Preparation of multilayered materials in cross-section for in situ TEM tensile deformation studies (open access)

Preparation of multilayered materials in cross-section for in situ TEM tensile deformation studies

The success of in-situ transmission electron microscopy experimentation is often dictated by proper specimen preparation. We report here a novel technique permitting the production of cross-sectioned tensile specimens of multilayered films for in-situ deformation studies. Of primary importance in the development of this technique is the production of an electron transparent micro-gauge section using focused ion beam technology. This microgauge section predetermines the position at which plastic deformation is initiated; crack nucleation, growth and failure are then subsequently observed.
Date: May 13, 1997
Creator: Wall, M. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Temperature and spectral investigation of bulk KDP below damage using 355 nm laser irradiation (open access)

Temperature and spectral investigation of bulk KDP below damage using 355 nm laser irradiation

A spectral and temperature investigation of fast-grown KDP crystals under high fluence, 355 nm laser irradiation is discussed. Pump-and-probe Raman spectroscopy indicate transient changes of the vibrational spectrum. Photothermal deflection experiments provide information on the temporal behavior of the temperature change. The presence of emission in the visible and NIR spectral regions is attributed to the presence of impurities and/or defects in the crystal.
Date: October 1, 1997
Creator: Demos, S. G., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
APT/LEDA RFQ vacuum pumping system (open access)

APT/LEDA RFQ vacuum pumping system

This paper describes the design and fabrication of a vacuum pumping system for the ATP/LEDA (Low Energy Demonstration Accelerator) RFQ (Radio Frequency Quadrupole) linac. Resulted from the lost proton beam, gas streaming from the LEBT (Low Energy Beam Transport) and out-gassing from the surfaces of the RFQ cavity and vacuum plumbing, the total gas load will be on the order of 7.2 x 10{sup -4} Torr-liters/sec, consisting mainly of hydrogen. The system is designed to pump on a continual basis with redundancy to ensure that the minimal operating vacuum level of 1 x 10{sup -6} Torr is maintained even under abnormal conditions. Details of the design, performance analysis and the preliminary test results of the cryogenic pumps are presented.
Date: July 21, 1997
Creator: Shen, S., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deriving Particle Distributions from In-Line Fraunhofer Holographic Data (open access)

Deriving Particle Distributions from In-Line Fraunhofer Holographic Data

Holographic data are acquired during hydrodynamic experiments at the Pegasus Pulsed Power Facility at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. These experiments produce a fine spray of fast-moving particles. Snapshots of the spray are captured using in-line Fraunhofer holographic techniques. Roughly one cubic centimeter is recorded by the hologram. Minimum detectable particle size in the data extends down to 2 microns. In a holography reconstruction system, a laser illuminates the hologram as it rests in a three-axis actuator, recreating the snapshot of the experiment. A computer guides the actuators through an orderly sequence programmed by the user. At selected intervals, slices of this volume are captured and digitized with a CCD camera. Intermittent on-line processing of the image data and computer control of the camera functions optimizes statistics of the acquired image data for off-line processing. Tens of thousands of individual data frames (30 to 40 gigabytes of data) are required to recreate a digital representation of the snapshot. Throughput of the reduction system is 550 megabytes per hour (MB/hr). Objects and associated features from the data are subsequently extracted during off-line processing. Discrimination and correlation tests reject noise, eliminate multiple counting of particles, and build an error model to estimate …
Date: August 1997
Creator: Ciarcia, C. A.; Johnson, D. E.; Sorenson, D. S.; Frederickson, R. H.; Delanoy, A. D.; Malone, R. M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Top quark results from D-Zero (open access)

Top quark results from D-Zero

This is a brief summary of D0's top quark measurements, including {sigma}{sub t{bar t}} and m{sub t} in the {ell} + jets and dilepton channels, {sigma}{sub t{bar t}} in the all jets channel, and the search for top disappearance via t {yields} bH{sup +}, H{sup +} {yields} {tau}{nu} or c{bar s}.
Date: November 1, 1997
Creator: Strovink, Mark
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bench-Scale Demonstration of Hot-Gas Desulfurization Technology (open access)

Bench-Scale Demonstration of Hot-Gas Desulfurization Technology

Prior to the current project, development of the DSRP was done in a laboratory setting, using synthetic gas mixtures to simulate the regeneration off-gas and coal gas feeds. The objective of the current work is to further the development of zinc titanate fluidized-bed desulfurization (ZTFBD) and the DSRP for hot-gas cleanup by testing with actual coal gas. The objectives of this project are to: (1) Develop and test an integrated, skid-mounted, bench-scale ZTFBD/DSRP reactor system with a slipstream of actual coal gas; (2) Test the bench-scale DSRP over an extended period with a slipstream of actual coal gas to quantify the degradation in performance, if any, caused by the trace contaminants present in coal gas (including heavy metals, chlorides, fluorides, and ammonia); (3) Expose the DSRP catalyst to actual coal gas for extended periods and then test its activity in a laboratory reactor to quantify the degradation in performance, if any, caused by static exposure to the trace contaminants in coal gas; (4) Design and fabricate a six-fold larger-scale DSRP reactor system for future slipstream testing; (5) Further develop the fluidized-bed DSRP to handle high concentrations (up to 14 percent) of SO{sub 2} that are likely to be encountered when …
Date: July 1, 1997
Creator: Portzer, Jeffrey W. & Gangwal, Santosh K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Equation of State measurements of hydrogen isotopes on Nova (open access)

Equation of State measurements of hydrogen isotopes on Nova

High intensity lasers can be used to perform measurements of materials at extremely high pressures if certain experimental issues can be overcome. We have addressed those issues and used the Nova laser to shock-compress liquid deuterium and obtain measurements of density and pressure on the principal Hugoniot at pressures from 300 kbar to more than 2 Mbar. The data are compared with a number of equation of state models. The data indicate that the effect of molecular dissociation of the deuterium into a monatomic phase may have a significant impact on the equation of state near 1 Mbar.
Date: November 1, 1997
Creator: Collins, G. W., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addressing nuclear and hostile environment challenges with intelligent automation (open access)

Addressing nuclear and hostile environment challenges with intelligent automation

None
Date: August 4, 1997
Creator: Grasz, E. L. & Perez, M. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production code control system for hydrodynamics simulations (open access)

Production code control system for hydrodynamics simulations

We describe how the Production Code Control System (pCCS), written in Perl, has been used to control and monitor the execution of a large hydrodynamics simulation code in a production environment. We have been able to integrate new, disparate, and often independent, applications into the PCCS framework without the need to modify any of our existing application codes. Both users and code developers see a consistent interface to the simulation code and associated applications regardless of the physical platform, whether an MPP, SMP, server, or desktop workstation. We will also describe our use of Perl to develop a configuration management system for the simulation code, as well as a code usage database and report generator. We used Perl to write a backplane that allows us plug in preprocessors, the hydrocode, postprocessors, visualization tools, persistent storage requests, and other codes. We need only teach PCCS a minimal amount about any new tool or code to essentially plug it in and make it usable to the hydrocode. PCCS has made it easier to link together disparate codes, since using Perl has removed the need to learn the idiosyncrasies of system or RPC programming. The text handling in Perl makes it easy to …
Date: August 18, 1997
Creator: Slone, D.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of neutral gas models for divertor plasmas (open access)

Comparison of neutral gas models for divertor plasmas

None
Date: September 10, 1997
Creator: Rensink, M. E., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
How much is energy R and D worth? (open access)

How much is energy R and D worth?

The value of energy technology R and D as an insurance investment to reduce the cost of climate change stabilization, oil price shocks, urban air pollution, and energy disruptions is estimated to be $5-8 billion/year in sum total. However, the total that is justified is actually less than this sum because some R and D is applicable to more than one risk. nevertheless, the total DOE investment in energy technology R and D (about $1.3 billion/year in FY97) seems easily justified by its insurance value alone; and, in fact, more might be warranted, particularly in the areas related to climate change and urban air pollution. This conclusion appears robust even if the private sector is assumed to be investing a comparable amount. Not counted is the value to the economy and to US competitiveness of better energy technologies that may result from the R and D; only the insurance value for reducing the cost of these four risks to society was estimated.
Date: May 6, 1997
Creator: Schock, R. N., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test on 2,000 photomultipliers for the CDF endplug calorimeter upgrade (open access)

Test on 2,000 photomultipliers for the CDF endplug calorimeter upgrade

A systematic test of various characteristics, such as gain, dark current, maximum peak current, stability and relative quantum efficiency, has been made to evaluate about 2,000 photomultiplier tubes for the upgraded CDF Endplug calorimeters. The phototubes are Hamamatsu R4125,19mm diameter with green-extended photocathode. In this report we discuss the distribution of the major characteristics measured and the failure mode. Comparisons between independent measurements made on some of the characteristics are used to evaluate the quality of the measurement itself.
Date: December 1, 1997
Creator: Fiori, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence of critical scaling behavior during vapor phase synthesis of continuous filament composites (open access)

Evidence of critical scaling behavior during vapor phase synthesis of continuous filament composites

The authors present experimental measurements of the accessible pore fraction in ceramic matrix composites during consolidation by vapor phase infiltration. For two topologically distinct filament architectures, the accessible pore fraction decreased during consolidation with a power law decay and a critical scaling exponent of 0.41 (R{sup 2} = 0.97). A three-dimensional analysis of the percolating pores revealed that the structures became topologically equivalent and simply connected near the critical density.
Date: February 1, 1997
Creator: Kinney, J. H., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparative study of 137Cs transfer from soil to vegetation in the Marshall Islands (open access)

Comparative study of 137Cs transfer from soil to vegetation in the Marshall Islands

None
Date: October 1, 1997
Creator: Robison, W. I.; Conrado, C. L. & Hamilton, T. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rayleigh-taylor instability growth experiments in a cylindrically convergent geometry (open access)

Rayleigh-taylor instability growth experiments in a cylindrically convergent geometry

Convergent geometry Rayleigh-Taylor experiments have been performed with a 122-point detonation initiation system on cylinders having sinusoidal perturbations on the outer surface ranging from mode-6 to mode-36. Experiments were performed with various perturbation mode numbers, perturbation amplitudes, and ring accelerations. Feedthrough perturbation growth on the inner surface was observed in several experiments, and in one experiment the feed through perturbation underwent a phase inversion. These experimental results were found to be in good agreement with linear, small-amplitude analysis of feedthrough growth in an incompressible, cylindrically convergent geometry.
Date: June 11, 1997
Creator: Weir, S. T., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crystallization pathway in the bulk metallic glass Zr{sub 41.2}Ti{sub 13.8}Cu{sub 12.5}Ni{sub 10}Be{sub 22.5}. (open access)

Crystallization pathway in the bulk metallic glass Zr{sub 41.2}Ti{sub 13.8}Cu{sub 12.5}Ni{sub 10}Be{sub 22.5}.

A new family of multicomponent metallic alloys exhibits an excellent glass forming ability at moderate cooling rates of about 10K/s and a wide supercooled liquid region. These glasses are eutectic or nearly eutectic, thus far away from the compositions of competing crystalline phases. The nucleation of crystals from the homogeneous amorphous phase requires large thermally activated composition fluctuations for which the time scale is relatively long, even in the supercooled liquid. In the Zr{sub 41.2}Ti{sub 13.8}Cu{sub 12.5}Ni{sub 10}Be{sub 22.5} alloy therefore a different pathway to crystallization is observed. The initially homogeneous alloy separates into two amorphous phases. In the decomposed regions, crystallization probability increases and finally polymorphic crystallization occurs. The evolution of decomposition and succeeding primary crystallization in the bulk amorphous Zr{sub 41.2}Ti{sub 13.8}Cu{sub 12.5}Ni{sub 10}Be{sub 22.5}, alloy have been studied by small angle neutron. Samples annealed isothermally in the supercooled liquid and in the solid state exhibit interference peaks indicating quasiperiodic inhomogeneities in the scattering length density. The related wavelengths increase with temperature according to the linear Cahn-Hilliard theory for spinodal decomposition. Also the time evolution of the interference peaks in the early stages is consistent with this theory. At later stages, X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy investigations …
Date: June 24, 1997
Creator: Geyer, U.; Johnson, W. L.; Schneider, S. & Thiyagarajan, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An asymmetric muon-proton Collider: Luminosity Consideration (open access)

An asymmetric muon-proton Collider: Luminosity Consideration

An asymmetric muon-proton collider is proposed as an instrument for possible quark structure search. Energy of proton beam is supposed to be some 5-6 times of muon energy. Estimated luminosity of the collider with two rings--the Tevatron accelerator and {mu}-ring--is found to be of the order of 10{sup 33} s{sup -1} cm{sup -2}.
Date: April 1, 1997
Creator: Shiltsev, V. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced Control of Mercury and other HAP by Innovative Modifications to Wet FGD Processes (open access)

Enhanced Control of Mercury and other HAP by Innovative Modifications to Wet FGD Processes

The overall objective of this project was to learn more about controlling emissions of hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) from coal-fired power plants that are equipped with wet flue gas desulfurization (FGD) systems. The project was included by FETC as a Phase I project in its Mega-PRDA program. Phase I of this project focused on three research areas. These areas in order of priority were: (1) Catalytic oxidation of vapor-phase elemental mercury; (2) Enhanced particulate-phase HAPs removal by electrostatic charging of liquid droplets; and (3) Enhanced mercury removal by addition of additives to FGD process liquor. Mercury can exist in two forms in utility flue gas--as elemental mercury and as oxidized mercury (predominant form believed to be HgCl{sub 2}). Previous test results have shown that wet scrubbers effectively remove the oxidized mercury from the gas but are ineffective in removing elemental mercury. Recent improvements in mercury speciation techniques confirm this finding. Catalytic oxidation of vapor-phase elemental mercury is of interest in cases where a wet scrubber exists or is planned for SO{sub 2} control. If a low-cost process could be developed to oxidize all of the elemental mercury in the flue gas, then the maximum achievable mercury removal across the existing …
Date: July 1, 1997
Creator: Hargrove, O. W.; Carey, T. R.; Richardson, C. F.; Skarupa, R. C.; Meserole, F. B.; Rhudy, R. G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clear Liquor Scrubbing with Anhydrite Production (open access)

Clear Liquor Scrubbing with Anhydrite Production

The objective of this project to develop an advanced flue gas desulfurization (FGD) process that has decreased capital and operating costs, higher SO{sub 2} removal efficiency, and better by-product solids quality than existing, commercially available technology. A clear liquor process (which uses a scrubbing liquid with no solids) will be used to accomplish this objective rather than a slurry liquor process (which contains solids). This clear liquor scrubbing (CLS) project is focused on three research areas: (1) Development of a clear liquor scrubbing process that uses a clear solution to remove SO{sub 2} from flue gas and can be operated under inhibited-oxidation conditions; (2) Development of an anhydrite process that converts precipitated calcium sulfite to anhydrous calcium sulfate (anhydrite); and (3) Development of an alkali/humidification process to remove HCl from flue gas upstream of the FGD system. The anhydrite process also can be retrofit into existing FGD systems to produce a valuable by-product as an alternative to gypsum. This fits well into another of FETC's PRDA objectives of developing an advanced byproduct recovery subsystem capable of transforming SO{sub 2} into a useable byproduct or high-volume valuable commodities of interest. This paper describes the proposed processes, outlines the test approach, and …
Date: July 1, 1997
Creator: Hargrove, O. W.; Carey, T. R.; Lowell, P. S.; Meserole, F. B.; Rhudy, R. G. & Feeley, Thomas J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
In vivo argon laser vascular welding using thermal feedback: open and closed loop patency and collagen crosslinking (open access)

In vivo argon laser vascular welding using thermal feedback: open and closed loop patency and collagen crosslinking

An in vivo study of vascular welding with a fiber-delivered argon laser was conducted using a canine model. Longitudinal arteriotomies and venotomies were treated on femoral vein and artery. Laser energy was delivered to the vessel wall via a 400 {micro}m optical fiber. The surface temperature at the center of the laser spot was monitored in real time using a hollow glass optical fiber-based two-color infrared thermometer. The surface temperature was limited by either a room-temperature saline drip or direct feedback control of the laser using a mechanical shutter to alternately pass and block the laser. Acute patency was evaluated either visually (leak/no leak) or by in vivo burst pressure measurements. Biochemical assays were performed to investigate the possible laser-induced formation or destruction of enzymatically mediated covalent crosslinks between collagen molecules. Viable welds were created both with and without the use of feedback control. Tissues maintained at 50 C using feedback control had an elevated crosslink count compared to controls, while those irradiated without feedback control experienced a decrease. Differences between the volumetric heating associated with open and closed loop protocols may account for the different effects on collagen crosslinks. Covalent mechanisms may play a role in argon laser vascular …
Date: February 28, 1997
Creator: Small, W., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implementation and performance of beam smoothing on 10 beams of the Nova Laser (open access)

Implementation and performance of beam smoothing on 10 beams of the Nova Laser

Recent simulations and experiments on Nova indicate that some level of smoothing may be required to suppress filamentation in plasmas on the National Ignition Facility (NIF), resulting in the addition of 1-D smoothing capability to the current baseline design. Control of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) and filamentation is considered essential to the success of laser fusion because they affect the amount and location of laser energy delivered to the x-ray conversion region (hohlraum wall) for indirect drive and to the absorptive region for direct drive, Smoothing by spectral dispersion (SSD)[1], reduces these instabilities by reducing nonuniformities in the focal irradiance when averaged over a finite time interval. We have installed SSD on Nova to produce beam smoothing on all 10 beam lines. A single dispersion grating is located in a position common to all 10 beam lines early in the preamplifier chain. This location limits the 1{omega} bandwidth to 2.2 {angstrom} with sufficient dispersion to displace the speckle field of each frequency component at the target plane by one half speckle diameter. Several beam lines were modified to allow orientation of the dispersion on each arm relative to the hohlraum wall. After conversion to the third harmonic the beam passes …
Date: March 11, 1997
Creator: Pennington, D. M.; Dixit, S. N.; Weiland, T. L.; Ehrlich, R. & Rothenberg, J. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wake properties of a stripline beam kicker (open access)

Wake properties of a stripline beam kicker

The transport of a high current relativistic electron beam in a stripline beam kicker is strongly dependent on the wake properties of the structure. The effect of the beam-induced fields on the steering of the beam must be determined for a prescribed trajectory within the structure. A 3-D time domain electromagnetic code is used to determine the wake fields and the resultant Lorentz force on the beam both for an ultra-relativistic electron beam moving parallel to the beamline axis as well as a beam that follows a curved trajectory through the structure. Usually in determining the wake properties of the structure, a wake impedance is found for a beam that is moving parallel to the beamline axis. However, we extend this concept to curved trajectories by calculating beam induced forces along the curved trajectory. Comparisons are made with simple transmission line models of the structure. The wake properties are used in models to transport the beam self-consistently through the structure.
Date: May 27, 1997
Creator: Poole, B. R., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Searches for heavy exotic states at the Tevatron (open access)

Searches for heavy exotic states at the Tevatron

None
Date: December 1, 1997
Creator: Hoffman, Kara
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electronic structure and phase stability of Pu-Ga alloys (open access)

Electronic structure and phase stability of Pu-Ga alloys

Plutonium metal has six different crystallographic allotropes from room temperature until it melts just above 600 C. The room-temperature {alpha} phase is monoclinic with 32 atoms per unit cell, (an {alpha} phase with 16 atoms per cell also exists), which is the lowest-symmetry crystal structure known of any pure element. In fact, only the high-temperature {delta} (fcc) phase of Pu possesses one of the traditional close-packed structures. The low-symmetry and small lattice constants of the lowest-temperature phase of the light actinides can be used as an argument for f-bonding in these materials. The large volume increase in Pu in going from the {alpha} to the {delta} phase has been argued on phenomenological grounds to be the result of decreased f-bonding. In addition, XPS data have been obtained for both the {alpha} and the {delta} phases. Both sets of data show the presence of a peak below the Fermi level (EF). This peak is 2.0 eV wide in the {alpha} phase and 3.0 eV wide in the {delta} phase. The XPS intensity calculations (for the two phases) which treat the f-electrons as bonding states agree with the measurements of the {alpha} phase spectra, but not with those of the {delta} phase. …
Date: March 1, 1997
Creator: Gonis, A., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library