Z-petawatt driven ion beam radiography development. (open access)

Z-petawatt driven ion beam radiography development.

Laser-driven proton radiography provides electromagnetic field mapping with high spatiotemporal resolution, and has been applied to many laser-driven High Energy Density Physics (HEDP) experiments. Our report addresses key questions about the feasibility of ion radiography at the Z-Accelerator (%E2%80%9CZ%E2%80%9D), concerning laser configuration, hardware, and radiation background. Charged particle tracking revealed that radiography at Z requires GeV scale protons, which is out of reach for existing and near-future laser systems. However, it might be possible to perform proton deflectometry to detect magnetic flux compression in the fringe field region of a magnetized liner inertial fusion experiment. Experiments with the Z-Petawatt laser to enhance proton yield and energy showed an unexpected scaling with target thickness. Full-scale, 3D radiation-hydrodynamics simulations, coupled to fully explicit and kinetic 2D particle-in-cell simulations running for over 10 ps, explain the scaling by a complex interplay of laser prepulse, preplasma, and ps-scale temporal rising edge of the laser.
Date: September 1, 2013
Creator: Schollmeier, Marius; Geissel, Matthias; Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens & Sefkow, Adam B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Z-Source/Current Source Inverter-Topology Analysis, Comparison and Design (open access)

Z-Source/Current Source Inverter-Topology Analysis, Comparison and Design

None
Date: June 1, 2011
Creator: Cao, Dong & Peng, Fang
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZDC Effective Cross Section for Uranium-Uranium Collisions in Run 12 (open access)

ZDC Effective Cross Section for Uranium-Uranium Collisions in Run 12

N/A
Date: December 9, 2013
Creator: A., Drees
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZeCalc Algorithm Details (open access)

ZeCalc Algorithm Details

None
Date: August 22, 2012
Creator: Bond, K. C.; Smith, J. A.; Treuer, J. N.; Azevedo, S. G.; Kallman, J. S. & Martz, H. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero and One Jet Combined NLO Analysis of the Top Quark Forward-backward Asymmetry (open access)

Zero and One Jet Combined NLO Analysis of the Top Quark Forward-backward Asymmetry

None
Date: September 6, 2013
Creator: Hoeche, Stefan; Huang, Junwu; Luisoni, Gionata; Schoenherr, Marek & Winter, Jan
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero Discharge Water Management for Horizontal Shale Gas Well Development (open access)

Zero Discharge Water Management for Horizontal Shale Gas Well Development

Hydraulic fracturing technology (fracking), coupled with horizontal drilling, has facilitated exploitation of huge natural gas (gas) reserves in the Devonian-age Marcellus Shale Formation (Marcellus) of the Appalachian Basin. The most-efficient technique for stimulating Marcellus gas production involves hydraulic fracturing (injection of a water-based fluid and sand mixture) along a horizontal well bore to create a series of hydraulic fractures in the Marcellus. The hydraulic fractures free the shale-trapped gas, allowing it to flow to the well bore where it is conveyed to pipelines for transport and distribution. The hydraulic fracturing process has two significant effects on the local environment. First, water withdrawals from local sources compete with the water requirements of ecosystems, domestic and recreational users, and/or agricultural and industrial uses. Second, when the injection phase is over, 10 to 30% of the injected water returns to the surface. This water consists of flowback, which occurs between the completion of fracturing and gas production, and produced water, which occurs during gas production. Collectively referred to as returned frac water (RFW), it is highly saline with varying amounts of organic contamination. It can be disposed of, either by injection into an approved underground injection well, or treated to remove contaminants so …
Date: March 31, 2012
Creator: Ziemkiewicz, Paul; Hause, Jennifer; Lovett, Raymond; Johnson, David Locke Harry & Patchen, Doug
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero Emission Bay Area (ZEBA) Fuel Cell Bus Demonstration: First Results Report (open access)

Zero Emission Bay Area (ZEBA) Fuel Cell Bus Demonstration: First Results Report

This report documents the early implementation experience for the Zero Emission Bay Area (ZEBA) Demonstration, the largest fleet of fuel cell buses in the United States. The ZEBA Demonstration group includes five participating transit agencies: AC Transit (lead transit agency), Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA), Golden Gate Transit (GGT), San Mateo County Transit District (SamTrans), and San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni). The ZEBA partners are collaborating with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and DOE's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) to evaluate the buses in revenue service.
Date: August 1, 2011
Creator: Chandler, K. & Eudy, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero Emission Bay Area (ZEBA) Fuel Cell Bus Demonstration: Second Results Report (open access)

Zero Emission Bay Area (ZEBA) Fuel Cell Bus Demonstration: Second Results Report

This report presents results of a demonstration of 12 new fuel cell electric buses (FCEB) operating in Oakland, California. The 12 FCEBs operate as a part of the Zero Emission Bay Area (ZEBA) Demonstration, which also includes two new hydrogen fueling stations. This effort is the largest FCEB demonstration in the United States and involves five participating transit agencies. The ZEBA partners are collaborating with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and DOE's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) to evaluate the buses in revenue service. The first results report was published in August 2011, describing operation of these new FCEBs from September 2010 through May 2011. New results in this report provide an update through April 2012.
Date: July 1, 2012
Creator: Eudy, L. & Chandler, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero Emissions Coal Syngas Oxygen Turbo Machinery (open access)

Zero Emissions Coal Syngas Oxygen Turbo Machinery

Siemens Energy, Inc. (formerly Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation) worked with Clean Energy Systems and Florida Turbine Technologies to demonstrate the commercial feasibility of advanced turbines for oxy-fuel based power systems that discharge negligible CO{sub 2} into the atmosphere. The approach builds upon ultra supercritical steam turbine and advanced gas turbine technology with the goal of attaining plant efficiencies above 50% in the 2015 timeframe. Conceptual designs were developed for baseline, near term, and long term oxy-fuel turbine cycles, representing commercial introductions of increasingly advanced thermal conditions and increasing exposure to steam-CO{sub 2} mixtures. An economic analysis and market demand study was performed by Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC), and indicated that long-term oxy-fuel turbine cycles start to look attractive in 2025 when the CO{sub 2} tax is assumed to reach $40/ ton, and by 2030 it has a clear advantage over both IGCC with sequestration and pulverized coal with sequestration. A separate risk analysis of the oxy-fuel combustor, HP turbine, re-heater, and IP turbine of the long-term cycle identified and categorized risks and proposed mitigation measures. In 2007 the program began to focus on a potential oxy-fuel turbine power generation demonstration project in the 2012 -13 time period while still …
Date: December 31, 2010
Creator: Horazak, Dennis
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero Energy Communities with Central Solar Plants using Liquid Desiccants and Local Storage: Preprint (open access)

Zero Energy Communities with Central Solar Plants using Liquid Desiccants and Local Storage: Preprint

The zero energy community considered here consists of tens to tens-of-thousands of residences coupled to a central solar plant that produces all the community's electrical and thermal needs. A distribution network carries fluids to meet the heating and cooling loads. Large central solar systems can significantly reduce cost of energy vs. single family systems, and they enable economical seasonal heat storage. However, the thermal distribution system is costly. Conventional district heating/cooling systems use a water/glycol solution to deliver sensible energy. Piping is sized to meet the peak instantaneous load. A new district system introduced here differs in two key ways: (i) it continuously distributes a hot liquid desiccant (LD) solution to LD-based heating and cooling equipment in each home; and (ii) it uses central and local storage of both LD and heat to reduce flow rates to meet average loads. Results for piping sizes in conventional and LD thermal communities show that the LD zero energy community reduces distribution piping diameters meeting heating loads by {approx}5X and meeting cooling loads by {approx}8X for cooling, depending on climate.
Date: August 1, 2012
Creator: Burch, J.; Woods, J.; Kozubal, E. & Boranian, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero Net Energy Myths and Modes of Thought (open access)

Zero Net Energy Myths and Modes of Thought

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), and a number of professional organizations have established a target of zero net energy (ZNE) in buildings by 2030. One definition of ZNE is a building with greatly reduced needs for energy through efficiency gains with the balance of energy needs supplied by renewable technologies. The push to ZNE is a response to research indicating that atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases have increased sharply since the eighteenth century, resulting in a gradual warming of the Earth?s climate. A review of ZNE policies reveals that the organizations involved frame the ZNE issue in diverse ways, resulting in a wide variety of myths and a divergent set of epistemologies. With federal and state money poised to promote ZNE, it is timely to investigate how epistemologies, meaning a belief system by which we take facts and convert them into knowledge upon which to take action, and the propagation of myths might affect the outcome of a ZNE program. This paper outlines myths commonly discussed in the energy efficiency and renewable energy communities related to ZNE and describes how each myth is a different way of expressing"the truth." The paper continues by …
Date: September 20, 2010
Creator: Rajkovich, Nicholas B.; Diamond, Rick & Burke, Bill
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zeroing in on Supersymmetric Radiation Amplitude Zeros (open access)

Zeroing in on Supersymmetric Radiation Amplitude Zeros

Radiation amplitude zeros have long been used to test the Standard Model. Here, we consider the supersymmetric radiation amplitude zero in chargino-neutralino associated production, which can be observed at the luminosity upgraded LHC. Such an amplitude zero only occurs if the neutralino has a large wino fraction and hence this observable can be used to determine the neutralino eigenstate content. We find that this observable can be measured by comparing the p{sub T} spectrum of the softest lepton in the trilepton {tilde {chi}}{sub 1}{sup {+-}} {tilde {chi}}{sub 2}{sup 0} decay channel to that of a control process such as {tilde {chi}}{sub 1}{sup +} {tilde {chi}}{sub 1}{sup -} or {tilde {chi}}{sub 2}{sup 0} {tilde {chi}}{sub 2}{sup 0}. We test this technique on a previously generated model sample of the 19 dimensional parameter space of the phenomenological MSSM, and find that it is effective in determining the wino content of the neutralino.
Date: February 15, 2012
Creator: Hewett, JoAnne L.; Ismail, Ahmed & Rizzo, Thomas G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZGOUBI USERS GUIDE (open access)

ZGOUBI USERS GUIDE

N/A
Date: November 1, 2012
Creator: F., Meot
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zgoubi users guide (open access)

Zgoubi users guide

N/A
Date: October 25, 2012
Creator: F., Meot
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zinc distribution and speciation in Arabidopsis halleri x Arabidops is lyrata progenies presenting various zinc accumulation capacities (open access)

Zinc distribution and speciation in Arabidopsis halleri x Arabidops is lyrata progenies presenting various zinc accumulation capacities

- The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between the chemical form and localization of zinc (Zn) in plant leaves and their Zn accumulationcapacity. - An interspecific cross between Arabidopsis halleri sp. halleri and Arabidopsis lyrata sp. petrea segregating for Zn accumulation was used. Zinc (Zn) speciation and Zn distribution in the leaves of the parent plants and of selected F1 and F2 progenies were investigated by spectroscopic and microscopic techniques and chemical analyses. - A correlation was observed between the proportion of Zn being in octahedral coordination complexed to organic acids and free in solution (Zn?OAs + Znaq) and Zn content in the leaves. This pool varied between 40percent and 80percent of total leaf Zn depending on the plant studied. Elemental mapping of the leaves revealed different Zn partitioning between the veins and the leaf tissue. The vein : tissue fluorescence ratio was negatively correlated with Zn accumulation. - The higher proportion of Zn?OAs + Znaq and the depletion of the veins in the stronger accumulators are attributed to a higher xylem unloading and vacuolar sequestration in the leaf cells. Elemental distributions in the trichomes were also investigated, and results support the role of carboxyl and⁄ …
Date: April 8, 2010
Creator: Sarret, Geraldine; Willems, Glenda; Isaure, Marie-Pierre; Marcus, Matthew A.; Fakra, Sirine C.; Frerot, Helene et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZINC MITIGATION INTERIM REPORT - THERMODYNAMIC STUDY (open access)

ZINC MITIGATION INTERIM REPORT - THERMODYNAMIC STUDY

An experimental program was initiated in order to develop and validate conditions that will effectively trap Zn vapors that are released during extraction. The proposed work is broken down into three tasks. The first task is to determine the effectiveness of various pore sizes of filter elements. The second task is to determine the effect of filter temperature on zinc vapor deposition. The final task is to determine whether the zinc vapors can be chemically bound. The approach for chemically binding the zinc vapors has two subtasks, the first is a review of literature and thermodynamic calculations and the second is an experimental approach using the best candidates. This report details the results of the thermodynamic calculations to determine feasibility of chemically binding the zinc vapors within the furnace module, specifically the lithium trap (1). A review of phase diagrams, literature, and thermodynamic calculations was conducted to determine if there are suitable materials to capture zinc vapor within the lithium trap of the extraction basket. While numerous elements exist that form compounds with zinc, many of these also form compounds with hydrogen or the water that is present in the TPBARs. This relatively comprehensive review of available data indicates that …
Date: December 17, 2010
Creator: Korinko, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zinc Transporter YiiP Escherichia coli (open access)

Zinc Transporter YiiP Escherichia coli

None
Date: March 26, 2010
Creator: Fu, D.
Object Type: Book
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zirconium Evaluations for ENDF/B-VII.2 for the Fast Region (open access)

Zirconium Evaluations for ENDF/B-VII.2 for the Fast Region

N/A
Date: March 4, 2013
Creator: Brown, D. A.; Arcilla, R.; Capote Noy, R.; Mughabghab, S.; Herman, M. W.; Trkov, A. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZnMgO by APCVD Enabling High-Performance Mid-bandgap CIGS on Polyimide Modules: October 2009--October 2010 (open access)

ZnMgO by APCVD Enabling High-Performance Mid-bandgap CIGS on Polyimide Modules: October 2009--October 2010

This Pre-Incubator project was designed to increase the 'real world' CIGS based photovoltaic module performance and decrease the Levelized Cost of Energy (LCOE) of systems utilizing those modules compared to our traditional CIGS based photovoltaic modules. This was enabled by a) increasing the CIGS bandgap and b) developing better matched device finishing layers to the mid-bandgap CIGS based photovoltaics; including window and buffer layers (and eventually the TCO). Incremental progress in the novel device performance was demonstrated throughout the program, and ultimately achieved performance results that exceeded the milestones ahead of schedule. Metal-oxide buffer layer devices with mid-bandgap CIGS alloys on polyimide substrates were produced with efficiencies of over 12%. Corresponding mid-bandgap devices with CdS buffers produced over 13% efficient devices. Furthermore, no obvious degradation in the device performance has been observed to date, after proper storage ambient of the different types of unencapsulated devices were identified.
Date: April 1, 2011
Creator: Woods, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zonal Flow as Pattern Formation: Merging Jets and the Ultimate Jet Length Scale (open access)

Zonal Flow as Pattern Formation: Merging Jets and the Ultimate Jet Length Scale

Zonal flows are well known to arise spontaneously out of turbulence. It is shown that for statisti- cally averaged equations of quasigeostrophic turbulence on a beta plane, zonal flows and inhomoge- neous turbulence fit into the framework of pattern formation. There are many implications. First, the zonal flow wavelength is not unique. Indeed, in an idealized, infinite system, any wavelength within a certain continuous band corresponds to a solution. Second, of these wavelengths, only those within a smaller subband are linearly stable. Unstable wavelengths must evolve to reach a stable wavelength; this process manifests as merging jets.
Date: January 30, 2013
Creator: Krommes, Jeffrey B. Parker and John A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zone Freezing Study for Pyrochemical Process Waste Minimization (open access)

Zone Freezing Study for Pyrochemical Process Waste Minimization

Pyroprocessing technology is a non-aqueous separation process for treatment of used nuclear fuel. At the heart of pyroprocessing lies the electrorefiner, which electrochemically dissolves uranium from the used fuel at the anode and deposits it onto a cathode. During this operation, sodium, transuranics, and fission product chlorides accumulate in the electrolyte salt (LiCl-KCl). These contaminates change the characteristics of the salt overtime and as a result, large volumes of contaminated salt are being removed, reprocessed and stored as radioactive waste. To reduce the storage volumes and improve recycling process for cost minimization, a salt purification method called zone freezing has been proposed at Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI). Zone freezing is melt crystallization process similar to the vertical Bridgeman method. In this process, the eutectic salt is slowly cooled axially from top to bottom. As solidification occurs, the fission products are rejected from the solid interface and forced into the liquid phase. The resulting product is a grown crystal with the bulk of the fission products near the bottom of the salt ingot, where they can be easily be sectioned and removed. Despite successful feasibility report from KAERI on this process, there were many unexplored parameters to help understanding …
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Williams, Ammon
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZPR-3 Assembly 11 : A cylindrical sssembly of highly enriched uranium and depleted uranium with an average {sup 235}U enrichment of 12 atom % and a depleted uranium reflector. (open access)

ZPR-3 Assembly 11 : A cylindrical sssembly of highly enriched uranium and depleted uranium with an average {sup 235}U enrichment of 12 atom % and a depleted uranium reflector.

Over a period of 30 years, more than a hundred Zero Power Reactor (ZPR) critical assemblies were constructed at Argonne National Laboratory. The ZPR facilities, ZPR-3, ZPR-6, ZPR-9 and ZPPR, were all fast critical assembly facilities. The ZPR critical assemblies were constructed to support fast reactor development, but data from some of these assemblies are also well suited for nuclear data validation and to form the basis for criticality safety benchmarks. A number of the Argonne ZPR/ZPPR critical assemblies have been evaluated as ICSBEP and IRPhEP benchmarks. Of the three classes of ZPR assemblies, engineering mockups, engineering benchmarks and physics benchmarks, the last group tends to be most useful for criticality safety. Because physics benchmarks were designed to test fast reactor physics data and methods, they were as simple as possible in geometry and composition. The principal fissile species was {sup 235}U or {sup 239}Pu. Fuel enrichments ranged from 9% to 95%. Often there were only one or two main core diluent materials, such as aluminum, graphite, iron, sodium or stainless steel. The cores were reflected (and insulated from room return effects) by one or two layers of materials such as depleted uranium, lead or stainless steel. Despite their more …
Date: September 30, 2010
Creator: Lell, R. M.; McKnight, R. D.; Tsiboulia, A.; Rozhikhin, Y.; Security, National & Engineering, Inst. of Physics and Power
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZPR-3 Assembly 12 : A Cylindrical Assembly of Highly Enriched Uranium, Depleted Uranium and Graphite With an Average {Sup 235}U Enrichment of 21 Atom %. (open access)

ZPR-3 Assembly 12 : A Cylindrical Assembly of Highly Enriched Uranium, Depleted Uranium and Graphite With an Average {Sup 235}U Enrichment of 21 Atom %.

Over a period of 30 years, more than a hundred Zero Power Reactor (ZPR) critical assemblies were constructed at Argonne National Laboratory. The ZPR facilities, ZPR-3, ZPR-6, ZPR-9 and ZPPR, were all fast critical assembly facilities. The ZPR critical assemblies were constructed to support fast reactor development, but data from some of these assemblies are also well suited for nuclear data validation and to form the basis for criticality safety benchmarks. A number of the Argonne ZPR/ZPPR critical assemblies have been evaluated as ICSBEP and IRPhEP benchmarks. Of the three classes of ZPR assemblies, engineering mockups, engineering benchmarks and physics benchmarks, the last group tends to be most useful for criticality safety. Because physics benchmarks were designed to test fast reactor physics data and methods, they were as simple as possible in geometry and composition. The principal fissile species was {sup 235}U or {sup 239}Pu. Fuel enrichments ranged from 9% to 95%. Often there were only one or two main core diluent materials, such as aluminum, graphite, iron, sodium or stainless steel. The cores were reflected (and insulated from room return effects) by one or two layers of materials such as depleted uranium, lead or stainless steel. Despite their more …
Date: September 30, 2010
Creator: Lell, R. M.; McKnight, R. D.; Perel, R. L.; Wagschal, J. J.; Division, Nuclear Engineering & Physics, Racah Inst. of
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZPR-3 Assembly 6f : A Spherical Assembly of Highly Enriched Uranium, Depleted Uranium, Aluminum and Steel With an Average {Sup 235}U Enrichment of 47 Atom %. (open access)

ZPR-3 Assembly 6f : A Spherical Assembly of Highly Enriched Uranium, Depleted Uranium, Aluminum and Steel With an Average {Sup 235}U Enrichment of 47 Atom %.

Over a period of 30 years, more than a hundred Zero Power Reactor (ZPR) critical assemblies were constructed at Argonne National Laboratory. The ZPR facilities, ZPR-3, ZPR-6, ZPR-9 and ZPPR, were all fast critical assembly facilities. The ZPR critical assemblies were constructed to support fast reactor development, but data from some of these assemblies are also well suited for nuclear data validation and to form the basis for criticality safety benchmarks. A number of the Argonne ZPR/ZPPR critical assemblies have been evaluated as ICSBEP and IRPhEP benchmarks. Of the three classes of ZPR assemblies, engineering mockups, engineering benchmarks and physics benchmarks, the last group tends to be most useful for criticality safety. Because physics benchmarks were designed to test fast reactor physics data and methods, they were as simple as possible in geometry and composition. The principal fissile species was {sup 235}U or {sup 239}Pu. Fuel enrichments ranged from 9% to 95%. Often there were only one or two main core diluent materials, such as aluminum, graphite, iron, sodium or stainless steel. The cores were reflected (and insulated from room return effects) by one or two layers of materials such as depleted uranium, lead or stainless steel. Despite their more …
Date: September 30, 2010
Creator: Lell, R. M.; McKnight, R. D; Schaefer, R. W. & Division, Nuclear Engineering
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library