The Castle Project (open access)

The Castle Project

The goal of the Castle project was to provide a parallel programming environment that enables the construction of high performance applications that run portably across many platforms. The authors approach was to design and implement a multilayered architecture, with higher levels building on lower ones to ensure portability, but with care taken not to introduce abstractions that sacrifice performance.
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Anderson, Tom; Culler, David; Demmel, James; Feldman, Jerry; Graham, Susan; Hilfinger, Paul et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program Facilities Newsletter, January 2000 (open access)

Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program Facilities Newsletter, January 2000

Monthly newsletter discussing news and activities related to the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program, articles about weather and atmospheric phenomena, and other related topics.
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program (U.S.)
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final report on the project entitled: Highly Preheated Combustion Air System with/without Oxygen Enrichment for Metal Processing Furnaces (open access)

Final report on the project entitled: Highly Preheated Combustion Air System with/without Oxygen Enrichment for Metal Processing Furnaces

This work develops and demonstrates a laboratory-scale high temperature natural gas furnace that can operate with/without oxygen enrichment to significantly improve energy efficiency and reduce emissions. The laboratory-scale is 5ft in diameter & 8ft tall. This furnace was constructed and tested. This report demonstrates the efficiency and pollutant prevention capabilities of this test furnace. The project also developed optical detection technology to control the furnace output.
Date: February 16, 2007
Creator: Atreya, Arvind
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
FISCAL YEAR 2001 ANNUAL REPORT ON THE UNIVERSITY PROGRAMS OF THE ADVANCED ACCELERATOR APPLICATIONS PROGRAM. (open access)

FISCAL YEAR 2001 ANNUAL REPORT ON THE UNIVERSITY PROGRAMS OF THE ADVANCED ACCELERATOR APPLICATIONS PROGRAM.

The Advanced Accelerator Applications (AAA) Program was initiated in fiscal year 2001 (FY-01) by the U.S. Congress, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), and the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) in partnership with other national laboratories. The AAA Project and the R&D for its underlying science and technology will require a large cadre of educated scientists and trained technicians in the future. In addition, other applications of nuclear science and engineering (e.g., proliferation monitoring and defense, nuclear medicine, safety regulation, industrial processes, and many others) require increased academic and national infrastructure and student populations. Thus, the DOE AAA Program Office has begun a multi-year program to involve university faculty and students in various phases of the Project to support the infrastructure requirements of nuclear energy, science and technology fields as well as the special needs of the DOE transmutation program. Herein I summarize the goals and accomplishments of the university programs that have supported the AAA Project during FY-01, including the involvement of more than eighty students.
Date: February 16, 2002
Creator: BELLER, DENIS E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ENERGY-10 PV: Photovoltaics, A New Capability (Preprint) (open access)

ENERGY-10 PV: Photovoltaics, A New Capability (Preprint)

This is one of two companion papers that describe the ENERGY-10 PV design-tool computer simulation program. The other paper is titled ''Hourly Simulation of Grid-Connected PV Systems Using Realistic Building Loads.'' While this paper focuses on the implementation method, the companion paper focuses on the PV aspects of the program. The case study in this paper is a residential building application, whereas the case study in the companion paper is a commercial application with an entirely different building load characteristic. Together, they provide a balanced view.
Date: February 16, 2001
Creator: Balcomb, J. D.; Hayter, S. J. & Weaver, N. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summing Planar Bosonic Open Strings (open access)

Summing Planar Bosonic Open Strings

In earlier work, planar graphs of massless {phi}{sup 3} theory were summed with the help of the light cone world sheet picture and the mean field approximation. In the present article, the same methods are applied to the problem of summing planar bosonic open strings. They find that in the ground state of the system, string boundaries form a condensate on the world sheet, and a new string emerges from this summation. Its slope is always greater than the initial slope, and it remains non-zero even when the initial slope is set equal to zero. If they assume the initial string tends to a field a theory in the zero slope limit, this result provides evidence for string formation in field theory.
Date: February 16, 2006
Creator: Bardakci, Korkut
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
3-D sedimentological and geophysical studies of clastic reservoir analogs: Facies architecture, reservoir properties, and flow behavior within delta front facies elements of the Cretaceous Wall Creek Member, Frontier Formation, Wyoming (open access)

3-D sedimentological and geophysical studies of clastic reservoir analogs: Facies architecture, reservoir properties, and flow behavior within delta front facies elements of the Cretaceous Wall Creek Member, Frontier Formation, Wyoming

This project examined the internal architecture of delta front sandstones at two locations within the Turonian-age Wall Creek Member of the Frontier Formation, in Wyoming. The project involved traditional outcrop field work integrated with core-data, and 2D and 3D ground penetrating radar (GPR) imaging from behind the outcrops. The fluid-flow engineering work, handled through a collaborative grant given to PI Chris White at LSU, focused on effects on fluid flow of late-stage calcite cement nodules in 3D. In addition to the extensive field component, the work funded 2 PhD students (Gani and Lee) and resulted in publication of 10 technical papers, 17 abstracts, and 4 internal field guides. PI Bhattacharya also funded an additional 3 PhD students that worked on the Wall Creek sandstone funded separately through an industrial consortium, two of whom graduated in the fall 2006 ((Sadeque and Vakarelov). These additional funds provided significant leverage to expand the work to include a regional stratigraphic synthesis of the Wall Creek Member of the Frontier Formation, in addition to the reservoir-scale studies that DOE directly funded. Awards given to PI Bhattacharya included the prestigious AAPG Distinguished Lecture Award, which involved a tour of about 25 Universities and Geological Societies in …
Date: February 16, 2007
Creator: Bhattacharya, Janok P. & McMechan, George A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Variability of the Monthly Mean Temperature of the ECMWF and NCEP Reanalyses and CCM3 and DSM Simulations (open access)

Comparison of Variability of the Monthly Mean Temperature of the ECMWF and NCEP Reanalyses and CCM3 and DSM Simulations

The low frequency variation in the three dimensional air temperature fields of two reanalyses and two model simulations are described. The data sets used are the monthly mean temperature fields for the NCAR Climate Simulation Model (CSM, Boville and Gent, 1998) 300 year run, a NCAR Community Climate Model version 3 (CCM3, Kiehl et al., 1998) AMIP type simulation, and the NCEPLNCAR and ECMWF (ERA) reanalysis data sets. The variances and correlations are computed for the anomalies from the annual cycle for each data set. In general the reanalyses and models agree fairly well on the structure of the temperature variance. The models tend to have too much variance at the surface compared to the reanalyses. The CSM's poor simulation of the SST in the eastern Pacific leads to a much reduced variance in the Nino3 region. The enhanced variability over land appears to affect the midlatitude simulation of the CSM in that the higher surface variability extends off the east coast of continents. This is not evident in CCM3 and reanalyses where the SSTs are prescribed. At 200 hPa the CCM3 and reanalyses all evince the dumb bell pattern straddling the Equator in the eastern Pacific attributed by Yulaeva …
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Boyle, J.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The use of pressurized bladders for stress control of superconducting magnets (open access)

The use of pressurized bladders for stress control of superconducting magnets

None
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Caspi, S.; Gourlay, S.; Hafalia, R.; Lietzke, A.; O'Neill, J.; Taylor, C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Round Robin Study of Rotational Strain Rheometers (open access)

Round Robin Study of Rotational Strain Rheometers

A round robin of testing was performed to compare the performance of rotational dynamic mechanical spectrometers being used within the nuclear weapons complex. Principals from Sandia National Laboratories/New Mexico; Lockheed Martin Y12 Plant at Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico (polycarbonate only); and Honeywell Federal Manufacturing and Technologies (FM and T), Kansas City, MO, performed identical testing of hydrogen blown polysiloxane S5370 and bisphenol-A polycarbonate. Over an oscillation frequency sweep from 0.01 Hz to 15.9 Hz at 135 C, each site produced shear storage modulus values with standard deviations of less than 5%. The data from Sandia, Y12, and Kansas City agreed to within 4%, while the Los Alamos data differed by as much as 13%. Storage modulus values for a frequency sweep of the S5370 at 35 C had standard deviations between 6% and 8%, and site-to-site agreement averaged 3%. The shear loss modulus values had standard deviations of 5%, 7%, and 52% for the sites participating, while the results differed by 12% on average.
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Clifford, M.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Semi-Continuous Measurements of Aerosol Chemical Composition During the Summer 2002 Yosemite National Park Special Study (open access)

Semi-Continuous Measurements of Aerosol Chemical Composition During the Summer 2002 Yosemite National Park Special Study

Semi-continuous measurements of fine particle composition were made over a period of several weeks in summer 2002 in Yosemite National Park, California. These included measurement of aerosol ionic composition (by PILS- Particle-Into-Liquid System) and aerosol carbon (by dual wavelength aethalometer and an R&P particulate carbon monitor). The data reveal that aerosol composition at the site is highly :variable in time, with a strong diurnal cycle. Interestingly, however, different diurnal cycles were sometimes observed for different chemical constituents of the particles. Organic carbon was observed to dominate fine particle mass, with some periods apparently associated with influx of smoke from wildfires in the western U.S. Measurements of fine particle carbon isotopes revealed the fraction of carbon from biogenic sources to range from approximately 73 to 95%. The ionic fraction of the aerosol was usually dominated by ammoniated sulfate. During most periods, PM{sub 2.5} nitrate was found primarily in sea salt particles from which chloride had been displaced. Strong variations in the extent of ammonia neutralization of sulfate were also observed. The ability to observe rapid changes in aerosol composition using these semi-continuous aerosol composition measurements is helpful for understanding the dynamic chemical composition of fine particles responsible for regional haze.
Date: February 16, 2003
Creator: Collette, J.; Lee, T.; Heath, J.; Carrico, C.; Herckes, P.; Engling, G. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Peak Ground Velocities for Seismic Events at Yucca Mountain, Nevada (open access)

Peak Ground Velocities for Seismic Events at Yucca Mountain, Nevada

This report describes a scientific analysis to bound credible horizontal peak ground velocities (PGV) for the repository waste emplacement level at Yucca Mountain. Results are presented as a probability distribution for horizontal PGV to represent uncertainties in the analysis. The analysis also combines the bound to horizontal PGV with results of ground motion site-response modeling (BSC 2004 [DIRS 170027]) to develop a composite hazard curve for horizontal PGV at the waste emplacement level. This result provides input to an abstraction of seismic consequences (BSC 2004 [DIRS 169183]). The seismic consequence abstraction, in turn, defines the input data and computational algorithms for the seismic scenario class of the total system performance assessment (TSPA). Planning for the analysis is documented in Technical Work Plan TWP-MGR-GS-000001 (BSC 2004 [DIRS 171850]). The bound on horizontal PGV at the repository waste emplacement level developed in this analysis complements ground motions developed on the basis of PSHA results. In the PSHA, ground motion experts characterized the epistemic uncertainty and aleatory variability in their ground motion interpretations. To characterize the aleatory variability they used unbounded lognormal distributions. As a consequence of these characterizations, as seismic hazard calculations are extended to lower and lower annual frequencies of being …
Date: February 16, 2005
Creator: Coppersmith, K. & Quittmeyer, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design and performance of nitride-based UV LEDs (open access)

Design and performance of nitride-based UV LEDs

In this paper, the authors overview several of the critical materials growth, design and performance issues for nitride-based UV (< 400 nm) LEDs. The critical issue of optical efficiency is presented through temperature-dependent photoluminescence studies of various UV active regions. These studies demonstrate enhanced optical efficiencies for active regions with In-containing alloys (InGaN, AlInGaN). The authors discuss the trade-off between the challenging growth of high Al containing alloys (AlGaN, AlGaInN), and the need for sufficient carrier confinement in UV heterostructures. Carrier leakage for various composition AlGaN barriers is examined through a calculation of the total unconfined carrier density in the quantum well system. They compare the performance of two distinct UV LED structures: GaN/AlGaN quantum well LEDs for {lambda}< 360 nm emission, and InGaN/AlGaInN quantum well LEDs for 370 nm <{lambda}< 390 nm emission.
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Crawford, Mary H.; Han, Jung; Chow, Weng W.; Banas, Michael Anthony; Figiel, Jeffery J.; Zhang, Lei et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Convective Transport in Tokamaks (open access)

Convective Transport in Tokamaks

Scrape-off-layer (SOL) convection in fusion experiments appears to be a universal phenomenon that can ''short-circuit'' the divertor in some cases. The theory of ''blob'' transport provides a simple and robust physical paradigm for studying convective transport. This paper summarizes recent advances in the theory of blob transport and its comparison with 2D and 3D computer simulations. We also discuss the common physical basis relating radial transport of blobs, pellets, and ELMs and a new blob regime that may lead to a connection between blob transport and the density limit.
Date: February 16, 2005
Creator: D'Ippolito, D. A.; Myra, J. R.; Russell, D. A.; Krasheninnikov, S. I.; Pigarov, A. Y.; Yu, G. Q. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lasershot(sm) marking system: high-volume labeling for safety-critical parts (open access)

Lasershot(sm) marking system: high-volume labeling for safety-critical parts

The Lasershot Marking System uses laser pulses to safely and permanently impress identification markings on metal components. This process does not remove material or change surface chemistry and actually increases the marked area's resistance to fatigue and corrosion failure. Lasershot marking is ideally suited for marking parts used in situations where safety is critical--from hip-joint replacements to commercial airliner components. The minimum size of the mark is limited only by the resolution of the reading system, allowing manufacturers to mark parts which, up to now, have been too small to label with mechanical peening techniques. The high resolution of the Lasershot marks makes them difficult to reproduce, providing a solution to the ongoing problem of inferior, counterfeited parts. The high marking rate of up to six marks per second makes this system practical and cost-effective for marking high-volume components.
Date: February 16, 2001
Creator: Dane, C. B.; Hackel, L.; Honig, J.; Halpin, J.; Chen, H. L.; Mendieta, F. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Triple-axis X-ray Reciprocal Space Mapping of In(y)Ga(1-y)As Thermophotovoltaic Diodes Grown on (100) InP Substrates (open access)

Triple-axis X-ray Reciprocal Space Mapping of In(y)Ga(1-y)As Thermophotovoltaic Diodes Grown on (100) InP Substrates

Analysis of the composition, strain-relaxation, layer-tilt, and the crystalline quality of In{sub y}Ga{sub 1-y}As/InP{sub 1-x}As{sub x} thermophotovoltaic (TPV) diodes grown by metal organic vapor phase epitaxy (MOVPE) is demonstrated using triple-axis x-ray reciprocal space mapping techniques. In{sub 0.53}Ga{sub 0.47}As (E{sub gap} = 0.74eV) n/p junction diodes are grown lattice matched (LM) to InP substrates and lattice mismatched (LMM) In{sub 0.67}Ga{sub 0.33}As (E{sub gap} = 0.6eV) TPV diodes are grown on three-step InP{sub 1-x}As{sub x} (0 < x < 0.32) buffer layers on InP substrates. X-ray reciprocal space maps about the symmetric (400) and asymmetric (533) reciprocal lattice points (RELPs) determine the in-plane and out-of-plane lattice parameters and strain of the In{sub y}Ga{sub 1-y}As TPV active layer and underlying InP{sub 1-x}As{sub x} buffers. Triple-axis x-ray rocking curves about the LMM In{sub 0.67}Ga{sub 0.33}As RELP show an order of magnitude increase of its full width at half maximum (FWHM) compared to that from the LM In{sub 0.53}Ga{sub 0.47}As (250asec vs. 30asec). Despite the significant RELP broadening the photovoltaic figure of merits show that the electronic quality of the LMM In{sub 0.67}Ga{sub 0.33}As approaches that of the lattice matched diode material. This indicates that misfit-related crystalline imperfections are not dominating the photovoltaic response …
Date: February 16, 2006
Creator: Dashiell, M; Ehsani, H; Sander, P; Newman, F; Wang, C; Shellenbarger, Z et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Orbiter Composite Overwrapped Pressure Vessels (open access)

Orbiter Composite Overwrapped Pressure Vessels

None
Date: February 16, 2005
Creator: DeTeresa, S
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solute Transport in Variable Aperture Fractures: An Investigation of the Relative Importance of Taylor Dispersion and Macrodispersion (open access)

Solute Transport in Variable Aperture Fractures: An Investigation of the Relative Importance of Taylor Dispersion and Macrodispersion

None
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Detwiler, Russell L.; Rajaram, Harihar & Glass, Robert J., Jr.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Management Performance Report for December 1999 (open access)

Environmental Management Performance Report for December 1999

The purpose of the Environmental Management Performance Report (EMPR) is to provide the Department of Energy Richland Operations Office's (DOE-RL's) report of Hanford's Environmental Management (EM) performance by: U. S. Department of Energy, Richland Operations Office, Project Hanford Management Contract (PHMC) through Fluor Hanford, Inc. (FHI) and its subcontractors, Environmental Restoration Contract through Bechtel Hanford, Inc. (BHI), and its subcontractors, and Pacific Northwest National Laboratories (PNNL) for EM and EM Science and Technology (S&T) Mission. This report is a monthly publication that summarizes EM Site performance under RL Operations Office. It is organized by the four sections listed above, with each section containing an Executive Summary and Area Performance Summaries. A listing of what is contained in the sections can be found in the Table of Contents.
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: EDER, D.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developing the Manufacturing Process for Hylene MP Curing Agent (open access)

Developing the Manufacturing Process for Hylene MP Curing Agent

This report details efforts to scale-up and re-establish the manufacturing process for the curing agent known as Hylene MP. First, small scale reactions were completed with varying conditions to determine key drivers for yielding high quality product. Once the optimum conditions were determined on the small scale, the scaled-up process conditions were determined. New equipment was incorporated into the manufacturing process to create a closed production system and improve chemical exposure controls and improve worker safety. A safe, efficient manufacturing process was developed to manufacture high quality Hylene MP in large quantities.
Date: February 16, 2009
Creator: Eastwood, Eric
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
RADIANT Liquid Isotope Intravascular Radiation Therapy System (open access)

RADIANT Liquid Isotope Intravascular Radiation Therapy System

None
Date: February 16, 2000
Creator: Eigler, N.; Whiting, J.; Makkar, R.A.J.; Honda, H.; Knapp, F.F.; Litvack, F. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Organic Analysis of C-104 Tank Waste (open access)

Organic Analysis of C-104 Tank Waste

Fourteen jars of waste material from Tank C-104 were received by PNNL. The contents of all jars were mixed to provide a single composite. Each composite was homogenized and representative sub-samples extracted for organic, radiochemical, and inorganic regulatory analyses. The representative sub-samples were analyzed for inorganic, radiochemical, and organic analyses for analytes of interest as defined in Test Plan BNFL-29953-30, Rev. 1. This report presents the organic results. The inorganic and radiochemical results are reported in report WTP RPT-007, PNNL-13364 (formerly BNFL RPT 043).
Date: February 16, 2001
Creator: Evans, John C.; Campbell, James A.; Hoopes, Francis V.; Hoppe, Eric W.; Klinger, George S.; Mong, Gary M. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogen Storage in Carbon Nanotubes at High Pressures LDRD Final Report 03-ERD-047 (open access)

Hydrogen Storage in Carbon Nanotubes at High Pressures LDRD Final Report 03-ERD-047

This goal of this project was to perform feasibility experiments and measurements of the fundamental interactions between hydrogen and single wall carbon nanotubes (SWNT) at high pressures. High-pressure is an adjustable experimental parameter for tuning interaction strengths, thereby elucidating and providing insights into the fundamental nature of the H{sub 2}/SWNT system. We have developed and utilized systems and methodologies to make x-ray scattering, optical spectroscopic and electrical transport measurements. These activities have been productive in demonstrating capabilities and measuring properties of SWNTs under high-pressure conditions. We have also developed strong cooperative and complementary relationships with academic research colleagues at Stanford University. Building on these results and relationships, we hope to continue and expand our research as co-investigators in a joint Harvard-LLNL-Stanford proposal to the DOE ''Grand Challenge'' for Basic and Applied Research in Hydrogen Storage (Solicitation No. DE-PS36-03GO93013). Hydrogen storage is an active research topic with important basic science implications and a crucial enabling technology for advanced energy systems. Measurements of the H{sub 2} storage capacity indicate that it may achieve or exceed the storage capacity level (6.5 wt-%) mandated by the DOE hydrogen plan for fielding a hydrogen-fueled vehicle. The H{sub 2}/SWNT system has been the subject of intensive …
Date: February 16, 2004
Creator: Evans, W. J. & Cynn, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library