Depressed electron collector for the Gatling Gun Test Stand (open access)

Depressed electron collector for the Gatling Gun Test Stand

N/A
Date: October 24, 2013
Creator: A., Pikin; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Chang, X. Y.; Gassner, D.; Litvinenko, V.; Rahman, O. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
LEEM investigations of clean surfaces driven by energetic ion beams (open access)

LEEM investigations of clean surfaces driven by energetic ion beams

The original purpose of this award was to use low‐energy electron microscopy (LEEM) to explore the dynamics of surfaces of clean single crystal surfaces when driven by a beam of energetic ions. The goal was to understand the nanoscience of hyperthermal growth, surface erosion by sublimation and irradiation, operation of surface sinks in irradiated materials, diffusion on driven surfaces, and the creation of structural patterns. This project was based on a novel LEEM system constructed by C. P. Flynn, which provided real‐time imaging of surface dynamics by scattering low energy electrons. With the passing of Prof. Flynn in late 2011, this project was completed under a slightly different scope by constructing a low‐energy, inelastic electron scattering (�EELS�) instrument. Consistent with Flynn�s original objectives for his LEEM system, this device probes the dynamics of crystal surfaces. However the measurements are not carried out in real time, but instead are done in the frequency domain, through the energy lost from the probe electrons. The purpose of this device is to study the collective bosonic excitations in a variety of materials, including high temperature superconductors, topological insulators, carbon allotropes including (but not limited to) graphene, etc. The ultimate goal here is to identify …
Date: April 24, 2013
Creator: Abbamonte, Peter M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ION EXCHANGE PERFORMANCE OF TITANOSILICATES, GERMANATES AND CARBON NANOTUBES (open access)

ION EXCHANGE PERFORMANCE OF TITANOSILICATES, GERMANATES AND CARBON NANOTUBES

This report presents a summary of testing the affinity of titanosilicates (TSP), germanium-substituted titanosilicates (Ge-TSP) and multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) for lanthanide ions in dilute nitric acid solution. The K-TSP ion exchanger exhibited the highest affinity for lanthanides in dilute nitric acid solutions. The Ge-TSP ion exchanger shows promise as a material with high affinity, but additional tests are needed to confirm the preliminary results. The MWCNT exhibited much lower affinities than the K-TSP in dilute nitric acid solutions. However, the MWCNT are much more chemically stable to concentrated nitric acid solutions and, therefore, may candidates for ion exchange in more concentrated nitric acid solutions. This technical report serves as the deliverable documenting completion of the FY13 research milestone, M4FT-13SR0303061 – measure actinide and lanthanide distribution values in nitric acid solutions with sodium and potassium titanosilicate materials.
Date: April 24, 2013
Creator: Alsobrook, A. & Hobbs, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion Separation Effects in Mixed-Species Ablator and Fuels for Inertial Confinement Fusion Implosions (open access)

Ion Separation Effects in Mixed-Species Ablator and Fuels for Inertial Confinement Fusion Implosions

None
Date: June 24, 2013
Creator: Amendt, P.; Bellei, C.; Ross, J. S.; Salmonson, J. & Wilks, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ground Source Integrated Heat Pump (GS-IHP) Development (open access)

Ground Source Integrated Heat Pump (GS-IHP) Development

Between October 2008 and May 2013 ORNL and ClimateMaster, Inc. (CM) engaged in a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) to develop a groundsource integrated heat pump (GS-IHP) system for the US residential market. A initial prototype was designed and fabricated, lab-tested, and modeled in TRNSYS (SOLAR Energy Laboratory, et al, 2010) to predict annual performance relative to 1) a baseline suite of equipment meeting minimum efficiency standards in effect in 2006 (combination of air-source heat pump (ASHP) and resistance water heater) and 2) a state-of-the-art (SOA) two-capacity ground-source heat pump with desuperheater water heater (WH) option (GSHPwDS). Predicted total annual energy savings, while providing space conditioning and water heating for a 2600 ft{sup 2} (242 m{sup 2}) house at 5 U.S. locations, ranged from 52 to 59%, averaging 55%, relative to the minimum efficiency suite. Predicted energy use for water heating was reduced 68 to 78% relative to resistance WH. Predicted total annual savings for the GSHPwDS relative to the same baseline averaged 22.6% with water heating energy use reduced by 10 to 30% from desuperheater contributions. The 1st generation (or alpha) prototype design for the GS-IHP was finalized in 2010 and field test samples were fabricated for testing …
Date: May 24, 2013
Creator: Baxter, V. D.; Rice, K.; Murphy, R.; Munk, J.; Ally, Moonis; Shen, Bo et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physiochemical Evidence of Faulting Processes and Modeling of Fluid in Evolving Fault Systems in Southern California (open access)

Physiochemical Evidence of Faulting Processes and Modeling of Fluid in Evolving Fault Systems in Southern California

Our study targets recent (Plio-Pleistocene) faults and young (Tertiary) petroleum fields in southern California. Faults include the Refugio Fault in the Transverse Ranges, the Ellwood Fault in the Santa Barbara Channel, and most recently the Newport- Inglewood in the Los Angeles Basin. Subsurface core and tubing scale samples, outcrop samples, well logs, reservoir properties, pore pressures, fluid compositions, and published structural-seismic sections have been used to characterize the tectonic/diagenetic history of the faults. As part of the effort to understand the diagenetic processes within these fault zones, we have studied analogous processes of rapid carbonate precipitation (scaling) in petroleum reservoir tubing and manmade tunnels. From this, we have identified geochemical signatures in carbonate that characterize rapid CO2 degassing. These data provide constraints for finite element models that predict fluid pressures, multiphase flow patterns, rates and patterns of deformation, subsurface temperatures and heat flow, and geochemistry associated with large fault systems.
Date: May 24, 2013
Creator: Boles, James
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flow Shear Effects in the Onset Physics of Resistive MHD Instabilities in Tokamaks. Final report (open access)

Flow Shear Effects in the Onset Physics of Resistive MHD Instabilities in Tokamaks. Final report

The progress in this research centers around the computational analysis of flow shear effects in the onset of a 3/2 mode driven by a 1/1 mode in DIII-D equilibria. The initial idea was to try and calculate, via nonlinear simulations with NIMROD, the effects of rotation shear on driven 3/2 and 2/1 seed island physics, in experimentally relevant DIIID equilibria. The simulations indicated that very small seed islands were directly driven, as shielding between the sawtooth and the surfaces is significant at the high Lundquist numbers of the experiment. Instead, long after the initial crash the difference in linear stability of the 3/2, which remained prevalent despite the flattening of the core profiles from the sawtooth, contributed to a difference in the eventual seed island evolution. Essentially the seed islands grew or decayed long after the sawtooth crash, and not directly from it. Effectively the dominant 1/1 mode was found to be dragging the coupled modes surrounding it at a high rate through the plasma at their surfaces. The 1/1 mode is locked to the local frame of the plasma in the core, where the flow rate is greatest. The resonant perturbations at the surrounding surfaces propagate in the 'high …
Date: April 24, 2013
Creator: Brennan, Dylan P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Advanced Radiographic Capability, A Major Upgrade Of The Computer Controls For The National Ignition Facility* (open access)

The Advanced Radiographic Capability, A Major Upgrade Of The Computer Controls For The National Ignition Facility*

None
Date: September 24, 2013
Creator: Brunton, G.; Marshall, C.; Lagin, L.; Tietbohl, G.; Fishler, B.; Fisher, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flexible Data Driven Experimental Data Analysis At The National Ignition Facility* (open access)

Flexible Data Driven Experimental Data Analysis At The National Ignition Facility*

None
Date: September 24, 2013
Creator: Casey, A.; Bettenhausen, R.; Bond, E.; Fallejo, R.; Hutton, M.; Liebman, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A PIC-Fluid Hybrid Algorithm for Multi-scale Simulations of Laser-plasma Interactions (open access)

A PIC-Fluid Hybrid Algorithm for Multi-scale Simulations of Laser-plasma Interactions

None
Date: June 24, 2013
Creator: Cohen, B I; Dimits, A M; Fiuza, F; Kemp, A & Strozzi, D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
W4E HYDROPOWER DIRECT DRIVE IN-LINE HYDROTURBINE GENERATOR FULL SCALE PROTOTYPE VALIDATION TESTING REPORT MAY 2013 ALDEN LABORATORIES (open access)

W4E HYDROPOWER DIRECT DRIVE IN-LINE HYDROTURBINE GENERATOR FULL SCALE PROTOTYPE VALIDATION TESTING REPORT MAY 2013 ALDEN LABORATORIES

The W4E is a patent-pending, direct-drive, variable force turbine/generator. The equipment generates electricity through the water dependent engagement of a ring of rotating magnets with coils mounted on a stator ring. Validation testing of the W4e was performed at Alden Laboratories in the Spring of 2013. The testing was independently observed and validated by GZA GeoEnvironmental, Inc. The observations made during testing and the results of the testing are included in the Test Summary Report
Date: September 24, 2013
Creator: Cox, Chad W
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bounding the Higgs Width Through Interferometry (open access)

Bounding the Higgs Width Through Interferometry

None
Date: May 24, 2013
Creator: Dixon, Lance J. & Li, Ye
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Managing A Product Called NIF - PLM Current State And Processes (open access)

Managing A Product Called NIF - PLM Current State And Processes

None
Date: September 24, 2013
Creator: Dobson, D.; Churby, A. & Krieger, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated Stochastic Weather and Production Simulation Modeling (open access)

Integrated Stochastic Weather and Production Simulation Modeling

None
Date: October 24, 2013
Creator: Edmunds, T; Bulaevskaya, V; Lamont, A; Simpson, M; Top, P; Katzenstein, W et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monitoring Of The National Ignition Facility Integrated Computer Control System* (open access)

Monitoring Of The National Ignition Facility Integrated Computer Control System*

None
Date: September 24, 2013
Creator: Fisher, J; Arrowsmith, M & Stout, E
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A New Approach to Testing Dark Energy Models by Observations (open access)

A New Approach to Testing Dark Energy Models by Observations

None
Date: October 24, 2013
Creator: Gu, Je-An; Chen, Chien-Wen & Chen, Pisin
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Fundamental Investigation on the Structural Dynamics of Model Siloxane Networks under Extreme Pressure (open access)

A Fundamental Investigation on the Structural Dynamics of Model Siloxane Networks under Extreme Pressure

None
Date: April 24, 2013
Creator: Harley, S J & Lewicki, J P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrodynamic and shock heating instabilities of liquid metal strippers for RIA (open access)

Hydrodynamic and shock heating instabilities of liquid metal strippers for RIA

Stripping of accelerated ions is a key problem for the design of RIA to obtain high efficiency. Thin liquid Lithium film flow is currently considered as stripper for RIA ion beams to obtain higher Z for following acceleration: in extreme case of Uranium from Z=29 to Z=60-70 (first stripper) and from Z=70 till full stripping Z=92 (second stripper). Ionization of ion occurs due to the interaction of the ion with electrons of target material (Lithium) with the loss of parts of the energy due to ionization, Q{sub U}, which is also accompanied with ionization energy losses, Q{sub Li} of the lithium. The resulting heat is so high that can be removed not by heat conduction but mainly by convection, i.e., flowing of liquid metal across beam spot area. The interaction of the beam with the liquid metal generates shock wave propagating along direction perpendicular to the beam as well as excites oscillations along beam direction. We studied the dynamics of these excited waves to determine conditions for film stability at the required velocities for heat removal. It will allow optimizing jet nozzle shapes and flow parameters to prevent film fragmentation and to ensure stable device operation.
Date: May 24, 2013
Creator: Hassanein, Ahmed
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ultrafast probing of the x-ray-induced lattice and electron dynamics in graphite at atomic-resolution (open access)

Ultrafast probing of the x-ray-induced lattice and electron dynamics in graphite at atomic-resolution

None
Date: January 24, 2013
Creator: Hau-Riege, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamical diffraction at high intensities (open access)

Dynamical diffraction at high intensities

None
Date: January 24, 2013
Creator: Hau-Riege, S. & Pardini, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geometrical Optics of Dense Aerosols (open access)

Geometrical Optics of Dense Aerosols

Assembling a free-standing, sharp-edged slab of homogeneous material that is much denser than gas, but much more rare ed than a solid, is an outstanding technological challenge. The solution may lie in focusing a dense aerosol to assume this geometry. However, whereas the geometrical optics of dilute aerosols is a well-developed fi eld, the dense aerosol limit is mostly unexplored. Yet controlling the geometrical optics of dense aerosols is necessary in preparing such a material slab. Focusing dense aerosols is shown here to be possible, but the nite particle density reduces the eff ective Stokes number of the flow, a critical result for controlled focusing. __________________________________________________
Date: April 24, 2013
Creator: Hay, Michael J.; Valeo, Ernest J. & Fisch, Nathaniel J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transforming the representation of the boundary layer and low clouds for high-resolution regional climate modeling: Final report (open access)

Transforming the representation of the boundary layer and low clouds for high-resolution regional climate modeling: Final report

Stratocumulus and shallow cumulus clouds in subtropical oceanic regions (e.g., Southeast Pacific) cover thousands of square kilometers and play a key role in regulating global climate (e.g., Klein and Hartmann, 1993). Numerical modeling is an essential tool to study these clouds in regional and global systems, but the current generation of climate and weather models has difficulties in representing them in a realistic way (e.g., Siebesma et al., 2004; Stevens et al., 2007; Teixeira et al., 2011). While numerical models resolve the large-scale flow, subgrid-scale parameterizations are needed to estimate small-scale properties (e.g. boundary layer turbulence and convection, clouds, radiation), which have significant influence on the resolved scale due to the complex nonlinear nature of the atmosphere. To represent the contribution of these fine-scale processes to the resolved scale, climate models use various parameterizations, which are the main pieces in the model that contribute to the low clouds dynamics and therefore are the major sources of errors or approximations in their representation. In this project, we aim to 1) improve our understanding of the physical processes in thermal circulation and cloud formation, 2) examine the performance and sensitivity of various parameterizations in the regional weather model (Weather Research and Forecasting …
Date: July 24, 2013
Creator: Huang, Hsin-Yuan & Hall, Alex
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laboratory Report on Performance Evaluation of Key Constituents during Pre-Treatment of High Level Waste Direct Feed (open access)

Laboratory Report on Performance Evaluation of Key Constituents during Pre-Treatment of High Level Waste Direct Feed

The analytical capabilities of the 222-S Laboratory are tested against the requirements for an optional start up scenario of the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant on the Hanford Site. In this case, washed and in-tank leached sludge would be sent directly to the High Level Melter, bypassing Pretreatment. The sludge samples would need to be analyzed for certain key constituents in terms identifying melter-related issues and adjustment needs. The analyses on original tank waste as well as on washed and leached material were performed using five sludge samples from tanks 241-AY-102, 241-AZ-102, 241-AN-106, 241-AW-105, and 241-SY-102. Additionally, solid phase characterization was applied to determine the changes in mineralogy throughout the pre-treatment steps.
Date: June 24, 2013
Creator: Huber, Heinz J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Information Filters for Safeguards Applications: A Scoping Study (open access)

Information Filters for Safeguards Applications: A Scoping Study

N/A
Date: May 24, 2013
Creator: K., Bachner; D., Verdugo & Verdugo,D
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library