Accuracy and reliability of China's energy statistics (open access)

Accuracy and reliability of China's energy statistics

Many observers have raised doubts about the accuracy and reliability of China's energy statistics, which show an unprecedented decline in recent years, while reported economic growth has remained strong. This paper explores the internal consistency of China's energy statistics from 1990 to 2000, coverage and reporting issues, and the state of the statistical reporting system. Available information suggests that, while energy statistics were probably relatively good in the early 1990s, their quality has declined since the mid-1990s. China's energy statistics should be treated as a starting point for analysis, and explicit judgments regarding ranges of uncertainty should accompany any conclusions.
Date: September 14, 2001
Creator: Sinton, Jonathan E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Activation of theMercury Laser System: A Diode-Pumped Solid-State Laser Driver for Inertial Fusion (open access)

Activation of theMercury Laser System: A Diode-Pumped Solid-State Laser Driver for Inertial Fusion

Initial measurements are reported for the Mercury laser system, a scalable driver for rep-rated inertial fusion energy. The performance goals include 10% electrical efficiency at 10 Hz and 100 J with a 2-10 ns pulse length. We report on the first Yb:S-FAP crystals grown to sufficient size for fabricating full size (4 x 6 cm) amplifier slabs. The first of four 160 kW (peak power) diode arrays and pump delivery systems were completed and tested with the following results: 5.5% power droop over a 0.75 ms pulse, 3.95 nm spectral linewidth, far field divergence of 14.0 mrad and 149.5 mrad in the microlensed and unmicrolensed directions respectively, and 83% optical-to-optical transfer efficiency through the pump delivery system.
Date: September 10, 2001
Creator: Bayramian, A. J.; Beach, R. J.; Bibeau, C.; Ebbers, C. A.; Freitas, B. L.; Kanz, V. K. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adjustable Permanent Quadrupoles Using Rotating Magnet Material Rods for the Next Linear Collider (open access)

Adjustable Permanent Quadrupoles Using Rotating Magnet Material Rods for the Next Linear Collider

The proposed Next Linear Collider (NLC) will require over 1400 adjustable quadrupoles between the main linacs' accelerator structures. These 12.7 mm bore quadrupoles will have a range of integrated strength from 0.6 to 132 Tesla, with a maximum gradient of 135 Tesla per meter, an adjustment range of +0-20% and effective lengths from 324 mm to 972 mm. The magnetic center must remain stable to within 1 micrometer during the 20% adjustment. In an effort to reduce estimated costs and increase reliability, several designs using hybrid permanent magnets have been developed. All magnets have iron poles and use either Samarium Cobalt or Neodymium Iron to provide the magnetic fields. Two prototypes use rotating rods containing permanent magnetic material to vary the gradient. Gradient changes of 20% and center shifts of less than 20 microns have been measured. These data are compared to an equivalent electromagnet prototype.
Date: September 24, 2001
Creator: al., James T Volk et
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Adaptive Optics Technology Development (open access)

Advanced Adaptive Optics Technology Development

The NSF Center for Adaptive Optics (CfAO) is supporting research on advanced adaptive optics technologies. CfAO research activities include development and characterization of micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) deformable mirror (DM) technology, as well as development and characterization of high-resolution adaptive optics systems using liquid crystal (LC) spatial light modulator (SLM) technology. This paper presents an overview of the CfAO advanced adaptive optics technology development activities including current status and future plans.
Date: September 18, 2001
Creator: Olivier, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alternate Electrolyte Composition for Electropolishing of Niobium Surfaces (open access)

Alternate Electrolyte Composition for Electropolishing of Niobium Surfaces

Electropolishing has shown promising results for the treatment of Nb cavities to be used in particle accelerators, particularly in the attainment of high surface electric fields. In support of the CEBAF Upgrade project and as part of a longer-term R and D program, we have investigated the properties of several electrolyte recipes. A particularly promising one consists of a mixture of lactic, sulfuric, and hydrofluoric acids. Initial tests reveal that smooth Nb surfaces can be achieved with no observable grain boundaries under optical microscope. We report on the results of the investigations of the parameters that control the polishing process using this particular acid mixture.
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: Delayen, Jean R.; Mammosser, John; Phillips, Larry & Wu, Andy T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Angular distributions of electrons photoemitted from core levels of oriented diatomic molecules: Multiple scattering theory in non-spherical potentials (open access)

Angular distributions of electrons photoemitted from core levels of oriented diatomic molecules: Multiple scattering theory in non-spherical potentials

We use multiple scattering in non-spherical potentials (MSNSP) to calculate the angular distributions of electrons photoemitted from the 1s-shells of CO and N2 gas-phase molecules with fixed-in-space orientations. For low photoelectron kinetic energies (E<50 eV), as appropriate to certain shape-resonances, the electron scattering must be represented by non-spherical scattering potentials, which are naturally included in our formalism. Our calculations accurately reproduce the experimental angular patterns recently measured by several groups, including those at the shape-resonance energies. The MSNSP theory thus enhances the sensitivity to spatial electronic distribution and dynamics, paving the way toward their determination from experiment.
Date: September 6, 2001
Creator: Diez Muino, R.; Rolles, D.; Garcia de Abajo, F. J.; Fadley, C. S. & Van Hove, M. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of a Dynamic Fuzzy Search Algorithm to Determine Optimal Wind Plant Sizes and Locations in Iowa (open access)

Application of a Dynamic Fuzzy Search Algorithm to Determine Optimal Wind Plant Sizes and Locations in Iowa

This paper illustrates a method for choosing the optimal mix of wind capacity at several geographically dispersed locations. The method is based on a dynamic fuzzy search algorithm that can be applied to different optimization targets. We illustrate the method using two objective functions for the optimization: maximum economic benefit and maximum reliability. We also illustrate the sensitivity of the fuzzy economic benefit solutions to small perturbations of the capacity selections at each wind site. We find that small changes in site capacity and/or location have small effects on the economic benefit provided by wind power plants. We use electric load and generator data from Iowa, along with high-quality wind-speed data collected by the Iowa Wind Energy Institute.
Date: September 21, 2001
Creator: Milligan, M. R., National Renewable Energy Laboratory & Factor, T., Iowa Wind Energy Institute
System: The UNT Digital Library
APPLICATIONS OF ABUNDANCE DATA AND REQUIREMETNS FOR COSMOCHEMICAL MODELING (open access)

APPLICATIONS OF ABUNDANCE DATA AND REQUIREMETNS FOR COSMOCHEMICAL MODELING

None
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: WIENS, R.; BUSEMANN, H. & AL, ET
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applications of Crystal Plasticity in Multiscale Modeling (open access)

Applications of Crystal Plasticity in Multiscale Modeling

Multiscale modeling with crystal plasticity constitutive relations is used to determine the average response of a polycrystal. The measured crystallographic texture of a copper shaped charge liner is used in a crystal plasticity model to construct a yield surface that exhibits normal-shear coupling. Simulations with this yield surface model demonstrate the spinning behavior observed in the spin formed copper shaped charges.
Date: September 24, 2001
Creator: Becker, R.; Busche, M.; Schwartz, A. J. & Kumar, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applications using a Picosecond 14.7 nm X-Ray Laser (open access)

Applications using a Picosecond 14.7 nm X-Ray Laser

We report recent application experiments on the LLNL COMET tabletop facility using the picosecond, 14.7 nm Ni-like Pd x-ray laser. This work includes measurements of a laser-produced plasma density profile with a diffraction grating interferometer.
Date: September 21, 2001
Creator: Dunn, J.; Smith, R. F.; Nilsen, J.; Shlyaptsev, V. N.; Filevich, J.; Rocca, J. J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applying Fast String Matching to Intrusion Detection (open access)

Applying Fast String Matching to Intrusion Detection

None
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: FISK, M. & VARGHESE, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Approximate Splitting for Ensembles of Trees using Histograms (open access)

Approximate Splitting for Ensembles of Trees using Histograms

Recent work in classification indicates that significant improvements in accuracy can be obtained by growing an ensemble of classifiers and having them vote for the most popular class. Implicit in many of these techniques is the concept of randomization that generates different classifiers. In this paper, they focus on ensembles of decision trees that are created using a randomized procedure based on histograms. Techniques, such as histograms, that discretize continuous variables, have long been used in classification to convert the data into a form suitable for processing and to reduce the compute time. The approach combines the ideas behind discretization through histograms and randomization in ensembles to create decision trees by randomly selecting a split point in an interval around the best bin boundary in the histogram. The experimental results with public domain data show that ensembles generated using this approach are competitive in accuracy and superior in computational cost to other ensembles techniques such as boosting and bagging.
Date: September 28, 2001
Creator: Kamath, C.; Cantú-Paz, E. & Littau, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Are the J/psi and chi_c A dependencies the same? (open access)

Are the J/psi and chi_c A dependencies the same?

It has been empirically observed that the dependence of J/{psi} and {psi}{prime} production on nuclear mass number A is very similar. This has been postulated to be due to the predominance of color octet pre-resonant states in charmonium production and absorption. Two new experiments, NA60 at CERN and HERA-B at DESY, will measure the {chi}{sub c} A dependence for the first time. These measurements should shed new light on the charmonium production and absorption mechanisms.
Date: September 24, 2001
Creator: Vogt, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic scale heating in energetic plasma deposition (open access)

Atomic scale heating in energetic plasma deposition

Energetic deposition using filtered cathodic arc plasma is known to lead to well adherent and dense films. Interface mixing, subplantation depth, texture, and stress of the growing film are often studied as a function of the kinetic energy of condensing ions. Ions have also potential energy contributing to atomic scale heating, secondary electron emission and potential sputtering, thereby affecting all film properties. A table is presented showing kinetic and potential energies of ions in cathodic arc plasmas. These energies are greater than the binding energy, surface binding energy, and activation energy of surface diffusion. The role of potential energy on film growth is not limited to the cathodic arc plasma deposition process.
Date: September 28, 2001
Creator: Anders, Andre
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam measurements on the H- source and Low Energy Beam Transport system for the Spallation Neutron Source (open access)

Beam measurements on the H- source and Low Energy Beam Transport system for the Spallation Neutron Source

The ion source and Low Energy Beam Transport section of the front-end systems presently being built by Berkeley Lab are required to provide 50 mA of H - beam current at 6% duty factor (1 ms pulses at 60 Hz) with a normalized rms emittance of less than 0.20 p-mm-mrad. Experimental results, including emittance, chopping, and steering measurements, on the performance of the ion source and LEBT system operated at the demanded beam parameters will be discussed.
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: Thomae, R.; Gough, R.; Keller, R.; Leung, K. N.; Schenkel, T.; Aleksandrov, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beauty Physics at CDF (open access)

Beauty Physics at CDF

The CDF experiment has performed several measurements in the area of beauty and charm physics with the data collected during the Run I of the Tevatron. The experiment is now ready to collect new data at higher luminosity with a substantially improved detector. We discuss these improvements and the future measurements in this area of physics accessible after the first few years of data taking. These include the measurement of the mixing frequency of B{sub s} mesons and that of CP violation effects in the B{sub 0} sector.
Date: September 4, 2001
Creator: Bedeschi, Franco
System: The UNT Digital Library
BENCHMARKING TEN CODES AGAINST THE RECENT GSI MEASUREMENTS OF THE NUCLIDE YIELDS FROM 208Pb, 197Au, AND 238U+p REACTIONS AT 1 GeV/NUCLEON (open access)

BENCHMARKING TEN CODES AGAINST THE RECENT GSI MEASUREMENTS OF THE NUCLIDE YIELDS FROM 208Pb, 197Au, AND 238U+p REACTIONS AT 1 GeV/NUCLEON

None
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: MASHNIK, S. G.; PRAEL, R. E. & AL, ET
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catalysis of PAH Biodegradation by Humic Acid Shown in Synchrotron Infrared Studies (open access)

Catalysis of PAH Biodegradation by Humic Acid Shown in Synchrotron Infrared Studies

The role of humic acid (HA) in the biodegradation of toxic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) has been the subject of controversy, particularly in unsaturated environments. By utilizing an infrared spectromicroscope and a very bright, nondestructive synchrotron photon source, we monitored in situ and, over time, the influence of HA on the progression of degradation of pyrene (a model PAH) by a bacterial colony on a magnetite surface. Our results indicate that HA dramatically shortens the onset time for PAH biodegradation from 168 to 2 h. In the absence of HA, it takes the bacteria about 168 h to produce sufficient glycolipids to solubilize pyrene and make it bioavailable for biodegradation. These results will have large implications for the bioremediation of contaminated soils.
Date: September 26, 2001
Creator: Holman, Hoi-Ying N.; Nieman, Karl; Sorensen, Darwin L.; Miller, Charles D.; Martin, Michael C.; Borch, Thomas et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
CEBAF at 12 and 25 GeV (open access)

CEBAF at 12 and 25 GeV

The US nuclear physics community has identified an upgrade of CEBAF to 12 GeV as one of its top priorities. The principal motivation is to enable meson spectroscopy with 9 GeV polarized, quasi-monochromatic photons. A plan for implementing the 12 GeV upgrade has been prepared. Subsystem designs are being tested. Additional opportunities to reduce total project costs have been identified and will be pursued. The plan now calls for the addition to CEBAF of 10 new high-performance cryomodules and a new recirculation arc, yielding 12 GeV after 5.5 passes through the accelerator. Formal construction start could be in 2006. The same cryomodule design would subsequently be the building block for an eventual upgrade to 25 GeV.
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: Harwood, Leigh & Reece, Charles
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cellular senescence as a tumor suppressor mechanism (open access)

Cellular senescence as a tumor suppressor mechanism

None
Date: September 18, 2001
Creator: Campisi, Judith
System: The UNT Digital Library
CHROMATE INHIBITION OF THE LOCALIZED CORROSION OF ALUMINUM: MEASUREMENTS OF ELECTROCHEMICAL TRANSIENTS. (open access)

CHROMATE INHIBITION OF THE LOCALIZED CORROSION OF ALUMINUM: MEASUREMENTS OF ELECTROCHEMICAL TRANSIENTS.

We investigated the inhibition by chromate ions of the localized corrosion of aluminum by electrochemical transient measurements. In agreement with other work, the measurements demonstrated that chromate is a cathodic inhibitor for aluminum in open circuit. The reduction of hexavalent chromium to trivalent chromium is assumed to take place on catalyzed sites of the surface. The resulting products inhibit oxygen reduction reactions at these sites, thereby retarding pitting corrosion.
Date: September 2, 2001
Creator: Sasaki, K. & Isaacs, H. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cleanroom energy benchmarking results (open access)

Cleanroom energy benchmarking results

A utility market transformation project studied energy use and identified energy efficiency opportunities in cleanroom HVAC design and operation for fourteen cleanrooms. This paper presents the results of this work and relevant observations. Cleanroom owners and operators know that cleanrooms are energy intensive but have little information to compare their cleanroom's performance over time, or to others. Direct comparison of energy performance by traditional means, such as watts/ft{sup 2}, is not a good indicator with the wide range of industrial processes and cleanliness levels occurring in cleanrooms. In this project, metrics allow direct comparison of the efficiency of HVAC systems and components. Energy and flow measurements were taken to determine actual HVAC system energy efficiency. The results confirm a wide variation in operating efficiency and they identify other non-energy operating problems. Improvement opportunities were identified at each of the benchmarked facilities. Analysis of the best performing systems and components is summarized, as are areas for additional investigation.
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: Tschudi, William & Xu, Tengfang
System: The UNT Digital Library
Colorado Public Utility Commission's Xcel Wind Decision (open access)

Colorado Public Utility Commission's Xcel Wind Decision

In early 2001 the Colorado Public Utility Commission ordered Xcel Energy to undertake good faith negotiations for a wind plant as part of the utility's integrated resource plan. This paper summarizes the key points of the PUC decision, which addressed the wind plant's projected impact on generation cost and ancillary services. The PUC concluded that the wind plant would cost less than new gas-fired generation under reasonable gas cost projections.
Date: September 20, 2001
Creator: Lehr, R. L. (NRUC/NWCC); Nielsen, J. (Land and Water Fund of the Rockies); Andrews, S. & Milligan, M. (National Renewable Energy Laboratory)
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparison of Long-Lived, Prolieration Resistant Fast Reactors (open access)

A Comparison of Long-Lived, Prolieration Resistant Fast Reactors

Nuclear power is expected to play a significant role in meeting future electricity needs, and in significantly reducing emissions compared to fossil-fueled power plants. However, the next generation of nuclear power plants will be expected to demonstrate significant advancements in economics, safety, waste disposal, and proliferation resistance. Many reactor types have been proposed for “Generation IV”, some of which have been fast reactors. The work discussed in here is part of a larger effort at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL) and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to investigate the suitability of lead-bismuth cooled fast reactors for producing low-cost electricity as well as for actinide burning. The goal of the entire project is to identify and analyze the key technical issues in core neutronics, materials, thermal-hydraulics, fuels, and economics associated with the development of this reactor concept. The goal of the work presented in this paper is to investigate and compare a variety of possible fuel types, looking for optimum economics for an actinide burning, low cost of electricity, reactor design using sodium or lead-bismuth as the coolant.
Date: September 1, 2001
Creator: Weaver, Kevan Dean; Herring, James Stephen & Mac Donald, Philip Elsworth
System: The UNT Digital Library