Simulation of Spheromak Evolution and Energy Confinement (open access)

Simulation of Spheromak Evolution and Energy Confinement

Simulation results are presented that illustrate the formation and decay of a spheromak plasma driven by a coaxial electrostatic plasma gun, and that model the energy confinement of the plasma. The physics of magnetic reconnection during spheromak formation is also illuminated. The simulations are performed with the three-dimensional, time-dependent, resistive magnetohydrodynamic NIMROD code. The dimensional, simulation results are compared to data from the SSPX spheromak experiment at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The simulation results are tracking the experiment with increasing fidelity (e.g., improved agreement with measurements of the magnetic field, fluctuation amplitudes, and electron temperature) as the simulation has been improved in its representations of the geometry of the experiment (plasma gun and flux conserver), the magnetic bias coils, and the detailed time dependence of the current source driving the plasma gun, and uses realistic parameters. The simulations are providing a better understanding of the dominant physics in SSPX, including when the flux surfaces close and the mechanisms limiting the efficiency of electrostatic drive.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Cohen, B; Hooper, E; Cohen, R; Hill, D; McLean, H; Wood, R et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Validation of the Use of the NMR MOUSE for Detection of Inhomogeneities in DC745 at Production (open access)

Validation of the Use of the NMR MOUSE for Detection of Inhomogeneities in DC745 at Production

In an effort to develop a QA/QC protocol to be used in the development of new pads, we are employing a tabletop unilateral NMR relaxometer called the NMR MOUSE (MObile Universal Surface Explorer). Model materials of varying crosslink density first demonstrated the applicability of the method. Analysis of deformed pads returned from service has been shown to be clearly distinguishable by the NMR MOUSE. Finally, we have quantified the variables associated with taking the relevant measurements and believe that the NMR MOUSE is a viable production and surveillance tool for screening of future DC745 parts.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Chinn, S.; Sawvel, A. & Maxwell, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Increasing robustness of indirect drive capsule designs against short wavelength hydrodynamic instabilities (open access)

Increasing robustness of indirect drive capsule designs against short wavelength hydrodynamic instabilities

Target designs are described that are meant to achieve ignition on the National Ignition Facility. Simulations of recent indirect drive cryogenic capsule designs indicate dramatically reduced growth of short wavelength hydrodynamic instabilities, resulting from two changes in the designs. First, better optimization results from systematic mapping of the ignition target performance over the parameter space of ablator and DT-ice thickness combinations, using techniques developed by one of us (Herrmann). After the space is mapped with one-dimensional simulations, exploration of it with two-dimensional simulations quantifies the dependence of instability growth on target dimensions. Low modes and high modes grow differently in different regions of the space, allowing a trade-off of the two regimes of growth. Significant improvement in high-mode stability can be achieved, relative to previous designs, with only insignificant increase in low-mode growth. This procedure produces capsule designs that, in simulations, tolerate several times the surface roughness that could be tolerated by capsules optimized by older more heuristic techniques. Another significant reduction in instability growth, by another factor of several, is achieved with ablators with 'graded dopants.' In this type of capsule the mid-Z dopant, which is needed in the ablator to minimize x-ray preheat at the ablator-ice interface, is …
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Haan, S. W.; Herrmann, M. C.; Dittrich, T. R.; Fetterman, A. J.; Marinak, M. M.; Munro, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gamma Ray Imaging for Environmental Remediation (open access)

Gamma Ray Imaging for Environmental Remediation

This program is the development of germanium strip detectors for environmental remediation. It is a collaboration between the Naval Research Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. The goal is to develop detectors that are simultaneously capable of excellent spectroscopy and imaging of gamma radiation.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Philips, B.F.; Johnson, R.A. Kroeger: J.D. Kurfess: W.N.; Wulf, E.A. & Novikova, E. I.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
John von Neumann Birthday Centennial (open access)

John von Neumann Birthday Centennial

In celebration of John von Neumann's 100th birthday, a series of four lectures were presented on the evening of February 10, 2003 during the SIAM Conference on Computational Science and Engineering in San Diego. The venue was appropriate because von Neumann spent much of the later part of his life, in the 1950's, as an unofficial ambassador for computational science. He was then the only senior American scientist who had experience with the new computers (digital, electronic, and programmable) and a vision of their future importance. No doubt he would have relished the chance to attend a meeting such as this. The first speaker, William Aspray, described the ''interesting times'' during which computers were invented. His remarks were based on his history [1] of this period in von Neumann's life. We were honored to have John von Neumann's daughter, Marina von Neumann-Whitman, as our second speaker. Other accounts of von Neumann's life can be found in books by two of his colleagues [2] and [3]. Our third speaker, Peter Lax, provided both mathematical and international perspectives on John von Neumann's career. Finally, Pete Stewart spoke about von Neumann's numerical error analysis [4] in the context of later work; this talk …
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Grcar, Joseph F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Efficient Catalytic Activation of Hydrogen peroxide for Green Chemical Processes: Final Report (open access)

Energy Efficient Catalytic Activation of Hydrogen peroxide for Green Chemical Processes: Final Report

A new, highly energy efficient approach for using catalytic oxidation chemistry in multiple fields of technology has been pursued. The new catalysts, called TAML® activators, catalyze the reactions of hydrogen peroxide and other oxidants for the exceptionally rapid decontamination of noninfectious simulants (B. atrophaeus) of anthrax spores, for the energy efficient decontamination of thiophosphate pesticides, for the facile, low temperature removal of color and organochlorines from pulp and paper mill effluent, for the bleaching of dyes from textile mill effluents, and for the removal of recalcitrant dibenzothiophene compounds from diesel and gasoline fuels. Highlights include the following: 1) A 7-log kill of Bacillus atrophaeus spores has been achieved unambiguously in water under ambient conditions within 15 minutes. 2) The rapid total degradation under ambient conditions of four thiophosphate pesticides and phosphonate degradation intermediates has been achieved on treatment with TAML/peroxide, opening up potential applications of the decontamination system for phosphonate structured chemical warfare agents, for inexpensive, easy to perform degradation of stored and aged pesticide stocks (especially in Africa and Asia), for remediation of polluted sites and water bodies, and for the destruction of chemical warfare agent stockpiles. 3) A mill trial conducted in a Pennsylvanian bleached kraft pulp mill …
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Collins, Terrence J. & Horwitz, Colin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical Study of the Formation, Ion Spin-up and Nonlinear Stability Properties of Field-reversed Configurations (open access)

Numerical Study of the Formation, Ion Spin-up and Nonlinear Stability Properties of Field-reversed Configurations

Results of three-dimensional numerical simulations of field-reversed configurations (FRCs) are presented. Emphasis of this work is on the nonlinear evolution of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) instabilities in kinetic FRCs and the new FRC formation method by the counter-helicity spheromak merging. Kinetic simulations show nonlinear saturation of the n = 1 tilt mode, where n is the toroidal mode number. The n = 2 and n = 3 rotational modes are observed to grow during the nonlinear phase of the tilt instability due to the ion spin-up in the toroidal direction. The ion toroidal spin-up is shown to be related to the resistive decay of the internal flux, and the resulting loss of particle confinement. Three-dimensional MHD simulations of counter-helicity spheromak merging and FRC formation show good agreement with results from the SSX-FRC experiment. Simulations show formation of an FRC in about 30 Alfven times for typical experimental parameters. The growth rate of the n = 1 tilt mode is shown to be significantly reduced compared to the MHD growth rate due to the large plasma viscosity and field-line-tying effects.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Belova, E. V.; Davidson, R. C.; Ji, H.; Yamada, M.; Cothran, C. D.; Brown, M. R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final report (open access)

Final report

In the DOE award, DE-FG02-00ER45823, we have used molecular dynamics (MD) computer simulations of the intergranular films (IGFs) present in alumina and silicon nitride materials to address specific questions such as: What is the atomistic structure of the glassy silicate phase? Because of the extremely thin nature of the IGF, do bulk-like glass structure and properties prevail? Does distortion exist in the silicate bonds (which affects bond strength and reactivity) and how is this structure affected by the separation distance between the crystals and/or by the composition of the IGF? Does a structural ordering caused by epitaxial adsorption occur at the IGF/crystal interface? What is the correlation length of this order perpendicular to the interface? How is this ordering affected by composition of the IGF or by the crystals in question? In all simulations, a specific number of ions in stoichiometric ratio were placed as the IGF between two similar crystals, with, in some cases, different crystallographic orientations. The IGF compositions coincided with some of those observed experimentally (calcium aluminosilicate (CAS) glasses in the alumina case, calcium silicon oxy-nitride in the nitride case). The number of ions in the IGF was varied to allow for different thicknesses, although the X …
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Garofalini, S. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-Dimensional Hydrodynamics Experiments on the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Three-Dimensional Hydrodynamics Experiments on the National Ignition Facility

The production of supersonic jets of material via the interaction of a strong shock wave with a spatially localized density perturbation is a common feature of inertial confinement fusion and astrophysics. The behavior of two-dimensional (2D) supersonic jets has previously been investigated in detail [J. M. Foster et. al, Phys. Plasmas 9, 2251 (2002)]. In three-dimensions (3D), however, there are new aspects to the behavior of supersonic jets in compressible media. In this paper, the commissioning activities on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [J. A. Paisner et al., Laser Focus World 30, 75 (1994)] to enable hydrodynamic experiments will be presented as well as the results from the first series of hydrodynamic experiments. In these experiments, two of the first four beams of NIF are used to drive a 40 Mbar shock wave into millimeter scale aluminum targets backed by 100 mg/cc carbon aerogel foam. The remaining beams are delayed in time and are used to provide a point-projection x-ray backlighter source for diagnosing the three-dimensional structure of the jet evolution resulting from a variety of 2D and 3D features. Comparisons between data and simulations using several codes will be presented.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Blue, B. E.; Weber, S. V.; Glendinning, S.; Lanier, N.; Woods, D.; Bono, M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fe L-shell Diagnostics in Theory and Practice (open access)

Fe L-shell Diagnostics in Theory and Practice

None
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Mauche, C; Liedahl, D & Fournier, K
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accessing Ultra-High Pressure, Quasi-Isentropic States of Matter (open access)

Accessing Ultra-High Pressure, Quasi-Isentropic States of Matter

A new approach to the study of material strength of metals at extreme pressures has been developed on the Omega laser, using a ramped plasma piston drive. The laser drives a shock through a solid plastic reservoir that unloads at the rear free surface, expands across a vacuum gap, and stagnates on the metal sample under study. This produces a gently increasing ram pressure, compressing the sample nearly isentropically. The peak pressure on the sample, inferred from VISAR measurements of velocity, can be varied by adjusting the laser energy and pulse length, gap size, and reservoir density, and obeys a simple scaling relation. In an important application, using in-flight x-ray radiography, the material strength of solid-state samples at high pressure can be inferred by measuring the reductions in the growth rates (stabilization) of Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) unstable interfaces. This paper reports the first attempt to use this new laser-driven, quasi-isentropic technique for determining material strength in high-pressure solids. Modulated foils of Al-6061-T6 were accelerated and compressed to peak pressures of 200 kbar. Modulation growth was recorded at a series of times after peak acceleration and well into the release phase. Fits to the growth data, using a Steinberg-Guinan (SG) constitutive strength …
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Lorenz, K. T.; Edwards, M. J.; Glendinning, S. G.; Ho, D. D.; Jankowski, Alan Frederic; McNaney, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Workshop on the Physics PRogramme of the RBRC and UKQCD QCDOC Machines (open access)

Workshop on the Physics PRogramme of the RBRC and UKQCD QCDOC Machines

None
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Christ, N.; Kenway, R.; Mawhinney, R. & Qhta, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hohlraum Characterization Milestones (open access)

Hohlraum Characterization Milestones

A successful ignition campaign will depend in part upon having highly characterized hohlraums and shells for target assemblies. Regarding holhraums, properties of interest include dimensions, surface features and chemical composition. This report outlines the metrology needs for hohlraums and provides a timeline for capital as well as FTE expenditures through '07. The topics discussed include hohlraum metrology, windows and tenting metrology, with comments on support of other areas including cryo-related development efforts. Although there is a strong interest in non-destructive characterization, this report also investigates the use of destructive techniques for providing critical information for process development and improvement.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Gunther, J
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implosion Hydrodynamics of Fast Ignition Targets (open access)

Implosion Hydrodynamics of Fast Ignition Targets

The fast ignition (FI) concept requires the generation of a compact, dense, pure fuel mass accessible to an external ignition source. The current baseline FI target is a shell fitted with a reentrant cone extending to near its center. Conventional direct or indirect drive collapses the shell near the tip of the cone and then an ultra-intense laser pulse focused to the inside cone tip generates high-energy electrons to ignite the dense fuel. We have theoretically and experimentally investigated the collapse of such targets, validating modeling and exploring the tradeoffs available, in such an asymmetric geometry, to optimize compaction of the fuel and maintain the integrity of the cone. The collapse is complex. Away from the cone, the shell collapses much as does a conventional implosion, generating a hot, low-density inner core. But because of the open side hot plasma exhausts out toward the tip of the cone. This hot plasma is advantageous for implosion diagnostics; it can provide protons for angular dependent measurements of the shell wall, neutrons for temperature measurements, and self-emission for contamination measurements. But for FI it is a liability; the hot, low-density inner core impedes the compaction of the cold fuel, lowering the implosion/burn efficiency …
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Stephens, R. B.; Hatchett, S. P.; Tabak, M.; Stoeckl, C.; Sangster, T. C.; Petrasso, R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Testing of the Semikron Validation AIPM Unit at Oak Ridge National Laboratory -- October 2004 (open access)

Testing of the Semikron Validation AIPM Unit at Oak Ridge National Laboratory -- October 2004

This report documents the electrical tests performed on the Semikron high-voltage automotive integrated power module (AIPM) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). Testing was performed in the 100-hp dynamometer test cell at the National Transportation Research Center.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Nelson, S. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Warm Wavebreaking of Nonlinear Plasma Waves With Arbitrary Phase Velocities (open access)

Warm Wavebreaking of Nonlinear Plasma Waves With Arbitrary Phase Velocities

A warm, relativistic fluid theory of a nonequilibrium, collisionless plasma is developed to analyze nonlinear plasma waves excited by intense drive beams. The maximum amplitude and wavelength are calculated for nonrelativistic plasma temperatures and arbitrary plasma wave phase velocities. The maximum amplitude is shown to increase in the presence of a laser field. These results set a limit to the achievable gradient in plasma-based accelerators.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Schroeder, C. B.; Esarey, E. & Shadwick, B. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Internal Transport Barrier Driven by Redistribution of Energetic Ions (open access)

Internal Transport Barrier Driven by Redistribution of Energetic Ions

Alfven instabilities excited by energetic ions are used as a means to reduce the central magnetic shear in a tokamak via redistribution of energetic ions. When the central magnetic shear is low enough, ballooning modes become stable for any plasma pressure gradient and an internal transport barrier (ITB) with a steep pressure gradient can exist. This mechanism can sustain a steady-state ITB as demonstrated by experimental data from the DIII-D tokamak. It can also produce a shear in toroidal and poloidal plasma rotation. Possible application of this technique to use the energetic alpha particles for improvement of burning plasma performance is discussed.
Date: November 12, 2004
Creator: Wong, K. L.; Heidbrink, W. W.; Ruskov, E.; Petty, C. C.; Greenfield, C. M.; Nazikian, R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library