Linear and nonlinear Rayleigh-Taylor growth at strongly convergent spherical interfaces (open access)

Linear and nonlinear Rayleigh-Taylor growth at strongly convergent spherical interfaces

Recent attention has focused on the effect of spherical convergence on the nonlinear phase of Rayleigh-Taylor growth. For instability growth on spherically converging interfaces, modifications to the predictions of the Layzer model for the secular growth of a single, nonlinear mode have been reported [D. S. Clark and M. Tabak, Phys. Rev. E 72, 0056308 (2005).]. However, this model is limited in assuming a self-similar background implosion history as well as only addressing growth from a perturbation of already nonlinearly large amplitude. Additionally, only the case of single-mode growth was considered and not the multimode growth of interest in applications. Here, these deficiencies are remedied. First, the connection of the recent nonlinear results including convergence to the well-known results for the linear regime of growth is demonstrated. Second, the applicability of the model to more general implosion histories (i.e., not self-similar) is shown. Finally, to address the case of multimode growth with convergence, the recent nonlinear single mode results are combined with the Haan model formulation for weakly nonlinear multimode growth. Remarkably, convergence in the nonlinear regime is found not to modify substantially the multimode predictions of Haan's original model.
Date: December 22, 2005
Creator: Clark, D S & Tabak, M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Material-dependent high-frequency current fluctuations of cathodicvacuum arcs: Evidence for the ecton cutoff of the fractal model (open access)

Material-dependent high-frequency current fluctuations of cathodicvacuum arcs: Evidence for the ecton cutoff of the fractal model

Current fluctuations of cathodic arcs were recorded withhigh analog bandwidth (up to 1 GHz) and fast digital sampling (up to 5Gsamples/sec). The power spectral density of the arc current wasdetermined by fast Fourier transform clearly showing material dependent,non-linear features in the frequency domain. These features can beassociated with the non-linear impedance of the conducting channelbetween cathode and anode, driven by the explosive nature of electronemission and plasma formation. The characteristic times of less than 100ns can be associated with individual explosive processes, "ectons," andtherefore represent the short-time physical cutoff for the fractal modelof cathodic arcs.
Date: December 22, 2005
Creator: Anders, Andre & Oks, Efim
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relativistic multireference many-body perturbation theory calculations on F-, Ne-, Na-, Mg-, Al-, Si-, and P-like xenon ions (open access)

Relativistic multireference many-body perturbation theory calculations on F-, Ne-, Na-, Mg-, Al-, Si-, and P-like xenon ions

Many-Body Perturbation Theory (MBPT) has been employed to calculate with high wavelength accuracy the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) spectra of F-like to P-like Xe ions. They discuss the reliability of the new calculations using the example of EUV beam-foil spectra of Xe, in which n = 3, {Delta}n = 0 transitions of Na-, Mg-, Al-like, and Si-like ions have been found to dominate. A further comparison is made with spectra from an electron beam ion trap, that is, from a device with a very different (low density) excitation balance.
Date: December 22, 2005
Creator: Vilkas, M J; Ishikawa, Y & Trabert, E
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of an Improved Sodium Titanate for the Pretreatment of High Level Nuclear Waste at the Savannah River Site (open access)

Development of an Improved Sodium Titanate for the Pretreatment of High Level Nuclear Waste at the Savannah River Site

High-level nuclear waste produced from fuel reprocessing operations at the Savannah River Site (SRS) requires pretreatment to remove {sup 137}Cs, {sup 90}Sr and alpha-emitting radionuclides (i.e., actinides) prior to disposal onsite as low level waste. Separation processes planned at SRS include caustic side solvent extraction, for {sup 137}Cs removal, and sorption of {sup 90}Sr and alpha-emitting radionuclides onto monosodium titanate (MST). The predominant alpha-emitting radionuclides in the highly alkaline waste solutions include plutonium isotopes {sup 238}Pu, {sup 239}Pu and {sup 240}Pu. This paper describes recent results to produce an improved sodium titanate material that exhibits increased removal kinetics and capacity for {sup 90}Sr and alpha-emitting radionuclides compared to the baseline MST material.
Date: November 22, 2005
Creator: Hobbs D. T.; Poirier, M. R.; Barnes, M. J.; Stallings, M. E. & Nyman, M. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implementation of Localized Corrosion in the Performance Assessment Model for Yucca Mountain (open access)

Implementation of Localized Corrosion in the Performance Assessment Model for Yucca Mountain

None
Date: November 22, 2005
Creator: JAIN V - BSC, SEVOUGIAN DS - SNL , MATTIE PD - SNL , MON KG - ANP , MACKINNON RJ - SNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Last Annotation of Fugu rubripes at JGI (open access)

Last Annotation of Fugu rubripes at JGI

None
Date: November 22, 2005
Creator: Salamov, Asaf; Terry, Astrid; Putnam, Nicholas; Rokhsar, Dan; Grigoriev, Igor; Eddie, Loh et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL: RESEARCH NEEDS (open access)

SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL: RESEARCH NEEDS

None
Date: November 22, 2005
Creator: Ewing, R. and Peters, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SYNTHESIS OF ORGANICALLY TEMPLATED NANOPOROUS TIN (II/IV) PHOSPHATE FOR RADIONUCLIDE AND METAL SEQUESTRATION (open access)

SYNTHESIS OF ORGANICALLY TEMPLATED NANOPOROUS TIN (II/IV) PHOSPHATE FOR RADIONUCLIDE AND METAL SEQUESTRATION

Nanoporous tin (II/IV) phosphate materials, with spherical morphology, have been synthesized using cetyltrimethylammonium chloride (CH{sub 3}(CH{sub 2}){sub 16}N(CH{sub 3}){sub 5}Cl) as the surfactant. The structure of the material is stable at 500 C; however, partial oxidation of the material occurs with redox conversion of Sn{sup 2+} to SN{sup 4+}, resulting in a mixed Sn(II)/Sn(IV) material.
Date: November 22, 2005
Creator: WELLMAN DM, MATTIGOD SV, PARKER KE, HEALD SM , WANG C, FRYXELL GE
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transmutation analysis of realistic low-activation steels for magnetic fusion reactors and IFMIF (open access)

Transmutation analysis of realistic low-activation steels for magnetic fusion reactors and IFMIF

A comprehensive transmutation study for steels considered in the selection of structural materials for magnetic and inertial fusion reactors has been performed in the IFMIF neutron irradiation scenario, as well as in the ITER and DEMO ones for comparison purposes. An element-by-element transmutation approach is used in the study, addressing the generation of: (1) H and He and (2) solid transmutants. The IEAF-2001 activation library and the activation code ACAB were applied to the IFMIF transmutation analysis, after proving the applicability of ACAB for transmutation calculations of this kind of intermediate energy systems.
Date: November 22, 2005
Creator: Cabellos, O; Sanz, J; Garc?a-Herranz, N; D?az, S; Reyes, S & Piedloup, S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hard X-ray and Hot Electron Environment in Vacuum Hohlraums at NIF (open access)

Hard X-ray and Hot Electron Environment in Vacuum Hohlraums at NIF

Time resolved hard x-ray images (hv > 9 keV) and time integrated hard x-ray spectra (hv = 18-150 keV) from vacuum hohlraums irradiated with four 351 nm wavelength NIF laser beams are presented as a function of hohlraum size and laser power and duration. The hard x-ray images and spectra provide insight into the time evolution of the hohlraum plasma filling and the production of hot electrons. The fraction of laser energy detected as hot electrons (f{sub hot}) and a comparison to a filling model are presented.
Date: September 22, 2005
Creator: McDonald, J. W.; Suter, L. J.; Landen, O. L.; Foster, J. M.; Celeste, J. R.; Holder, J. P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intermittent Elevated Radium Concentrations in Coastal Plain Groundwater of South Carolina, U.S.A. (open access)

Intermittent Elevated Radium Concentrations in Coastal Plain Groundwater of South Carolina, U.S.A.

To learn the cause of intermittent radium concentrations in groundwater of Coastal Plain aquifers, 31 groundwater wells in South Carolina, U.S.A. were sampled for radium and other geochemical parameters. Sediments cored from near the well screens were also sampled to examine any relationship between sediment properties and radium concentration in the groundwater. Elevated radium concentrations only occurred in groundwater with low electrical conductivity and pH values below 6.3. The adsorption edge for radium on hematite--a major surface active mineral in these aquifers--is at a pH value of about 6. Near this value, small changes in pH can result in significant adsorption or desorption of radium. In groundwater with initially low alkalinity, small intermittent decreases in partial pressure of carbon dioxide in groundwater cause decreases in pH and desorption of radium. The result is intermittent elevated radium concentrations.
Date: September 22, 2005
Creator: Denham, Miles; Millings, Margaret & Noonkester, Jay
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling Growth of Au-Cu Nanocrystalliine Coatings (open access)

Modeling Growth of Au-Cu Nanocrystalliine Coatings

The electrodeposition process parameters of current density, pulse duration, and cell potential affect both the structure and composition of the foils. The mechanism for nucleation and growth as determined from current transients yield relationships for nucleus density and nucleation rate. To develop an understanding of the role of the process parameters on grain size--as a design structural parameter to control strength, for example, a formulation is presented to model the affects of the deposition energetics on grain size and morphology. An activation energy for the deposition process is modeled that reveals different growth mechanisms, wherein nucleation and diffusion effects are each dominant as dependent upon pulse duration. A diffusion coefficient common for each of the pulsed growth modes demarcates an observed transition in growth from smooth to rough surfaces. Empirical relationships are developed that relate the parameters of the deposition process to the morphology and grain size at the nanoscale. Regimes for nanocrystalline growth include a short and long pulse mode, each with distinct activation energies. The long pulse has the additional contribution of bulk-like diffusion whereas the short pulse is limited to surface diffusion and nucleation. For either pulse condition, a transition from a rough (or nodular) growth to …
Date: September 22, 2005
Creator: Jankowski, Alan Frederic
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mu B-Driven Electroweak Symmetry Breaking (open access)

Mu B-Driven Electroweak Symmetry Breaking

None
Date: September 22, 2005
Creator: Nomura, Yasunori; Poland, David & Tweedie, Brock
System: The UNT Digital Library
Silicon-Germanium Films Deposited by Low Frequency PE CVD: Effect of H2 and Ar Dilution (open access)

Silicon-Germanium Films Deposited by Low Frequency PE CVD: Effect of H2 and Ar Dilution

We have studied structure and electrical properties of Si{sub 1-Y}Ge{sub Y}:H films deposited by low frequency PE CVD over the entire composition range from Y=0 to Y=1. The deposition rate of the films and their structural and electrical properties were measured for various ratios of the germane/silane feed gases and with and without dilution by Ar and by H{sub 2}. Structure and composition was studied by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Surface morphology was characterized by atomic force microscopy (AFM). We found: (1) The deposition rate increased with Y maximizing at Y=1 without dilution. (2) The relative rate of Ge and Si incorporation is affected by dilution. (3) Hydrogen preferentially bonds to silicon. (4) Hydrogen content decreases for increasing Y. In addition, optical measurements showed that as Y goes for 0 to 1, the Fermi level moves from mid gap to the conduction band edge, i.e. the films become more n-type. No correlation was found between the pre-exponential and the activation energy of conductivity. The behavior of the conductivity {gamma}-factor suggests a local minimum in the density of states at E {approx} 0.33 eV for the films grown with or …
Date: September 22, 2005
Creator: Kosarev, A; Torres, A; Hernandez, Y; Ambrosio, R; Zuniga, C; Felter, T E et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coupled Climate Model Appraisal a Benchmark for Future Studies (open access)

Coupled Climate Model Appraisal a Benchmark for Future Studies

The Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison (PCMDI) has produced an extensive appraisal of simulations of present-day climate by eleven representative coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation models (OAGCMs) which were developed during the period 1995-2002. Because projections of potential future global climate change are derived chiefly from OAGCMs, there is a continuing need to test the credibility of these predictions by evaluating model performance in simulating the historically observed climate. For example, such an evaluation is an integral part of the periodic assessments of climate change that are reported by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The PCMDI appraisal thus provides a useful benchmark for future studies of this type. The appraisal mainly analyzed multi-decadal simulations of present-day climate by models that employed diverse representations of climate processes for atmosphere, ocean, sea ice, and land, as well as different techniques for coupling these components (see Table). The selected models were a subset of those entered in phase 2 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP2, Covey et al. 2003). For these ''CMIP2+ models'', more atmospheric or oceanic variables were provided than the minimum requirements for participation in CMIP2. However, the appraisal only considered those climate variables that were supplied from …
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Phillips, T. J.; AchutaRao, K.; Bader, D.; Covey, C.; Doutriaux, C. M.; Fiorino, M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Density distribution for a polymer adsorbed at an oil-water interface (open access)

Density distribution for a polymer adsorbed at an oil-water interface

None
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Cai, Jun & Prausnitz, John M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat Transfer from Condensate Droplets Falling through an Immiscible Layer of Tributyl Phosphate (open access)

Heat Transfer from Condensate Droplets Falling through an Immiscible Layer of Tributyl Phosphate

As part of a safety analysis of reactions in two-layer mixtures of nitric acid and tributyl phosphate (TBP), an experiment was conducted to study how steam condensate mixes with the TBP layer when steam passes over a TBP-nitric acid mixture. The experiments showed that the condensate does not form a separate layer on top of the TBP but instead percolates as droplets through the TBP layer. The temperature at the top surface of the TBP layer undergoes a step change increase when the initial condensate droplets reach the surface. Temperatures at the surface and within the TBP and aqueous layers subsequently approach a steady state distribution governed by laminar convection and radiation heat transfer from the vapor space above the two-layer mixture. The rate of temperature increase and the steady state temperature gradient are determined by a characteristic propagation velocity and a streamwise dispersion coefficient for heat transfer. The propagation velocity is the geometric mean of the thermal convection velocities for the organic and aqueous phases, and the dispersion coefficient equals 0.494 times the product of the superficial condensate droplet velocity and the diameter of the test vessel. The value of the dispersion coefficient agrees with the Joshi (1980) correlation …
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Laurinat, James E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implementing Information Security and Its Technology: A LineManagement Perspective (open access)

Implementing Information Security and Its Technology: A LineManagement Perspective

Assuring the security and privacy of institutionalinformation assets is a complex task for the line manager responsible forinternational and multi-national transactions. In the face of an unsureand often conflicting international legal framework, the line managermust employ all available tools in an Integrated Security and PrivacyManagement framework that ranges from legal obligations, to policy, toprocedure, to cutting edge technology to counter the rapidly evolvingcyber threat to information assets and the physical systems thatinformation systems control.
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Barletta, William A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multimode-diode-pumped gas (alkali-vapor) laser (open access)

Multimode-diode-pumped gas (alkali-vapor) laser

We report the first demonstration of a multimode-diode-pumped gas laser--Rb vapor operating on the 795 nm resonance transition. Peak output of {approx}1 Watt was obtained using a volume-Bragg-grating stabilized pump diode array. The laser's output radiance exceeded the pump radiance by a factor greater than 2000. Power scaling (by pumping with larger diode arrays) is therefore possible.
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Page, R H; Beach, R J & Kanz, V K
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical Tooling with a Laptop Data Collector (Presentation material) (open access)

Optical Tooling with a Laptop Data Collector (Presentation material)

It has long been understood that the transposition of data from printouts to data collection sheets, and the subsequent manipulation of this data with measurement values, is an obvious error source in optical tooling projects. Ideas for computerized data collection have been under consideration for some time, yet they lacked the versatility needed for even the most typical optical tooling jobs. Surveyors experienced with optical tooling were used to designing the measurement strategy that worked best for each job. There was no canned formula that worked with every case. After extensive field testing a program was developed that worked in as many cases as possible. The program contains ideal files for components and monumentation, format sheets for set-up and measurement of components, and a summary sheet of work accomplished so far. This allows for the step by step movement through the measurement process.
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Perry, M.; Gaudreault, F. M.; Gaydosh, M. & Rogers, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Re-Visiting SPEAR After 25 Years (Presentation material) (open access)

Re-Visiting SPEAR After 25 Years (Presentation material)

The SPEAR machine was completed in 1972. It consists of a single ring about 80 meters in diameter and started its very productive life as a positron-electron collider circulating beams up to 4 GeV. Synchrotron radiation research began almost immediately parasitically, then as half the program in the 1980s, and then became the whole program in 1991. The original network surveys used optical theodolites and invar tapes to place ring monuments in their ideal positions at constant offsets from the lines of ring quadrupoles. Optical tooling techniques were used to reference the monuments and survey offset targets on fixtures attached to the magnets. For more than 20 years neither the monuments nor magnets were restored to their ideal positions; the obvious discrepancies were simply ''feathered''. In 1992 SLC technology was used for the first time to re-measure the network and map the magnets. The discovery of many multiple-millimeter problems spurred planning for a 1995 global re-alignment. In 1995, all storage ring magnets and beamlines were mapped and moved. The band of displacements from ideal was reduced from about +/- 5mm to +/- 0.5mm. Upon start-up, beam stored without correctors.
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Pietryka, M.; Gaydosh, M. & King, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Developments in Neutrino Science: A Whole Lot About Almost Nothing (open access)

Recent Developments in Neutrino Science: A Whole Lot About Almost Nothing

Results from Super-K, SNO, and KamLAND provide strong evidence that neutrinos undergo flavor-changing oscillations and therefore have non-zero mass. The {nu}-disappearance observations by KamLAND, assuming CPT conservation, point to matter enhanced (MSW) oscillations with large mixing angles as the solution to the solar neutrino problem--a result consistent with the MSW parameters recently defined by these experiments. This requires that the observed neutrino flavors (e, {mu}, and tau) are not mass eigenstates, but are linear combinations of the mass eigenstates of the neutrino. However, such oscillation experiments can only determine the differences in the masses of the neutrinos, not the absolute scale of neutrino mass. What can be inferred from these experiments is that at least one species of neutrino has a mass greater than 55 meV. In fact, the WMAP observations of large-scale structure point to a sum-neutrino mass of {approx} 0.7 eV (roughly 0.25 eV/species assuming democracy between the flavors). Furthermore, there is still the important issue of whether the neutrino and anti-neutrino are distinct particles (i.e. Dirac type) or not (Majorana type). The only way to answer both of these questions is through neutrinoless double beta decay (DBD) experiments. CUORE (Cryogenic Underground Observatory for Rare Events) is a …
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Norman, E B
System: The UNT Digital Library
Separating Hazardous Aerosols from Ambient Aerosols: Role of Fluorescence-Spectral Determination, Aerodynamic Deflector and Pulse Aerodynamic Localizer (PAL) (open access)

Separating Hazardous Aerosols from Ambient Aerosols: Role of Fluorescence-Spectral Determination, Aerodynamic Deflector and Pulse Aerodynamic Localizer (PAL)

An aerosol deflection technique based on the single-shot UV-laser-induced fluorescence spectrum from a flowing particle is presented as a possible front-end bio-aerosol/hazardous-aerosol sensor/identifier. Cued by the fluorescence spectra, individual flowing bio-aerosol particles (1-10 {micro}m in diameter) have been successfully deflected from a stream of ambient aerosols. The electronics needed to compare the fluorescence spectrum of a particular particle with that of a pre-determined fluorescence spectrum are presented in some detail. The deflected particles, with and without going through a funnel for pulse aerodynamic localization (PAL), were collected onto a substrate for further analyses. To demonstrate how hazardous materials can be deflected, TbCl{sub 3} {center_dot} 6H{sub 2}O (a simulant material for some chemical forms of Uranium Oxide) aerosol particles (2 {micro}m in diameter) mixed with Arizona road dust was separated and deflected with our system.
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Pan, Yong-Le; Cobler, Patrick J.; Rhodes, Scott A.; Halverson, Justin & Chang, Richard K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status Of Cryogenic Layering For NIF Ignition Targets (open access)

Status Of Cryogenic Layering For NIF Ignition Targets

Recent advances in cryogenic layering include the development of a self-contained and self-filling cro hohlraum, application of phase contrast x-ray measurements for ice layer characterization, an ice layer achieved with beta-layering which meets the NIF specification for surface roughness at 1.5 K below the triple point. In addition, recent results on target integration in a hohlraum show effective layer control using heaters on the hohlraum.
Date: August 22, 2005
Creator: Moody, J. D.; Kozioziemski, B. J.; London, R. L.; Montgomery, D. S.; Sanchez, J. J.; Sater, J. D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library