Positivity Preservation and Advection Algorithm Tests for Edge Plasma Turbulence (open access)

Positivity Preservation and Advection Algorithm Tests for Edge Plasma Turbulence

None
Date: August 8, 2012
Creator: Peterson, J L & Hammett, G W
System: The UNT Digital Library
2012 MULTIPHOTON PROCESSES GRC, JUNE 3-8, 2012 (open access)

2012 MULTIPHOTON PROCESSES GRC, JUNE 3-8, 2012

The sessions will focus on:  Attosecond science;  Strong-field processes in molecules and solids;  Generation of harmonics and attosecond pulses;  Free-electron laser experiments and theory;  Ultrafast imaging;  Applications of very high intensity lasers;  Propagation of intense laser fields.
Date: March 8, 2012
Creator: Walker, Barry
System: The UNT Digital Library
Brewster Angle Polarizing Beamsplitter Laser Damage Competition: "P" polarization (open access)

Brewster Angle Polarizing Beamsplitter Laser Damage Competition: "P" polarization

None
Date: November 8, 2012
Creator: Stolz, C. J. & Runkel, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Jet Substructure at the Tevatron And LHC: New Results, New Tools, New Benchmarks (open access)

Jet Substructure at the Tevatron And LHC: New Results, New Tools, New Benchmarks

None
Date: November 8, 2012
Creator: Altheimer, A.; U., /Columbia; Arora, S.; /Rutgers U., Piscataway; Asquith, L.; /Argonne et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Compact UV Timing Fiducial System for use with x-Ray Streak Cameras at NIF (open access)

A Compact UV Timing Fiducial System for use with x-Ray Streak Cameras at NIF

None
Date: August 8, 2012
Creator: Homoelle, D.; Bowers, M.; Browning, D.; Burns, S.; Golick, B.; Erbert, G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
TAGGING, TRACKING AND LOCATING WITHOUT GPS (open access)

TAGGING, TRACKING AND LOCATING WITHOUT GPS

The Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) was requested to lead a Law Enforcement Working Group that was formed to collaborate on common operational needs. All agencies represented on the working group ranked their need to tag, track, and locate a witting or unwitting target as their highest priority. Specifically, they were looking for technologies more robust than Global Positioning Satellite (GPS), could communicate back to the owner, and worked where normal cell phone communications did not work or were unreliable. SRNL brought together multiple technologies in a demonstration that was held in in various Alaska venues, including metropolitan, wilderness, and at-sea that met the working group's requirements. Using prototypical technologies from Boeing, On Ramp, and Fortress, SRNL was able to demonstrate the ability to track personnel and material in all scenarios including indoors, in heavily wooden areas, canyons, and in parking garages. In all cases GPS signals were too weak to measure. Bi-directional communication was achieved in areas that Wi-Fi, cell towers, or traditional radios would not perform. The results of the exercise will be presented. These technologies are considered ideal for tracking high value material such has nuclear material with a platform that allows seamless tracking anywhere in the …
Date: July 8, 2012
Creator: Cordaro, J.; Coleman, T. & Shull, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
RADIOACTIVE HIGH LEVEL WASTE TANK PITTING PREDICTIONS: AN INVESTIGATION INTO CRITICAL SOLUTION CONCENTRATIONS (open access)

RADIOACTIVE HIGH LEVEL WASTE TANK PITTING PREDICTIONS: AN INVESTIGATION INTO CRITICAL SOLUTION CONCENTRATIONS

A series of cyclic potentiodynamic polarization tests was performed on samples of ASTM A537 carbon steel in support of a probability-based approach to evaluate the effect of chloride and sulfate on corrosion the steel�s susceptibility to pitting corrosion. Testing solutions were chosen to systemically evaluate the influence of the secondary aggressive species, chloride, and sulfate, in the nitrate based, high-level wastes. The results suggest that evaluating the combined effect of all aggressive species, nitrate, chloride, and sulfate, provides a consistent response for determining corrosion susceptibility. The results of this work emphasize the importance for not only nitrate concentration limits, but also chloride and sulfate concentration limits.
Date: November 8, 2012
Creator: Hoffman, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal characteristics of air flow cooling in the lithium ion batteries experimental chamber (open access)

Thermal characteristics of air flow cooling in the lithium ion batteries experimental chamber

A battery pack prototype has been designed and built to evaluate various air cooling concepts for the thermal management of Li-ion batteries. The heat generation from the Li-Ion batteries was simulated with electrical heat generation devices with the same dimensions as the Li-Ion battery (200 mm x 150 mm x 12 mm). Each battery simulator generates up to 15W of heat. There are 20 temperature probes placed uniformly on the surface of the battery simulator, which can measure temperatures in the range from -40 C to +120 C. The prototype for the pack has up to 100 battery simulators and temperature probes are recorder using a PC based DAQ system. We can measure the average surface temperature of the simulator, temperature distribution on each surface and temperature distributions in the pack. The pack which holds the battery simulators is built as a crate, with adjustable gap (varies from 2mm to 5mm) between the simulators for air flow channel studies. The total system flow rate and the inlet flow temperature are controlled during the test. The cooling channel with various heat transfer enhancing devices can be installed between the simulators to investigate the cooling performance. The prototype was designed to configure …
Date: July 8, 2012
Creator: A., Lukhanin; U., Rohatgi; Belyaev, A.; Fedorchenko, D.; Khazhmuradov, M.; Lukhanin, O et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
2012 ELECTRONIC PROCESSES IN ORGANIC MATERIALS GORDON RESEARCH SEMINAR, JUNE 2-8, 2012 (open access)

2012 ELECTRONIC PROCESSES IN ORGANIC MATERIALS GORDON RESEARCH SEMINAR, JUNE 2-8, 2012

This meeting focuses on the latest progress and challenges regarding organic electronics devices, artificial light-harvesting systems, and inorganic/organic hybrid nanoscale systems and especially on the synergy between these fields.
Date: June 8, 2012
Creator: Eisele, Dorthe
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of the bus joint for the ITER Central Solenoid (open access)

Development of the bus joint for the ITER Central Solenoid

None
Date: August 8, 2012
Creator: Martovetsky, N. N.; Irick, D. K. & Kenney, S. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finding Motifs in Wind Generation Time Series Data (open access)

Finding Motifs in Wind Generation Time Series Data

None
Date: August 8, 2012
Creator: Kamath, C & Fan, Y J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Channel Modeling and Time Delay Estimation for Clock Synchronization Among Seaweb Nodes (open access)

Channel Modeling and Time Delay Estimation for Clock Synchronization Among Seaweb Nodes

From simulations, tracking of the impulse response is feasible. Potential to benefit other functions such as ranging between two nodes. Potential to combine the features of different protocols to create a new and more realistic clock-synchronization protocol.
Date: July 8, 2012
Creator: Gagnon, Pascal; Rice, Joseph A. & Clark, Grace A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer experiments on the onset of turbulence (open access)

Computer experiments on the onset of turbulence

None
Date: August 8, 2012
Creator: Weisgraber, T H & Alder, B J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dosimetric Quantities and Neutron Spectra Outside the Shielding of Electron Accelerators (open access)

Dosimetric Quantities and Neutron Spectra Outside the Shielding of Electron Accelerators

None
Date: October 8, 2012
Creator: Fasso, Alberto; Lab, /SLAC /Jefferson; Liu, James C.; Rokni, Sayed H & /SLAC
System: The UNT Digital Library
Potential Emissions of Tritium in Air from Wells on the Nevada National Security Site (open access)

Potential Emissions of Tritium in Air from Wells on the Nevada National Security Site

This slide-show discusses the Nevada National Security Site (NNSS) and tritium in the groundwater. It describes the wells and boreholes and potential airflow from these sources. Monitoring of selected wells is discussed and preliminary results are presented.
Date: October 8, 2012
Creator: Warren, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Particle Size-Dependent Photoelectron Plasmon Loss Features In Deposited Germanium Nanocrystals (open access)

Particle Size-Dependent Photoelectron Plasmon Loss Features In Deposited Germanium Nanocrystals

None
Date: March 8, 2012
Creator: Bostedt, C; Willey, T; Terminello, L & van Buuren, T
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Performance Computing for Electric Grid Planning and Operations (open access)

High-Performance Computing for Electric Grid Planning and Operations

None
Date: February 8, 2012
Creator: Epperly, T W; Edmunds, T; Lamont, A; Meyers, C; Smith, S; Yao, Y et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Methods of reducing vehicle aerodynamic drag (open access)

Methods of reducing vehicle aerodynamic drag

A small scale model (length 1710 mm) of General Motor SUV was built and tested in the wind tunnel for expected wind conditions and road clearance. Two passive devices, rear screen which is plate behind the car and rear fairing where the end of the car is aerodynamically extended, were incorporated in the model and tested in the wind tunnel for different wind conditions. The conclusion is that rear screen could reduce drag up to 6.5% and rear fairing can reduce the drag by 26%. There were additional tests for front edging and rear vortex generators. The results for drag reduction were mixed. It should be noted that there are aesthetic and practical considerations that may allow only partial implementation of these or any drag reduction options.
Date: July 8, 2012
Creator: V., Sirenko & U., Rohatgi
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling of Coherent Synchrotron Radiation using a Direct Numerical Solution of Maxwell's Equations (open access)

Modeling of Coherent Synchrotron Radiation using a Direct Numerical Solution of Maxwell's Equations

None
Date: October 8, 2012
Creator: Novokhatski, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrated, Geothermal-CO2 Storage Reservoirs: Adaptable, Multi-Stage, Sustainable, Energy-Recovery Strategies that Reduce Carbon Intensity and Environmental Risk (open access)

Integrated, Geothermal-CO2 Storage Reservoirs: Adaptable, Multi-Stage, Sustainable, Energy-Recovery Strategies that Reduce Carbon Intensity and Environmental Risk

None
Date: May 8, 2012
Creator: Buscheck, T A; Elliot, T R; Celia, M A; Chen, M; Hao, Y; Lu, C et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Model-Based, Memory-Centric Performance and Power Optimization on NUMA Multiprocessors (open access)

Model-Based, Memory-Centric Performance and Power Optimization on NUMA Multiprocessors

None
Date: October 8, 2012
Creator: Su, C Y; Li, D; Nikolopoulos, D S; Cameron, K W; de Supinski, B R & Leon, E A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Forest Irrigation Of Tritiated Water: A Proven Tritiated Water Management Tool (open access)

Forest Irrigation Of Tritiated Water: A Proven Tritiated Water Management Tool

Tritium releases from the Old Radioactive Waste Burial Ground (ORWBG) at the SRS in South Carolina has impacted groundwater and surface water. Tritiated groundwater plumes discharge into Fourmile Branch which is a small tributary of the Savannah River, a regional water resource. Taking advantage of the groundwater flow paths and the local topography a water collection and irrigation system was constructed and has been used at the SRS for over a decade to reduce these tritiated water releases to Fourmile Branch. The tritiated water is transferred to the atmosphere by evaporation from the pond surface, and after irrigation, wetted surface evaporation and evapotranspiration through the forest vegetation. Over the last decade SRS has irrigated over 120,000,000 gallons of tritiated water, which diverted over 6000 curies away from Fourmile Branch and the Savannah River. The system has been effective in reducing the flux of tritiated groundwater by approximately 70%. Mass balance studies of tritium in the forest soils before operations and over the last decade indicate that approximately 90% of the tritiated water that is irrigated is transferred to the atmosphere. Dose studies indicate that exposure to site workers and offsite maximally exposed individual is very low, approximately 6 mrem/year and …
Date: November 8, 2012
Creator: Vangelas, Karen; Blount, Gerald; Kmetz, Thomas & Prater, Phil
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Multiplicity Processes at NLO with BlackHat and Sherpa (open access)

High Multiplicity Processes at NLO with BlackHat and Sherpa

None
Date: November 8, 2012
Creator: Bern, Zvi; Ozeren, Kemal; Dixon, Lance J.; Hoeche, Stefan; Cordero, Fernando Febres; Ita, Harald et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
LCLS-II New Instruments Workshops Report (open access)

LCLS-II New Instruments Workshops Report

The LCLS-II New Instruments workshops chaired by Phil Heimann and Jerry Hastings were held on March 19-22, 2012 at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. The goal of the workshops was to identify the most exciting science and corresponding parameters which will help define the LCLS-II instrumentation. This report gives a synopsis of the proposed investigations and an account of the workshop. Scientists from around the world have provided short descriptions of the scientific opportunities they envision at LCLS-II. The workshops focused on four broadly defined science areas: biology, materials sciences, chemistry and atomic, molecular and optical physics (AMO). Below we summarize the identified science opportunities in the four areas. The frontiers of structural biology lie in solving the structures of large macromolecular biological systems. Most large protein assemblies are inherently difficult to crystallize due to their numerous degrees of freedom. Serial femtosecond protein nanocrystallography, using the 'diffraction-before-destruction' approach to outrun radiation damage has been very successfully pioneered at LCLS and diffraction patterns were obtained from some of the smallest protein crystals ever. The combination of femtosecond x-ray pulses of high intensity and nanosized protein crystals avoids the radiation damage encountered by conventional x-ray crystallography with focused beams and opens the …
Date: August 8, 2012
Creator: Baradaran, Samira; Bergmann, Uwe; Durr, Herrmann; Gaffney, Kelley; Goldstein, Julia; Guehr, Markus et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library