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Spontaneous polarization and piezoelectricity in boron nitride nanotubes (open access)

Spontaneous polarization and piezoelectricity in boron nitride nanotubes

Article on spontaneous polarization and piezoelectricity in boron nitride nanotubes.
Date: June 10, 2003
Creator: Nakhmanson, Serge M.; Calzolari, Arrigo; Meunier, Vincent; Bernholc, Jerry & Buongiorno Nardelli, Marco
System: The UNT Digital Library
The AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalesvky Lecture - 3 part Lecture Series (open access)

The AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalesvky Lecture - 3 part Lecture Series

The Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) in cooperation with the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) and with funding from the Department of Energy initiated a new lecture series. The purpose of the lecture series is to increase the visibility of women who have made significant contributions in applied or computational mathematics. The AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalevsky Lecture is presented at the SIAM Annual Meeting which is a national conference. The lecturer is a woman who has made distinguished contributions in applied or computational mathematics. The lecturer is determined by the Selection Committee which consists of two members of AWM and two members of SIAM, appointed by the presidents of these organizations. The committee may solicit nominations from other members of the scientific and engineering community. The lectureship may be awarded to any woman in the scientific or engineering community.
Date: June 3, 2003
Creator: Lenhart, Suzanne & Lewis, Jennifer
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-level detection and quantification of Plutonium(III, IV, V,and VI) using a liquid core waveguide (open access)

Low-level detection and quantification of Plutonium(III, IV, V,and VI) using a liquid core waveguide

Understanding the aqueous chemistry of plutonium, in particular in environmental conditions, is often complicated by plutonium's complex redox chemistry. Because plutonium possesses four oxidation states, all of which can coexist in solution, a reliable method for the identification of these oxidation states is needed. The identification of plutonium oxidation states at low levels in aqueous solution is often accomplished through an indirect determination using series of liquid-liquid extraction procedures using oxidation state specific reagents such as HDEHP and TTA. While these methods, coupled with radioactive counting techniques provide superior limits of detection they may influence the plutonium redox equilibrium, are time consuming, waste intensive and costly. Other analytical methods such as mass spectrometry and radioactive counting as stand alone methods provide excellent detection limits but lack the ability to discriminate between the oxidation states of the plutonium ions in solution.
Date: June 28, 2003
Creator: Wilson, Richard E.; Hu, Yung-Jin & Nitsche, Heino
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interfacial behavior of polymer electrolytes (open access)

Interfacial behavior of polymer electrolytes

Evidence is presented concerning the effect of surfaces on the segmental motion of PEO-based polymer electrolytes in lithium batteries. For dry systems with no moisture the effect of surfaces of nano-particle fillers is to inhibit the segmental motion and to reduce the lithium ion transport. These effects also occur at the surfaces in composite electrodes that contain considerable quantities of carbon black nano-particles for electronic connection. The problem of reduced polymer mobility is compounded by the generation of salt concentration gradients within the composite electrode. Highly concentrated polymer electrolytes have reduced transport properties due to the increased ionic cross-linking. Combined with the interfacial interactions this leads to the generation of low mobility electrolyte layers within the electrode and to loss of capacity and power capability. It is shown that even with planar lithium metal electrodes the concentration gradients can significantly impact the interfacial impedance. The interfacial impedance of lithium/PEO-LiTFSI cells varies depending upon the time elapsed since current was turned off after polarization. The behavior is consistent with relaxation of the salt concentration gradients and indicates that a portion of the interfacial impedance usually attributed to the SEI layer is due to concentrated salt solutions next to the electrode surfaces …
Date: June 3, 2003
Creator: Kerr, John; Kerr, John B.; Han, Yong Bong; Liu, Gao; Reeder, Craig; Xie, Jiangbing et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photovoltaic Module Thermal/Wind Performance: Long-Term Monitoring and Model Development for Energy Rating (open access)

Photovoltaic Module Thermal/Wind Performance: Long-Term Monitoring and Model Development for Energy Rating

In order to predict the energy production of photovoltaic (PV) modules, it is necessary to predict the module temperature as a function of ambient temperature, wind speed, wind direction, total irradiance, and relative humidity. This paper presents a mathematical model to predict the module temperature based on the field monitored real data of module temperature, ambient temperature, wind speed, wind direction and relative humidity.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: TamizhMani, G.; Ji, L.; Tang, Y.; Petacci, L. & Osterwald, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
DESIGN OF SUPERCONDUCTING COMBINED FUNCTION MAGNETS FOR THE 50 GEV PROTON BEAM LINE FOR THE J-PARC NEUTRINO EXPERIMENT. (open access)

DESIGN OF SUPERCONDUCTING COMBINED FUNCTION MAGNETS FOR THE 50 GEV PROTON BEAM LINE FOR THE J-PARC NEUTRINO EXPERIMENT.

Superconducting combined function magnets will be utilized for the 50GeV-750kW proton beam line for the J-PARC neutrino experiment and an R and D program has been launched at KEK. The magnet is designed to provide a combined function with a dipole field of 2.59 T and a quadrupole field of 18.7 T/m in a coil aperture of 173.4 mm. A single layer coil is proposed to reduce the fabrication cost and the coil arrangement in the 2-D cross-section results in left-right asymmetry. This paper reports the design study of the magnet.
Date: June 15, 2003
Creator: Wanderer, P. & Al., Et
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measured and Calculated Losses in a Model Dipole for Gsi's Heavy Ion Synchrotron. (open access)

Measured and Calculated Losses in a Model Dipole for Gsi's Heavy Ion Synchrotron.

The new heavy ion synchrotron facility proposed by GSI will have two superconducting magnet rings in the same tunnel, with rigidities of 300T{center_dot}m and 10OT{center_dot}m. Fast ramp times are needed. These can cause problems of ac loss and field distortion in the magnets. For the high energy ring, a lm model dipole magnet has been built, based on the RHIC dipole design. This magnet was tested under boiling liquid helium in a vertical dewar. The quench current showed very little dependence on ramp rate. The ac losses, measured by an electrical method, were fitted to straight line plots of loss/cycle versus ramp rate, thereby separating the eddy current and hysteresis components. These results were compared with calculated values, using parameters which had previously been measured on short samples of cable. Reasonably good agreement between theory and experiment was found, although the measured hysteresis loss is higher than expected in ramps to the highest field levels.
Date: June 15, 2003
Creator: Wanderer, P.; Anerella, M.; Ganetis, G.; Ghosh, A. K.; Joshi, P.; Marone, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Spatial Variations in Packing Fraction of Reactor Physics Parameters in Pebble-Bed Reactors (open access)

Effects of Spatial Variations in Packing Fraction of Reactor Physics Parameters in Pebble-Bed Reactors

The well-known spatial variation of packing fraction near the outer boundary of a pebble-bed reactor core is cited. The ramifications of this variation are explored with the MCNP computer code. It is found that the variation has negligible effects on the global reactor physics parameters extracted from the MCNP calculations for use in analysis by diffusion-theory codes, but for local reaction rates the effects of the variation are naturally important. Included is some preliminary work in using first-order perturbation theory for estimating the effect of the spatial variation of packing fraction on the core eigenvalue and the fission density distribution.
Date: June 11, 2003
Creator: Terry, W. K.; Ougouag, A. M.; Rahnema, F. & Mckinley, M. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Correlation of Structural and Electronic Properties with Solar Cell Efficiency for Amorphous Silicon Deposited at Increasing Growth Rates (open access)

Correlation of Structural and Electronic Properties with Solar Cell Efficiency for Amorphous Silicon Deposited at Increasing Growth Rates

This paper details the effects of increasing the growth rate of hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H), deposited by dc plasma chemical vapor deposition, on the structural and electronic properties of the material in comparison with the performance of solar cells incorporating such layers. The hydrogen content exhibits the strongest correlation with the solar cell efficiency. The defect density measured by two different techniques, correlate poorly but when measured by a third technique, correlates well. On the other hand, the Urbach tail slope correlated well when measured by two different techniques but poorly when measured by a third one.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Ganguly, G.; Han, D.; Williamson, D. L.; Nelson, B. P. & Cohen, J. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multivariate Clustering of Large-Scale Scientific Simulation Data (open access)

Multivariate Clustering of Large-Scale Scientific Simulation Data

Simulations of complex scientific phenomena involve the execution of massively parallel computer programs. These simulation programs generate large-scale data sets over the spatio-temporal space. Modeling such massive data sets is an essential step in helping scientists discover new information from their computer simulations. In this paper, we present a simple but effective multivariate clustering algorithm for large-scale scientific simulation data sets. Our algorithm utilizes the cosine similarity measure to cluster the field variables in a data set. Field variables include all variables except the spatial (x, y, z) and temporal (time) variables. The exclusion of the spatial dimensions is important since ''similar'' characteristics could be located (spatially) far from each other. To scale our multivariate clustering algorithm for large-scale data sets, we take advantage of the geometrical properties of the cosine similarity measure. This allows us to reduce the modeling time from O(n{sup 2}) to O(n x g(f(u))), where n is the number of data points, f(u) is a function of the user-defined clustering threshold, and g(f(u)) is the number of data points satisfying f(u). We show that on average g(f(u)) is much less than n. Finally, even though spatial variables do not play a role in building clusters, it …
Date: June 13, 2003
Creator: Eliassi-Rad, T & Critchlow, T
System: The UNT Digital Library
Domain Walls in Random Field Ising Magnets: Wetting (open access)

Domain Walls in Random Field Ising Magnets: Wetting

Domain walls in random-field Ising magnets can be investigated in groundstates into which walls are induced by prepared boundary conditions. We outline recent progress, and new results on (domain wall) wetting in random field systems. This is studied in fixed disorder configurations in the presence of an external field, which is varied.
Date: June 12, 2003
Creator: Seppala, E T; Alava, M J & Sillanpaa, I J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Identification of Wind Turbine Response to Turbulent Inflow Structures: Preprint (open access)

Identification of Wind Turbine Response to Turbulent Inflow Structures: Preprint

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory conducted an experiment to obtain detailed wind measurements and corresponding wind turbine measurements in order to establish a causal relationship between coherent turbulent structures and wind turbine blade fatigue loads. Data were collected for one entire wind season from October 2000 to May 2001. During this period, the wind turbine operated under atmospheric conditions that support the formation of coherent turbulent structures 31% of the time. Using the equivalent fatigue load parameter as a measure of wind turbine blade fatigue and using statistical measures of the turbulent fluctuations of the wind, general correlation between the turbulence and the wind turbine response is shown. Direct correlation cannot be resolved with 10-minute statistics for several reasons. Multiple turbulent structures can exist within a 10-minute record, and the equivalent fatigue load parameter is essentially a 10-minute statistic that cannot estimate turbine response to individual turbulent structures. Large-magnitude turbulent fluctuations in the form of instantaneous Reynolds stresses do not necessarily correspond directly to large-magnitude blade root moment amplitudes. Thus, additional work must be done to quantify the negative turbine response and to correlate this response to turbulent inflow parameters over time scales less than 10 minutes.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Hand, M. M.; Kelley, N. D. & Balas, M. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Creating a Public Web Database about High Performance (Green) Buildings: Preprint (open access)

Creating a Public Web Database about High Performance (Green) Buildings: Preprint

Preprint of conference paper about the DOEs High Performance Buildings Database to be presented at the ASHRAE Conference in Scotland in September 2003.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Crawley, D. B.; Torcellini, P. & Malin, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microsecond Microfluidic Mixing for Investigation of Protein Folding Kinetics (open access)

Microsecond Microfluidic Mixing for Investigation of Protein Folding Kinetics

We have developed and characterized a mixer to study the reaction kinetics of protein folding on a microsecond timescale. The mixer uses hydrodynamic focusing of pressure-driven flow in a microfluidic channel to reduce diffusion times as first demonstrated by Knight et al.[1]. Features of the mixer include 1 {micro}s mixing times, sample consumptions of order 1 nl/s, loading sample volumes on the order of microliters, and the ability to manufacture in fused silica for compatibility with most spectroscopic methods.
Date: June 25, 2003
Creator: Hertzog, D E; Santiago, J G & Bakajin, O
System: The UNT Digital Library
rSUGRA: Putting Nonuniversal Gaugino Masses on the (W)MAP (open access)

rSUGRA: Putting Nonuniversal Gaugino Masses on the (W)MAP

In this talk, we investigate the relic density and direct detection prospects of rSUGRA, a simple paradigm for supersymmetry breaking that allows for nonuniversal gaugino masses. We present updated plots reflecting the latest cosmological measurements from WMAP.
Date: June 17, 2003
Creator: Birkedal-Hansen, Andreas
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling a Cold Crucible Induction Heated Melter (open access)

Modeling a Cold Crucible Induction Heated Melter

FIDAP has been used to simulate melting of radioactive waste glass in a cold crucible induction heated melter. A model has been created that couples the magnetic vector potential (real and imaginary) to a transient startup of the melting process. This magnetic field is coupled to the mass, momentum, and energy equations that vary with time and position as the melt grows. The coupling occurs with the electrical conductivity of the glass as it rises above the melt temperature of the glass and heat is generated. Natural convection within the molten glass helps determine the shape of the melt as it progresses in time. An electromagnetic force is also implemented that is dependent on the electrical properties and frequency of the coil. This study shows the progression of the melt shape with time along with temperatures, power input, velocities, and magnetic vector potential. A power controller is implemented that controls the primary coil current and power.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Hawkes, Grant L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Key differences in the fabrication, irradiation and high temperature accident testing of US and German TRISO-coated particle fuel, and their implications on fuel performance (open access)

Key differences in the fabrication, irradiation and high temperature accident testing of US and German TRISO-coated particle fuel, and their implications on fuel performance

Historically, the irradiation performance of TRISO-coated gas reactor particle fuel in Germany has been superior to that in the US. German fuel generally has displayed gas release values during irradiation three orders of magnitude lower than US fuel. Thus, we have critically examined the TRISO-coated fuel fabrication processes in the US and Germany and the associated irradiation database with a goal of understanding why the German fuel behaves acceptably, why the US fuel has not faired as well, and what process/production parameters impart the reliable performance to this fuel form. The postirradiation examination results are also reviewed to identify failure mechanisms that may be the cause of the poorer US irradiation performance. This comparison will help determine the roles that particle fuel process/product attributes and irradiation conditions (burnup, fast neutron fluence, temperature, degree of acceleration) have on the behavior of the fuel during irradiation and provide a more quantitative linkage between acceptable processing parameters, as-fabricated fuel properties and subsequent in-reactor performance.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Petti, David Andrew; Buongiorno, Jacopo; Maki, John Thomas & Hobbins, Richard Redfield
System: The UNT Digital Library
Using the National Environmental Policy Act to Fight Wildland Fires on the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (open access)

Using the National Environmental Policy Act to Fight Wildland Fires on the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory

The decade of the 90s saw an average of 106,000 wildland fires each year, resulting in an average yearly loss of 3.7 million acres across the United States. The total number of acres burned during the past decade exceeded 36 million acres (about 57 thousand square miles). This is an area about the size of the state of Iowa. The impact from wildland fires on federal lands came to the nation’s attention in May of 2000, when the "Cerro Grande" fire near Los Alamos, New Mexico burned 47,650 acres while destroying 235 structures. Firefighting activities for federal agencies alone exceeded 1.3 billion dollars in 2000. The dollar amount spent on firefighting does not approach the dollars lost in terms of timber resources, homes, and wildlife habitat. Following several fires on U. S. Department of Energy lands, the Deputy Secretary of Energy placed a moratorium on "prescribed burns" in June 2000. From 1994 to 2000, about 130,000 acres of the INEEL (or the Site) and several hundred thousand acres of surrounding Bureau of Land Management lands burned on the Snake River Plain of southeast Idaho. The fires on the INEEL threatened facilities and exposed soils to wind erosion, resulting in severe …
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Irving, John S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Using Addenda in Documented Safety Analysis Reports (open access)

Using Addenda in Documented Safety Analysis Reports

This paper discusses the use of addenda to the Radioactive Waste Management Complex (RWMC) Documented Safety Analysis (DSA) located at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL). Addenda were prepared for several systems and processes at the facility that lacked adequate descriptive information and hazard analysis in the DSA. They were also prepared for several new activities involving unreviewed safety questions (USQs). Ten addenda to the RWMC DSA have been prepared since the last annual update.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Swanson, Douglas S. & Thieme, Michael A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Active, Non-Intrusive Inspection Technologies for Homeland Defense (open access)

Active, Non-Intrusive Inspection Technologies for Homeland Defense

Active, non-intrusive inspection or interrogation technologies have been used for 100 years - with the primary focus being radiographic imaging. During the last 50 years, various active interrogation systems have been investigated and most have revealed many unique and interesting capabilities and advantages that have already benefited the general public. Unfortunately, except for medical and specific industrial applications, these unique capabilities have not been widely adopted, largely due to the complexity of the technology, the overconfident reliance on passive detection systems to handle most challenges, and the unrealistic public concerns regarding radiation safety issues for a given active inspection deployment. The unique homeland security challenges facing the United States today are inviting more "out-of-the-box" solutions and are demanding the effective technological solutions that only active interrogation systems can provide. While revolutionary new solutions are always desired, these technology advancements are rare, and when found, usually take a long time to fully understand and implement for a given application. What's becoming more evident is that focusing on under-developed, but well-understood, active inspection technologies can provide many of the needed "out-of-the-box" solutions. This paper presents a brief historical overview of active interrogation. It identifies some of the major homeland defense challenges being …
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Jones, James L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gallium Safety in the Laboratory (open access)

Gallium Safety in the Laboratory

A university laboratory experiment for the US Department of Energy magnetic fusion research program required a simulant for liquid lithium. The simulant choices were narrowed to liquid gallium and galinstan (Ga-In-Sn) alloy. Safety information on liquid gallium and galinstan were compiled, and the choice was made to use galinstan. A laboratory safety walkthrough was performed in the fall of 2002 to support the galinstan experiment. The experiment has been operating successfully since early 2002.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Cadwallader, Lee C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Morphological, rheological and electrochemical studies ofpoly(ethylene oxide) electrolytes containing fumed silicananoparticles (open access)

Morphological, rheological and electrochemical studies ofpoly(ethylene oxide) electrolytes containing fumed silicananoparticles

In this paper, the rheology and crystallization of composite Poly(Ethylene Oxide) (PEO) electrolytes were studied by dynamic mechanical analysis, DSC and polarized light microscopy. The effects of fumed silica nanoparticles on the conductivities of the polymer electrolytes at temperatures above and below their melting point were measured and related to their rheology and crystallization behavior, respectively. The electrolyte/electrode interfacial properties and cycling performances of the composite polymer electrolytes in Li/Li cells are also discussed. The measured electrochemical properties were found to depend heavily on the operational environments and sample processing history.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Xie, Jiangbing; Kerr, John B.; Duan, Robert G. & Han, Yongbong
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fabrication of Gas-Filled Tungsten-Coated Glass Shells (open access)

Fabrication of Gas-Filled Tungsten-Coated Glass Shells

OAK-B135 Deuterium (D{sub 2}) filled glass shells coated with a high Z element are needed for high energy density (HED) experiments by researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory. They report here on our initial attempt to produce such shells. Glass shells made using the drop tower technique were coated with gold, palladium or tungsten, or a mixture of two of these elements. It was found that gold and palladium coatings did not stick well to the glass and resulted in poor or delaminated films. Tungsten coatings resulted in films suitable for these targets. Bouncing of shells during coating resulted in uniform tungsten coatings, but the surface of such coatings were filled with small nodules. Proper agitation of shells using a tapping technique resulted in smooth films with minimal particulate contamination. For coating rates of {approx} 0.15 {micro}m/hr coatings with {approx} 2 nm RMS surface finish could be deposited. The surface roughness of coatings at higher rates, 0.7 {micro}m/hr, was considerably worse ({approx} 100 nm RMS). The columnar structure of the coatings allowed permeation filling of the tungsten coated glass shells with deuterium at 300 C.
Date: June 1, 2003
Creator: Nikroo, A.; Baugh, W. & Steinman, D. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser plasma interactions in fused silica cavities (open access)

Laser plasma interactions in fused silica cavities

The effect of laser energy on formation of a plasma inside a cavity was investigated. The temperature and electron number density of laser-induced plasmas in a fused silica cavity were determined using spectroscopic methods, and compared with laser ablation on a flat surface. Plasma temperature and electron number density during laser ablation in a cavity with aspect ratio of 4 increased faster with irradiance after the laser irradiance reached a threshold of 5 GW/cm{sup 2}. The threshold irradiance of particulate ejection was lower for laser ablation in a cavity compared with on a flat surface; the greater the cavity aspect ratio, the lower the threshold irradiance. The ionization of silicon becomes saturated and the crater depths were increased approximately by an order of magnitude after the irradiance reached the threshold. Phase explosion was discussed to explain the large change of both plasma characteristics and mass removal when irradiance increased beyond a threshold value. Self-focusing of the laser beam was discussed to be responsible for the decrease of the threshold in cavities.
Date: June 24, 2003
Creator: Zeng, Xianzhong; Mao, Xianglei; Mao, Samuel S.; Yoo, Jong H.; Greif, Ralph & Russo, Richard E.
System: The UNT Digital Library