given that these values are known only as well as the Pb(111) surface energy; the calculated step-energy ratio, 1.29, is within {approximately}8% of experiment. In contrast, calculated kink-formation energies, 41 and 60 meV for the two step types, are 40--50% below published experimental values derived from STM images. The discrepancy results from interpreting the images with a step-stiffness vs. kink-energy relation appropriate to (100) but not (111) surfaces. Good agreement is found when the step-stiffness data are reinterpreted, taking proper account of the trigonal symmetry of Pb(111).
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Feibelman, Peter J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adsorption of Barium (II) on Montmorillonite Surface (open access)

Adsorption of Barium (II) on Montmorillonite Surface

None
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Zhang, Pengchu; Brady, Patrick V.; Arthur, Sara E.; Zhou, Wei-Qing; Sawyer, Dale & Hesterberg, Dean A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bifurcation Mode of Relativistic and Charge-Displacement Self-Channeling (open access)

Bifurcation Mode of Relativistic and Charge-Displacement Self-Channeling

Stable self-channeling of ultra-powerful (P{sub 0} - 1 TW -1 PW) laser pulses in dense plasmas is a key process for many applications requiring the controlled compression of power at high levels. Theoretical computations predict that the transition zone between the stable and highly unstable regimes of relativistic/charge-displacement self-channeling is well characterized by a form of weakly unstable behavior that involves bifurcation of the propagating energy into two powerful channels. Recent observations of channel instability with femtosecond 248 nm pulses reveal a mode of bifurcation that corresponds well to these theoretical predictions. It is further experimentally shown that the use of a suitable longitudinal gradient in the plasma density can eliminate this unstable behavior and restore the efficient formation of stable channels.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Borisov, A. B.; Cameron, Stewart M.; Luk, Ting S.; Nelson, Thomas R.; Van Tassle, A. J.; Santoro, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bistable Output from a Coupled-Resonator Vertical-Cavity Laser Diode (open access)

Bistable Output from a Coupled-Resonator Vertical-Cavity Laser Diode

The authors report a monolithic coupled-resonator vertical-cavity laser with an ion-implanted top cavity and a selectively oxidized bottom cavity which exhibits bistable behavior in the light output versus injection current. Large bistability regions over current ranges as wide as 18 mA have been observed with on/off contrast ratios of greater than 20 dB. The position and width of the bistability region can be varied by changing the bias to the top cavity. Switching between on and off states can be accomplished with changes as small as 250 {micro}W to the electrical power applied to the top cavity. Theoretical analysis suggests that the bistable behavior is the response of the nonlinear susceptibility in the top cavity to the changes in the bottom intracavity laser intensity as the bottom cavity reaches the thermal rollover point.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Fischer, Arthur J.; Choquette, Kent D.; Chow, Weng W.; Allerman, Andrew A. & Geib, Kent M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemometric Analysis of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Data (open access)

Chemometric Analysis of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Data

Chemometric analysis of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has increased dramatically in recent years. A variety of different chemometric techniques have been applied to a wide range of problems in food, agricultural, medical, process and industrial systems. This article gives a brief review of chemometric analysis of NMR spectral data, including a summary of the types of mixtures and experiments analyzed with chemometric techniques. Common experimental problems encountered during the chemometric analysis of NMR data are also discussed.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: ALAM,TODD M. & ALAM,M. KATHLEEN
System: The UNT Digital Library
Colloids generation from metallic uranium fuel (open access)

Colloids generation from metallic uranium fuel

The possibility of colloid generation from spent fuel in an unsaturated environment has significant implications for storage of these fuels in the proposed repository at Yucca Mountain. Because colloids can act as a transport medium for sparingly soluble radionuclides, it might be possible for colloid-associated radionuclides to migrate large distances underground and present a human health concern. This study examines the nature of colloidal materials produced during corrosion of metallic uranium fuel in simulated groundwater at elevated temperature in an unsaturated environment. Colloidal analyses of the leachates from these corrosion tests were performed using dynamic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy. Results from both techniques indicate a bimodal distribution of small discrete particles and aggregates of the small particles. The average diameters of the small, discrete colloids are {approximately}3--12 nm, and the large aggregates have average diameters of {approximately}100--200 nm. X-ray diffraction of the solids from these tests indicates a mineral composition of uranium oxide or uranium oxy-hydroxide.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Metz, C.; Fortner, J.; Goldberg, M. & Shelton-Davis, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conductivities and Seebeck Coefficients of Boron Carbides: ''Softening-Bipolaron'' Hopping (open access)

Conductivities and Seebeck Coefficients of Boron Carbides: ''Softening-Bipolaron'' Hopping

The most conspicuous feature of boron carbides' electronic transport properties is their having both high carrier densities and large Seebeck coefficients. The magnitudes and temperature dependencies of the Seebeck coefficients are consistent with large contributions from softening bipolarons: singlet bipolarons whose stabilization is significantly affected by their softening of local vibrations. Boron carbides' high carrier densities, small activation energies for hopping ({approx} 0.16 eV), and anomalously large Seebeck coefficients combine with their low, glass-like thermal conductivities to make them unexpectedly efficient high-temperature thermoelectrics.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: ASELAGE,TERRENCE L.; EMIN,DAVID JACOB & MCCREADY,STEVEN S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Corrosion testing of spent nuclear fuel performed at Argonne National Laboratory for repository acceptance (open access)

Corrosion testing of spent nuclear fuel performed at Argonne National Laboratory for repository acceptance

Corrosion tests of DOE-owned spent nuclear fuel are performed at Argonne National Laboratory to support the license application for the Yucca Mountain Repository. The tests are designed to determine corrosion rates and degradation products formed when fuel is reacted at elevated temperature in different aqueous environments, including vapor, dripping water, submersion, and liquid film contact. Corrosion rates are determined from the quantity of radionuclides released from wetted fuel and from the weight loss of the test fuel specimen as a function of time. Degradation products include secondary mineral phases and dissolved, adsorbed, and colloidal species. Solid phase examinations determine fuel/mineral interface relationships, characterize radionuclide incorporation into secondary phases, and determine corrosion mechanisms at grain interfaces within the fuel. Leachate solution analyses quantify released radionuclides and determine the size and charge distribution of colloids. This paper presents selected results from corrosion tests on metallic fuels.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Goldberg, M. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of in-medium properties on heavy-ion collisions (open access)

Effect of in-medium properties on heavy-ion collisions

The properties of strange hadrons, i.e. of kaons and hyperons, in the nuclear medium--are discussed in connection with neutron star properties and relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Firstly, the relevant medium modifications of a kaon in a medium as provided by heavy-ion collisions is critically examined within a coupled channel calculation. We demonstrate, that particle ratios for kaons are not a sensitive probe of in-medium effects while the K{sup {minus}} flow is more suited to pin down the K{sup {minus}} optical potential in dense matter. Secondly, the interaction between hyperons is studied and may form bound states which can be produced in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Signals for the detection of strange dibaryons by their decay topology and/or in the invariant mass spectra are outlined.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Schaffner-Bielich, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Vacuum on the Occurrence of UV-Induced Surface Photoluminescence, Transmission Loss, and Catastrophic Surface Damage (open access)

Effect of Vacuum on the Occurrence of UV-Induced Surface Photoluminescence, Transmission Loss, and Catastrophic Surface Damage

Vacuum degrades the transmittance and catastrophic damage performance of fused-silica surfaces, both bare and silica-sol anti-reflective coated. These effects may be important in certain space application of photonics devices. When exposed to hundreds of 355-rim, 10-ns laser pulses with fluences in the 2-15 J/cm{sup 2} range, transmittance loss is due to both increased reflectance and absorption at the surface. Spectroscopic measurements show that the absorbed light induces broadband fluorescence from the visible to infrared and that the peak photoluminescence wavelength depends cumulative fluence. The effect appears to be consistent with the formation of surface SiO{sub x} (x<2) with progressively lower x as cumulative fluence increases. Conversely, low fluence CW UV irradiation of fluorescent sites in air reduces the fluorescence signal, which suggests a photochemical oxidation reaction back to Si0{sub 2}. The occurrence of catastrophic damage (craters that grow on each subsequent pulse) also increases in a vacuum relative to air for both coated and uncoated samples. In both cases, the 50% damage probability for 100 one-mm sites decreases from about 45 to 35 J/cm{sup 2} for superpolished fused silica at pressures in the 10{sup -6} Torr range. The damage probability distribution in 10 Torr of air is close to that …
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Burnham, A K; Runkel, M; Demos, S G; Kozlowski, M R & Wegner, P J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Emplacement of Mercury Wastes in the Sediments of the Deep-Ocean? (open access)

Emplacement of Mercury Wastes in the Sediments of the Deep-Ocean?

None
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Gomez, Leo S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
In Situ Determination of Long-Term Volcanic Glass Weathering: Implications for Nuclear Waste Storage over Geologic Time (open access)

In Situ Determination of Long-Term Volcanic Glass Weathering: Implications for Nuclear Waste Storage over Geologic Time

None
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Gordon, Steven J. & Brady, Patrick V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Issues and approaches in control for autonomous reactor operation (open access)

Issues and approaches in control for autonomous reactor operation

A capability for autonomous and passively safe operation is one of the goals of the NERI funded development of Generation IV nuclear plants. An approach is described for evaluating the effect of increasing autonomy on safety margins and load behavior and for examining issues that arise with increasing autonomy and their potential impact on performance. The method provides a formal approach to the process of exploiting the innate self-regulating property of a reactor to make it less dependent on operator action and less vulnerable to automatic control system fault and/or operator error. Some preliminary results are given.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Vilim, R. B.; Khalil, H. S. & Wei, T. Y. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Land-Based Geologic Emplacement of Mercury Wastes (open access)

Land-Based Geologic Emplacement of Mercury Wastes

None
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: ANDERSON,D. RICHARD
System: The UNT Digital Library
Long-Period Solar Variability (open access)

Long-Period Solar Variability

Terrestrial climate records and historical observations of the Sun suggest that the Sun undergoes aperiodic oscillations in radiative output and size over time periods of centuries and millenia. Such behavior can be explained by the solar convective zone acting as a nonlinear oscillator, forced at the sunspot-cycle frequency by variations in heliomagnetic field strength. A forced variant of the Lorenz equations can generate a time series with the same characteristics as the solar and climate records. The timescales and magnitudes of oscillations that could be caused by this mechanism are consistent with what is known about the Sun and terrestrial climate.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: GAUTHIER,JOHN H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the Efficiency of Gold Transmission Gratings in the 100 to 5000 eV Photon Energy Range (open access)

Measurement of the Efficiency of Gold Transmission Gratings in the 100 to 5000 eV Photon Energy Range

None
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Ruggles, Laurence E.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Porter, John L.; Wenger, David F. & Simpson, Walter W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parton Distributions Working Group (open access)

Parton Distributions Working Group

This report summarizes the activities of the Parton Distributions Working Group of the QCD and Weak Boson Physics workshop held in preparation for Run II at the Fermilab Tevatron. The main focus of this working group was to investigate the different issues associated with the development of quantitative tools to estimate parton distribution functions uncertainties. In the conclusion, the authors introduce a Manifesto that describes an optimal method for reporting data.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: de Barbaro, L.; Keller, S. A.; Kuhlmann, S.; Schellman, H. & Tung, W.-K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pulsed Power: Sandia's Plans for the New Millenium (open access)

Pulsed Power: Sandia's Plans for the New Millenium

Pulsed power science and engineering activities at Sandia National Laboratories grew out of a programmatic need for intense radiation sources to advance capabilities in radiographic imaging and to create environments for testing and certifying the hardness of components and systems to radiation in hostile environments. By the early 1970s, scientists in laboratories around the world began utilizing pulsed power drivers with very short (10s of nanoseconds) pulse lengths for Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) experiments. In the United States, Defense Programs within the Department of Energy has sponsored this research. Recent progress in pulsed power, specifically fast-pulsed-power-driven z pinches, in creating temperatures relevant to ICF has been remarkable. Worldwide developments in pulsed power technologies and increased applications in both defense and industry are contrasted with ever increasing stress on research and development tiding. The current environment has prompted us at Sandia to evaluate our role in the continued development of pulsed power science and to consider options for the future. This presentation will highlight our recent progress and provide an overview of our plans as we begin the new millennium.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: QUINTENZ,JEFFREY P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Role of Seismic Calibration as a Confidence-Building Measure (open access)

Role of Seismic Calibration as a Confidence-Building Measure

Confidence-Building Measures (CBMs) under the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) address the political goal of alleviating compliance concerns raised by chemical explosions and the technical goal of calibrating the International Monitoring System (IMS; ref. Article IV, E, and Part 111 of the Protocol to the treaty). The term ''calibration'' only appears in the treaty associated with CBMs and On-Site Inspection and has different meanings in each case. This difference can be illustrated through the use of a simple, conceptual equation:
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Casey, L A; Zucca, J JW S & Phillips, W S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Fluctuations in the Structure of Naturally Chiral Pt Surfaces (open access)

Thermal Fluctuations in the Structure of Naturally Chiral Pt Surfaces

The intrinsic chirality of metal surfaces with kinked steps (e.g. Pt(643)) endows them with enantiospecific adsorption properties (D. S. Shell, Langmuir, 14, 1998, 862). To understand these properties quantitatively the impact of thermally-driven step wandering must be assessed. The authors derive a lattice-gas model of step motion on Pt(111) surfaces using diffusion barriers from Density Functional Theory. This model is used to examine thermal fluctuations of straight and kinked steps.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Asthagiri, Aravind; Feibelman, Peter J. & Sholl, David S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Treatment of traction-free boundary condition in three-dimensional dislocation dynamics using generalized image stress analysis (open access)

Treatment of traction-free boundary condition in three-dimensional dislocation dynamics using generalized image stress analysis

Recent attention has been given to the proper treatment of the planar traction-free surfaces which typically bound a computational box in three-dimensional dislocation dynamics. This paper presents an alternative to the use of the finite-element method for this purpose. Here, to annul the tractions produced by a sub-surface dislocation segment on a finite-area free surface S, a combination of an image dislocation segment, and a distribution of N prismatic rectangular Volterra dislocation loops meshing S is utilized. The image dislocation segment, with the proper sign selection of the Burgers vector components, annuls the shear stresses, and the normal stress component is annulled discretely at N collocation points representing the centers of the loops. The unknowns in this problem are the magnitudes of the N Burgers vectors for the loops. Once these are determined, one can back calculate the Peach-Koehler force acting on the sub-surface segment and representing the effect of the free surface. As expected, the accuracy of the method improves as the loops continuously decrease in size.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Khraishi, T A; Zbib, H M & Diaz de la Rubia, T
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tribological Properties of Self-assembled Monolayers on Au, SiOx and Si Surfaces (open access)

Tribological Properties of Self-assembled Monolayers on Au, SiOx and Si Surfaces

Using interracial force microscopy (IFM), the tribological properties of self-assembled monolayer (SAM) on Si surfaces produced by a new chemical strategy are investigated and compared to those of classical SAM systems, which include alkanethiols on Au and alkylsilanes on SiO{sub x}. The new SAM films are prepared by depositing n-alkyl chains with OH-terminations onto Cl-terminated Si substrates. The chemical nature of the actual lubricating molecules, n-dodecyl, is kept constant in all three thin film systems for direct comparison and similarities and differences in tribological properties are observed. The adhesion strength is virtually identical for all three systems; however, frictional properties differ due to differences in film packing. Differences in the chemical bonds that attach the lubricant molecules to the substrate are also discussed as they influence variations in film wear and durability. It is demonstrated that the new SAM films are capable of controlling the friction and adhesion of Si surfaces as well as the classical SAMs in addition to providing a greater potential to be more reproducible and more durable.
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Kim, Hyun I.; Boiadjiev, V.; Houston, Jack E.; Zhu, X. -Y & Kiely, J .D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-Ray Imaging Techniques on Z using the Z-Beamlet Laser Backlighter System (title change from A) (open access)

X-Ray Imaging Techniques on Z using the Z-Beamlet Laser Backlighter System (title change from A)

None
Date: July 20, 2000
Creator: Bennett, G. R.; Porter, John L.; Ruggles, Laurence E.; Simpson, Walter W.; Wakefield, Colleen & Landed, O. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library