Does Mixing Make Residential Ventilation More Effective? (open access)

Does Mixing Make Residential Ventilation More Effective?

Ventilation dilutes or removes indoor contaminants to reduce occupant exposure. In a multi-zone environment such as a house, there will be different dilution rates and different source strengths in every zone. The total ventilation rate is the most important factor in determining the exposure of occupants to given sources, but the zone- specific distribution of exhaust and supply air, and the mixing of ventilation air can have significant roles. Different types of ventilation systems will provide different amounts of mixing depending on several factors such as air leakage through the building envelope, air distribution systems and the location of sources and occupants. This paper reports recent results of investigations to determine the impact that air mixing has on exposures of residential occupants to prototypical contaminants of concern. Evaluations of existing field measurements and simulations reported in the literature are combined with new analyses to provide an integrated overview of the topic. The results show that for extreme cases additional mixing can be a significant factor but for typical homes looking at average exposures mixing is not helpful and can even make exposures worse.
Date: August 16, 2010
Creator: Sherman, Max & Walker, Iain
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full Electromagnetic Fel Simulation via the Lorentz-Boosted Frame Transformation (open access)

Full Electromagnetic Fel Simulation via the Lorentz-Boosted Frame Transformation

Numerical electromagnetic simulation of some systems containing charged particles with highly relativistic directed motion can by speeded up by orders of magnitude by choice of the proper Lorentz-boosted frame. A particularly good application for calculation in a boosted frame isthat of short wavelength free-electron lasers (FELs) where a high energy electron beam with small fractional energy spread interacts with a static magnetic undulator. In the optimal boost frame (i.e., the ponderomotive rest frame), the red-shifted FEL radiation and blue-shifted undulator field have identical wavelengths and the number of required longitudinal grid cells and time-steps for fully electromagnetic simulation (relative to the laboratory frame) decrease by factors of gamma^2 each. In theory, boosted frame EM codes permit direct study of FEL problems for which the eikonal approximation for propagation of the radiation field and wiggler-period-averaging for the particle-field interaction may be suspect. We have adapted the WARP code to apply this method to several electromagnetic FEL problems including spontaneous emission, strong exponential gain in a seeded, single pass amplifier configuration, and emission from e-beams in undulators with multiple harmonic components. WARP has a standard relativistic macroparticle mover and a fully 3-D electromagnetic field solver. We discuss our boosted frame results and …
Date: August 16, 2010
Creator: Fawley, William & Vay, Jean-Luc
System: The UNT Digital Library
Earth System Grid Center for Enabling Technologies: Building a Global Infrastructure for Climate Change Research (open access)

Earth System Grid Center for Enabling Technologies: Building a Global Infrastructure for Climate Change Research

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Date: August 16, 2010
Creator: Williams, D. N.; Ahrens, J.; Ananthakrishnan, R.; Bell, G.; Bharathi, S.; Brown, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detection of Anomalous Reactor Activity Using Antineutrino Count Evolution Over the Course of a Reactor Cycle (open access)

Detection of Anomalous Reactor Activity Using Antineutrino Count Evolution Over the Course of a Reactor Cycle

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Date: August 16, 2010
Creator: Bulayevskaya, V & Bernstein, A
System: The UNT Digital Library