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2001 Gordon Research Conference on Laser Diagnostics in Combustion. Final Progress Report (open access)

2001 Gordon Research Conference on Laser Diagnostics in Combustion. Final Progress Report

None
Date: July 6, 2001
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Absorption of Bound States in Hot, Dense Matter (open access)

Absorption of Bound States in Hot, Dense Matter

Preliminary experiments using a long pulse laser generated X-ray source to back-light a short pulse laser heated thin foil have been performed at the Laboratoire pour l'Utilisation des Lasers Intenses (LULI) at Ecole Polytechnique in France. In this experiment, a 2 J, 300 ps, 532 nm laser was used to create the X-ray back-lighter. The primary diagnostic was a von Hamos spectrograph coupled to a 500 fs X-ray streak camera (TREX-VHS) developed at LLNL. This diagnostic combines high collection efficiency ({approx} 10{sup -4} steradians) with fast temporal response ({approx} 500 fs), allowing resolution of extremely transient spectral variations. The TREX-VHS was used to determine the time history, intensity, and spectral content of the back-lighter. The second diagnostic, Fourier Domain Interferometry (FDI), provides information about the position of the critical density of the target and thus the expansion hydrodynamics, laying the ground work for the plasma characterization. The plasmas were determined to be moderately to strongly coupled, resulting in absorption measurements that provide insight into bound states under such conditions.
Date: March 6, 2001
Creator: Shepherd, R.; Audebert, P.; Chenais-Popovics, C.; Geindre, J. P.; Fajardo, M.; Iglesias, C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
ADVANCED STEAM GENERATORS (open access)

ADVANCED STEAM GENERATORS

Concerns about climate change have encouraged significant interest in concepts for ultra-low or ''zero''-emissions power generation systems. In some proposed concepts, nitrogen is removed from the combustion air and replaced with another diluent such as carbon dioxide or steam. In this way, formation of nitrogen oxides is prevented, and the exhaust stream can be separated into concentrated CO{sub 2} and steam or water streams. The concentrated CO{sub 2} stream could then serve as input to a CO{sub 2} sequestration process or utilized in some other way. Some of these concepts are illustrated in Figure 1. This project is an investigation of one approach to ''zero'' emission power generation. Oxy-fuel combustion is used with steam as diluent in a power cycle proposed by Clean Energy Systems, Inc. (CES) [1,2]. In oxy-fuel combustion, air separation is used to produce nearly pure oxygen for combustion. In this particular concept, the combustion temperatures are moderated by steam as a diluent. An advantage of this technique is that water in the product stream can be condensed with relative ease, leaving a pure CO{sub 2} stream suitable for sequestration. Because most of the atmospheric nitrogen has been separated from the oxidant, the potential to form any …
Date: November 6, 2001
Creator: Richards, George A.; Casleton, Kent H.; Lewis, Robie E.; Rogers, William A.; Woike, Mark R. & Willis, Brian P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advances in ANL reactor physics methods inspired by A. F. Henry. (open access)

Advances in ANL reactor physics methods inspired by A. F. Henry.

None
Date: July 6, 2001
Creator: Khalil, H. S.; Taiwo, T. A.; Yang, W. S. & Finck, P. J.
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
CHARACTERIZATION OF A RIGID BARRIER FILTER SYSTEM (open access)

CHARACTERIZATION OF A RIGID BARRIER FILTER SYSTEM

A mathematical model is formulated to describe the dynamics of a rigid barrier filter system. Complete with filtration, regeneration and particle re-deposition, this model provides sizing information for new filter systems and diagnostic information for operating filter systems. To turn this model into a practical and smart filter system predictive model, monitoring devices for variables such as real-time particle concentration and size distribution are currently under laboratory development. The program goal is to introduce a smart filter system to supervise its operation and to assure its system reliability. Primarily, a smart filter system will update operating information, sound up malfunction alarms, and provide self-activated measures such as adjusting the cleaning frequency, intensity and back-pulse duration.
Date: November 6, 2001
Creator: Chiang, Ta-Kuan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical freeze-out parameters at RHIC from microscopic model calculations (open access)

Chemical freeze-out parameters at RHIC from microscopic model calculations

None
Date: April 6, 2001
Creator: Bravina, L. V.; Zabrodin, E. E.; Bass, S. A.; Faessler, A.; Fuchs, C.; Gorenstein, M. I. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Circulating Fluid-Bed Technology for Advanced Power Systems (open access)

Circulating Fluid-Bed Technology for Advanced Power Systems

Circulating fluid bed technology offers the advantages of a plug flow, yet well-mixed, and high throughput reactor for power plant applications. The ability to effectively scale these systems in size, geometry, and operating conditions is limited because of the extensive deviation from ideal dilute gas-solids flow behavior (Monazam et al., 2001; Li, 1994). Two fluid computations show promise of accurately simulating the hydrodynamics in the riser circulating fluid bed; however, validation tests for large vessels with materials of interest to the power industry are lacking (Guenther et al., 2002). There is little available data in reactors large enough so that geometry (i.e. entrance, exit, and wall) effects do not dominate the hydrodynamics, yet with sufficiently large particle sizes to allow sufficiently large grid sizes to allow accurate and timely hydrodynamic simulations. To meet this need experimental tests were undertaken with relatively large particles of narrow size distribution in a large enough unit to reduce the contributions of wall effects and light enough to avoid geometry effects. While computational fluid dynamic calculations are capable of generating detailed velocity and density profiles, it is believed that the validation and model development begins with the ability to simulate the global flow regime transitions. …
Date: November 6, 2001
Creator: Shadle, Lawrence J.; Ludlow, J. Christopher; Mei, Joseph S. & Guenther, Christopher
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Colour Glass Condensate: An Introduction (open access)

The Colour Glass Condensate: An Introduction

In these lectures, the authors develop the theory of the Colour Glass Condensate. This is the matter made of gluons in the high density environment characteristic of deep inelastic scattering or hadron-hadron collisions at very high energy. The lectures are self contained and comprehensive. They start with a phenomenological introduction, develop the theory of classical gluon fields appropriate for the Colour Glass, and end with a derivation and discussion of the renormalization group equations which determine this effective theory.
Date: August 6, 2001
Creator: Iancu, E.; Leonidov, A. & McLerran, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of emerging diagnostic tools for large commercial HVAC systems (open access)

Comparison of emerging diagnostic tools for large commercial HVAC systems

Diagnostic software tools for large commercial buildings are being developed to help detect and diagnose energy and other performance problems with building operations. These software applications utilize energy management control system (EMCS) trend log data. Due to the recent development of diagnostic tools, there has been little detailed comparison among the tools and a limited awareness of tool capabilities by potential users. Today, these diagnostic tools focus mainly on air handlers, but the opportunity exists for broadening the scope of the tools to include all major parts of heating, cooling, and ventilation systems in more detail. This paper compares several tools in the following areas: (1) Scope, intent, and background; (2) Data acquisition, pre-processing, and management; (3) Problems detected; (4) Raw data visualization; (5) Manual and automated diagnostic methods and (6) Level of automation. This comparison is intended to provide practitioners and researchers with a picture of the current state of diagnostic tools. There is tremendous potential for these tools to help improve commercial building energy and non-energy performance.
Date: April 6, 2001
Creator: Friedman, Hannah & Piette, Mary Ann
System: The UNT Digital Library
Composition Effects on Aluminide Oxidation Performance: Objectives for Improved Bond Coats (open access)

Composition Effects on Aluminide Oxidation Performance: Objectives for Improved Bond Coats

Formerly, the role of metallic coatings on Ni-base superalloys was simply to limit environmental attack of the underlying substrate. However, a new paradigm has been established for metallic coatings adapted as bond coats for thermal barrier coatings. It is no longer sufficient for the coating to just minimize the corrosion rate. The metallic coating must also form a slow-growing external Al{sub 2}O{sub 3} layer beneath the overlying low thermal conductivity ceramic top coat. This thermally grown oxide or scale must have near-perfect adhesion in order to limit spallation of the top coat, thereby achieving a long coating lifetime. While oxidation is not the only concern in complex thermal barrier coating systems, it is, however, a primary factor in developing the next generation of bond coats. Therefore, a set of compositional guidelines for coatings is proposed in order to maximize oxidation performance. These criteria are based on test results of cast alloy compositions to quantify an d understand possible improvements as a basis for further investigations using coatings made by chemical vapor deposited (CVD). Experimental work includes furnace cycle testing and in-depth characterization of the alumina scale, including transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
Date: September 6, 2001
Creator: Pint, BA
System: The UNT Digital Library
COMPUTATIONAL FLUID DYNAMICS MODELING ANALYSIS OF COMBUSTORS (open access)

COMPUTATIONAL FLUID DYNAMICS MODELING ANALYSIS OF COMBUSTORS

In the current fiscal year FY01, several CFD simulations were conducted to investigate the effects of moisture in biomass/coal, particle injection locations, and flow parameters on carbon burnout and NO{sub x} inside a 150 MW GEEZER industrial boiler. Various simulations were designed to predict the suitability of biomass cofiring in coal combustors, and to explore the possibility of using biomass as a reburning fuel to reduce NO{sub x}. Some additional CFD simulations were also conducted on CERF combustor to examine the combustion characteristics of pulverized coal in enriched O{sub 2}/CO{sub 2} environments. Most of the CFD models available in the literature treat particles to be point masses with uniform temperature inside the particles. This isothermal condition may not be suitable for larger biomass particles. To this end, a stand alone program was developed from the first principles to account for heat conduction from the surface of the particle to its center. It is envisaged that the recently developed non-isothermal stand alone module will be integrated with the Fluent solver during next fiscal year to accurately predict the carbon burnout from larger biomass particles. Anisotropy in heat transfer in radial and axial will be explored using different conductivities in radial and …
Date: November 6, 2001
Creator: Mathur, M. P.; Freeman, Mark & Gera, Dinesh
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Computational Workbench Environment For Virtual Power Plant Simulation (open access)

A Computational Workbench Environment For Virtual Power Plant Simulation

In this paper we describe our progress toward creating a computational workbench for performing virtual simulations of Vision 21 power plants. The workbench provides a framework for incorporating a full complement of models, ranging from simple heat/mass balance reactor models that run in minutes to detailed models that can require several hours to execute. The workbench is being developed using the SCIRun software system. To leverage a broad range of visualization tools the OpenDX visualization package has been interfaced to the workbench. In Year One our efforts have focused on developing a prototype workbench for a conventional pulverized coal fired power plant. The prototype workbench uses a CFD model for the radiant furnace box and reactor models for downstream equipment. In Year Two and Year Three, the focus of the project will be on creating models for gasifier based systems and implementing these models into an improved workbench. In this paper we describe our work effort for Year One and outline our plans for future work. We discuss the models included in the prototype workbench and the software design issues that have been addressed to incorporate such a diverse range of models into a single software environment. In addition, we …
Date: November 6, 2001
Creator: Bockelie, Michael J.; Swensen, David A.; Denison, Martin K. & Sarofim, Adel F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A control-theoretic formulation of the bunch train cavity interaction. (open access)

A control-theoretic formulation of the bunch train cavity interaction.

The bunch train cavity interaction is an accelerator physics problem, for which a system-theoretic model is lacking. Modal analysis has been used to characterize the system dynamics, exploiting the system's symmetry. Correspondingly, control design has been done using classical frequency-domain-based control. Several shortcomings of these methods are highlighted, all of which are remedied by a new time-domain, system-theoretic model presented herein. The new formulation is a periodic, discrete-time system, amenable to state-space control-design methods.
Date: March 6, 2001
Creator: Schwartz, C.; Haddad, H. & Nassiri, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
DARHT-II Downstream Transport Beamline (open access)

DARHT-II Downstream Transport Beamline

This paper describes the mechanical design of the downstream beam transport line for the second axis of the Dual Axis Radiographic Hydrodynamic Test (DARHT II) Facility. The DARHT-II project is a collaboration between LANL, LBNL and LLNL. DARHT II is a 18.4-MeV, 2000-Amperes, 2-{micro}sec linear induction accelerator designed to generate short bursts of x-rays for the purpose of radiographing dense objects. The downstream beam transport line is approximately 22-meter long region extending from the end of the accelerator to the bremsstrahlung target. Within this proposed transport line there are 12 conventional solenoid, quadrupole and dipole magnets; as well as several specialty magnets, which transport and focus the beam to the target and to the beam dumps. There are two high power beam dumps, which are designed to absorb 80-kJ per pulse during accelerator start-up and operation. Aspects of the mechanical design of these elements are presented.
Date: June 6, 2001
Creator: Westenskow, G A; Bertolini, L R; Duffy, P T & Paul, A C
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deoxygenations of (silox)₃WNO and R₃PO by (silox)₃M (M = V, Ta) and (silox)₃NbL (silox = ᵗBu₃SiO): Consequences of Electronic Effects (open access)

Deoxygenations of (silox)₃WNO and R₃PO by (silox)₃M (M = V, Ta) and (silox)₃NbL (silox = ᵗBu₃SiO): Consequences of Electronic Effects

Article discussing deoxygenations of (silox)3 WNO and R3PO by (silox)3M (M = V, Ta) and (silox)3NbL (silox = tBu3SiO) and consequences of electronic effects.
Date: June 6, 2001
Creator: Veige, Adam S.; Slaughter, LeGrande M.; Wolczanski, Peter T.; Matsunaga, Nikita; Decker, Stephen A. & Cundari, Thomas R., 1964-
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Foster Wheeler's Vision 21 Partial Gasification Module (open access)

Development of Foster Wheeler's Vision 21 Partial Gasification Module

The US Department of Energy (DOE) has awarded Foster Wheeler Development Corporation a contract to develop a partial gasification module (PGM) that represents a critical element of several potential coal-fired Vision 21 plants. When utilized for electrical power generation, these plants will operate with efficiencies greater than 60% while producing near zero emissions of traditional stack gas pollutants. The new process partially gasifies coal at elevated pressure producing a coal derived syngas and a char residue. The syngas can be used to fuel the most advanced power producing equipment such as solid oxide fuel cells or gas turbines or processed to produce clean liquid fuels or chemicals for industrial users. The char residue is not wasted; it can also be used to generate electricity by fueling boilers that drive the most advanced ultra-supercritical pressure steam turbines. The unique aspect of the process is that it utilizes a pressurized circulating fluidized bed partial gasifier and does not attempt to consume the coal in a single step. To convert all the coal to syngas in a single step requires extremely high temperatures ({approx} 2500 to 2800F) that melt and vaporize the coal and essentially drive all coal ash contaminants into the syngas. …
Date: November 6, 2001
Creator: Robertson, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Durable Zinc Oxide-Based Regenerable Sorbents for Desulfurization of Syngas in a Fixed-Bed Reactor (open access)

Durable Zinc Oxide-Based Regenerable Sorbents for Desulfurization of Syngas in a Fixed-Bed Reactor

A fixed-bed regenerable desulfurization sorbent, identified as RVS-land developed by researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory, was awarded the R&D 100 award in 2000 and is currently offered as a commercial product by Sued-Chemie Inc. An extensive testing program for this sorbent was undertaken which included tests at a wide range of temperatures, pressures and gas compositions both simulated and generated in an actual gasifier for sulfidation and regeneration. This testing has demonstrated that during these desulfurization tests, the RVS-1 sorbent maintained an effluent H2S concentration of <5 ppmv at temperatures from 260 to 600 C (500-1100 F) and pressures of 203-2026 kPa(2 to 20 atm) with a feed containing 1.2 vol% H{sub 2}S. The types of syngas tested ranged from an oxygen-blown Texaco gasifier to biomass-generated syngas. The RVS-1 sorbent has high crush strength and attrition resistance, which, unlike past sorbent formulations, does not decrease with extended testing at actual at operating conditions. The sulfur capacity of the sorbent is roughly 17 to 20 wt.% and also remains constant during extended testing (>25 cycles). In addition to H{sub 2}S, the RVS-1 sorbent has also demonstrated the ability to remove dimethyl sulfide and carbonyl sulfide …
Date: November 6, 2001
Creator: Siriwardane, Ranjani V.; Cicero, Daniel C. (U.S. Department of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory, Morgantown); Stiegel, Gary J.; Gupta, Raghubir P. (U.S. Department of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory, Pittsburgh) & Turk, Brian S. (Research Triangle Institute)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic Experiments: an Overview (open access)

Dynamic Experiments: an Overview

Dynamic high pressures are applied rapidly to materials to increase density and temperature, to alter. crystal structure and microstructure, and to change physical and chemical properties [1]. These effects are achieved at high pressures and many are retained on release from high pressures. Today it is possible to achieve pressures of order 50 to 500 GPa (5 Mbar), compressions up to fifteen fold greater than initial solid density in the case of hydrogen, and temperatures ranging from 1 K up to several ev (11,600 K) in condensed matter. At these extreme conditions the bonding , structure, physical properties and chemistry of condensed matter are changed substantially from what they are at ambient. This in turn opens up a whole new range of opportunities for novel condensed matter physics, chemistry, and planetary research at extreme conditions. If high pressure phases could be quenched to ambient, then new opportunities would become available in condensed matter and material sciences, as well as for technological applications. This article is concerned with high pressures achieved dynamically by shock compression [2]. In fact, the terms dynamic and shock are used interchangably to describe pressure pulses above 1 GPa (10 kbar) or so. Because dynamic compression is …
Date: July 6, 2001
Creator: Nellis, W J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of thin-film coating on wear in EGR-contaminated oil. (open access)

Effect of thin-film coating on wear in EGR-contaminated oil.

Increased use of higher-efficiency compression ignition direct injection (CIDI) diesel engines instead of today's gasoline engines will result in reduced fuel consumption and greenhouse gases emissions. However, NO{sub x} and particulate exhaust emissions from diesel engines must be significantly reduced due to their possible adverse health effects. Exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) is an effective way to reduce NO{sub x} emissions from diesel engines, but the particulates and acidic exhaust products in the recirculated gas will contaminate engine lubricant oil by increasing the soot content and total acid number (TAN). These factors will increase the wear rate in many critical engine components and seriously compromise engine durability. We have investigated the use of commercially available thin and hard coatings (TiN, TiCN, TiAlN, and CrN) to mitigate the negative effects of EGR on wear. In tests with the four-ball machine according to ASTM D4172, we found that all the four coatings deposited on M-50 steel significantly reduced wear in EGR-contaminated oils when compared with uncoated M50 steel balls.
Date: December 6, 2001
Creator: Ajayi, O. O.; Aldajah, S. H.; Erdemir, A. & Fenske, G. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of an Absorption Heat Pump to Mitigate Plant Capacity Reduction Due to Ambient Temperature Rise for an Air-Cooled Ammonia and Water Cycle: Preprint (open access)

Evaluation of an Absorption Heat Pump to Mitigate Plant Capacity Reduction Due to Ambient Temperature Rise for an Air-Cooled Ammonia and Water Cycle: Preprint

Air-cooled geothermal plants suffer substantial decreases in generating capacity at increased ambient temperatures. As the ambient temperature rises by 50 F above a design value of 50 F, at low brine-resource temperatures, the decrease in generating capacity can be more than 50%. This decrease is caused primarily by increased condenser pressure. Using mixed-working fluids has recently drawn considerable attention for use in power cycles. Such cycles are more readily amenable to use of absorption ''heat pumps.'' For a system that uses ammonia and water as the mixed-working fluid, this paper evaluates using an absorption heat pump to reduce condenser backpressure. At high ambient temperatures, part of the turbine exhaust vapor is absorbed into a circulating mixed stream in an absorber in series with the main condenser. This steam is pumped up to a higher pressure and heated to strip the excess vapor, which is recondensed using an additional air-cooled condenser. The operating conditions are chosen to reconstitute this condensate back to the same concentration as drawn from the original system. We analyzed two power plants of nominal 1-megawatt capacity. The design resource temperatures were 250 F and 300 F. Ambient temperature was allowed to rise from a design value of …
Date: August 6, 2001
Creator: Bharathan, D. & Nix, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental analysis of high-resolution soft x-ray microscopy (open access)

Experimental analysis of high-resolution soft x-ray microscopy

The soft x-ray, full-field microscope XM-1 at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's (LBNL) Advanced Light Source has already demonstrated its capability to resolve 25-nm features. This was accomplished using a micro zone plate (MZP) with an outer zone width of 25 nm. Limited by the aspect ratio of the resist used in the fabrication, the gold-plating thickness of that zone plate is around 40 nm. However, some applications, in particular, biological imaging, prefer improved efficiency, which can be achieved by high-aspect-ratio zone plates. We accomplish this by using a bilayer-resist process in the zone plate fabrication. As our first attempt, a 40-nm-outer-zone-width MZP with a nickel-plating thickness of 150 nm (aspect ratio of 4:1) was successfully fabricated. Relative to the 25-nm MZP, this zone plate is ten times more efficient. Using this high-efficiency MZP, a line test pattern with half period of 30 nm is resolved by the microscope at photon energy of 500 eV. Furthermore, with a new multilayer mirror, the XM-1 can now perform imaging up to 1.8 keV. An image of a line test pattern with half period of 40 nm has a measured modulation of 90%. The image was taken at 1.77 keV with the high-efficiency MZP …
Date: September 6, 2001
Creator: Chao, Weilun; Anderson, Erik H.; Denbeaux, Gregory; Harteneck, Bruce; Pearson, Angelic L.; Olynick, Deirdre et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Explosion-induced combustion of hydrocarbon clouds in a chamber (open access)

Explosion-induced combustion of hydrocarbon clouds in a chamber

The interaction of the detonation of a solid HE-charge with a non-premixed cloud of hydro-carbon fuel in a chamber was studied in laboratory experiments. Soap bubbles filled with a flammable gas were subjected to the blast wave created by the detonation of PETN-charges (0.2 g < mass < 0.5 g). The dynamics of the combustion system were investigated by means of high-speed photography and measurement of the quasi-static chamber pressure.
Date: February 6, 2001
Creator: Neuwald, P; Reichenbach, H & Kuhl, A L
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extraction of highly charged ions from the electron beam ion trap at LBNL for applications in surface analysis and Materials Science (open access)

Extraction of highly charged ions from the electron beam ion trap at LBNL for applications in surface analysis and Materials Science

We describe results from highly ion extraction experiments at the Electron Beam Ion Trap (EBIT) facility which is now operated at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory after transfer from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Requirements on ion source performance for the application of highly charged ions (e. g. Xe{sup 44+}) in surface analysis and materials science are discussed.
Date: September 6, 2001
Creator: Schenkel, T.; Persaud, A.; Kraemer, A.; McDonald, J. W.; Holder, J. P.; Hamza, A. V. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library