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Effects of EOS and constitutive models on simulating copper shaped charge jets in ALEGRA

2019 15th Hypervelocity Impact Symposium, HVIS 2019

Doney, Robert L.; Niederhaus, John H.J.; Fuller, Timothy J.; Coppinger, Matthew J.

In this work we evaluated the effects that equations of state and strength models have on SCJ development using the Sandia National Laboratories multiphysics shock code, ALEGRA. Results were quantified using a Lagrangian tracer particle following liner collapse, passing through the compression zone, and flowing into the jet tip. We found consistent results among several EOS: 3320, 3331, and 3337. The 3325 EOS generated a measurable low density and hollow region near the jet tip which appears to be reflected in a lower internal energy of the jet. At this time, we cannot tell, experimentally, if such a hollow region exists. The 3337 EOS is recent, well documented [6], and produces results similar to 3320 [3]. The various strength models produced more noticeable differences. In terms of internal energy and temperature, SGL had the largest values followed by PTW, ZA, and finally JC and MTS, which were quite similar to each other. We looked at melt conditions in the SGL and JC models using the 3337 EOS. The SGL model reported a liquid region along the jet axis all the way to the tip-seemingly consistent with experiment-while the JC model does not indicate any phase transition. None of the other yield models indicated melt along the jet axis. For all EOS and strength models, we found similar results for the velocity history of the jet tip as measured against experiment using photon Dopper velocimetry.

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IMPACT OF SAMPLING STRATEGIES IN THE POLYNOMIAL CHAOS SURROGATE CONSTRUCTION FOR MONTE CARLO TRANSPORT APPLICATIONS

Proceedings of the International Conference on Mathematics and Computational Methods Applied to Nuclear Science and Engineering, M and C 2021

Geraci, Gianluca; Olson, Aaron

The accurate construction of a surrogate model is an effective and efficient strategy for performing Uncertainty Quantification (UQ) analyses of expensive and complex engineering systems. Surrogate models are especially powerful whenever the UQ analysis requires the computation of statistics which are difficult and prohibitively expensive to obtain via a direct sampling of the model, e.g. high-order moments and probability density functions. In this paper, we discuss the construction of a polynomial chaos expansion (PCE) surrogate model for radiation transport problems for which quantities of interest are obtained via Monte Carlo simulations. In this context, it is imperative to account for the statistical variability of the simulator as well as the variability associated with the uncertain parameter inputs. More formally, in this paper we focus on understanding the impact of the Monte Carlo transport variability on the recovery of the PCE coefficients. We are able to identify the contribution of both the number of uncertain parameter samples and the number of particle histories simulated per sample in the PCE coefficient recovery. Our theoretical results indicate an accuracy improvement when using few Monte Carlo histories per random sample with respect to configurations with an equivalent computational cost. These theoretical results are numerically illustrated for a simple synthetic example and two configurations of a one-dimensional radiation transport problem in which a slab is represented by means of materials with uncertain cross sections.

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Path towards a vertical TFET enabled by atomic precision advanced manufacturing

2021 Silicon Nanoelectronics Workshop, SNW 2021

Lu, T.M.; Gao, Xujiao; Anderson, Evan; Mendez Granado, Juan P.; Campbell, Deanna M.; Ivie, Jeffrey A.; Schmucker, Scott W.; Grine, Albert; Lu, Ping; Tracy, Lisa A.; Arghavani, Reza; Misra, Shashank

We propose a vertical TFET using atomic precision advanced manufacturing (APAM) to create an abrupt buried n++-doped source. We developed a gate stack that preserves the APAM source to accumulate holes above it, with a goal of band-to-band tunneling (BTBT) perpendicular to the gate – critical for the proposed device. A metal-insulator-semiconductor (MIS) capacitor shows hole accumulation above the APAM source, corroborated by simulation, demonstrating the TFET’s feasibility.

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Deep learning of parameterized equations with applications to uncertainty quantification

International Journal for Uncertainty Quantification

Qin, Tong; Chen, Zhen; Jakeman, John D.; Xiu, Dongbin

We propose a learning algorithm for discovering unknown parameterized dynamical systems by using observational data of the state variables. Our method is built upon and extends the recent work of discovering unknown dynamical systems, in particular those using a deep neural network (DNN). We propose a DNN structure, largely based upon the residual network (ResNet), to not only learn the unknown form of the governing equation but also to take into account the random effect embedded in the system, which is generated by the random parameters. Once the DNN model is successfully constructed, it is able to produce system prediction over a longer term and for arbitrary parameter values. For uncertainty quantification, it allows us to conduct uncertainty analysis by evaluating solution statistics over the parameter space.

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EMPIRE-PIC: A performance portable unstructured particle-in-cell code

Communications in Computational Physics

Bettencourt, Matthew T.; Brown, Dominic A.S.; Cartwright, Keith L.; Cyr, Eric C.; Glusa, Christian; Lin, Paul T.; Moore, Stan G.; Mcgregor, Duncan A.O.; Pawlowski, Roger; Phillips, Edward; Roberts, Nathan V.; Wright, Steven A.; Maheswaran, Satheesh; Jones, John P.; Jarvis, Stephen A.

In this paper we introduce EMPIRE-PIC, a finite element method particle-in-cell (FEM-PIC) application developed at Sandia National Laboratories. The code has been developed in C++ using the Trilinos library and the Kokkos Performance Portability Framework to enable running on multiple modern compute architectures while only requiring maintenance of a single codebase. EMPIRE-PIC is capable of solving both electrostatic and electromagnetic problems in two- and three-dimensions to second-order accuracy in space and time. In this paper we validate the code against three benchmark problems - a simple electron orbit, an electrostatic Langmuir wave, and a transverse electromagnetic wave propagating through a plasma. We demonstrate the performance of EMPIRE-PIC on four different architectures: Intel Haswell CPUs, Intel's Xeon Phi Knights Landing, ARM Thunder-X2 CPUs, and NVIDIA Tesla V100 GPUs attached to IBM POWER9 processors. This analysis demonstrates scalability of the code up to more than two thousand GPUs, and greater than one hundred thousand CPUs.

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Photothermal alternative to device fabrication using atomic precision advanced manufacturing techniques

Journal of Micro/Nanopatterning, Materials and Metrology

Katzenmeyer, Aaron M.; Dmitrovic, Sanja; Baczewski, Andrew D.; Campbell, Quinn T.; Bussmann, Ezra; Lu, T.M.; Anderson, Evan M.; Schmucker, Scott W.; Ivie, Jeffrey A.; Campbell, Deanna M.; Ward, Daniel R.; Scrymgeour, David A.; Wang, George T.; Misra, Shashank

The attachment of dopant precursor molecules to depassivated areas of hydrogen-terminated silicon templated with a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) has been used to create electronic devices with subnanometer precision, typically for quantum physics experiments. This process, which we call atomic precision advanced manufacturing (APAM), dopes silicon beyond the solid-solubility limit and produces electrical and optical characteristics that may also be useful for microelectronic and plasmonic applications. However, scanned probe lithography lacks the throughput required to develop more sophisticated applications. Here, we demonstrate and characterize an APAM device workflow where scanned probe lithography of the atomic layer resist has been replaced by photolithography. An ultraviolet laser is shown to locally and controllably heat silicon above the temperature required for hydrogen depassivation on a nanosecond timescale, a process resistant to under- and overexposure. STM images indicate a narrow range of energy density where the surface is both depassivated and undamaged. Modeling that accounts for photothermal heating and the subsequent hydrogen desorption kinetics suggests that the silicon surface temperatures reached in our patterning process exceed those required for hydrogen removal in temperature-programmed desorption experiments. A phosphorus-doped van der Pauw structure made by sequentially photodepassivating a predefined area and then exposing it to phosphine is found to have a similar mobility and higher carrier density compared with devices patterned by STM. Lastly, it is also demonstrated that photodepassivation and precursor exposure steps may be performed concomitantly, a potential route to enabling APAM outside of ultrahigh vacuum.

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FROSch Preconditioners for Land Ice Simulations of Greenland and Antarctica

Heinlein, Alexander; Perego, Mauro; Rajamanickam, Sivasankaran

Numerical simulations of Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets involve the solution of large-scale highly nonlinear systems of equations on complex shallow geometries. This work is concerned with the construction of Schwarz preconditioners for the solution of the associated tangent problems, which are challenging for solvers mainly because of the strong anisotropy of the meshes and wildly changing boundary conditions that can lead to poorly constrained problems on large portions of the domain. Here, two-level GDSW (Generalized Dryja–Smith–Widlund) type Schwarz preconditioners are applied to different land ice problems, i.e., a velocity problem, a temperature problem, as well as the coupling of the former two problems. We employ the MPI-parallel implementation of multi-level Schwarz preconditioners provided by the package FROSch (Fast and Robust Schwarz)from the Trilinos library. The strength of the proposed preconditioner is that it yields out-of-the-box scalable and robust preconditioners for the single physics problems. To our knowledge, this is the first time two-level Schwarz preconditioners are applied to the ice sheet problem and a scalable preconditioner has been used for the coupled problem. The pre-conditioner for the coupled problem differs from previous monolithic GDSW preconditioners in the sense that decoupled extension operators are used to compute the values in the interior of the sub-domains. Several approaches for improving the performance, such as reuse strategies and shared memory OpenMP parallelization, are explored as well. In our numerical study we target both uniform meshes of varying resolution for the Antarctic ice sheet as well as non uniform meshes for the Greenland ice sheet are considered. We present several weak and strong scaling studies confirming the robustness of the approach and the parallel scalability of the FROSch implementation. Among the highlights of the numerical results are a weak scaling study for up to 32 K processor cores (8 K MPI-ranks and 4 OpenMP threads) and 566 M degrees of freedom for the velocity problem as well as a strong scaling study for up to 4 K processor cores (and MPI-ranks) and 68 M degrees of freedom for the coupled problem.

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Dakota-NAERM Integration

Swiler, Laura P.; Newman, Sarah; Staid, Andrea; Barrett, Emily

This report presents the results of a collaborative effort under the Verification, Validation, and Uncertainty Quantification (VVUQ) thrust area of the North American Energy Resilience Model (NAERM) program. The goal of the effort described in this report was to integrate the Dakota software with the NAERM software framework to demonstrate sensitivity analysis of a co-simulation for NAERM.

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Towards Predictive Plasma Science and Engineering through Revolutionary Multi-Scale Algorithms and Models (Final Report)

Laity, George R.; Robinson, Allen C.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Alam, Kathleen M.; Beckwith, Kristian; Bennett, Nichelle L.; Bettencourt, Matthew T.; Bond, Stephen D.; Cochrane, Kyle; Criscenti, Louise; Cyr, Eric C.; Bays, Nathan R.; Drake, Richard R.; Evstatiev, Evstati G.; Fierro, Andrew S.; Gardiner, Thomas A.; Bays, Nathan R.; Goeke, Ronald S.; Hamlin, Nathaniel D.; Hooper, Russell; Koski, Jason P.; Lane, James M.D.; Larson, Steven R.; Leung, Kevin; Mcgregor, Duncan A.O.; Miller, Philip R.; Miller, Sean; Ossareh, Susan J.; Phillips, Edward; Simpson, Sean; Sirajuddin, David; Smith, Thomas M.; Swan, Matthew S.; Thompson, Aidan P.; Tranchida, Julien; Bortz-Johnson, Asa J.; Welch, Dale; Russell, Alex; Watson, Eric; Rose, David; Mcbride, Ryan

This report describes the high-level accomplishments from the Plasma Science and Engineering Grand Challenge LDRD at Sandia National Laboratories. The Laboratory has a need to demonstrate predictive capabilities to model plasma phenomena in order to rapidly accelerate engineering development in several mission areas. The purpose of this Grand Challenge LDRD was to advance the fundamental models, methods, and algorithms along with supporting electrode science foundation to enable a revolutionary shift towards predictive plasma engineering design principles. This project integrated the SNL knowledge base in computer science, plasma physics, materials science, applied mathematics, and relevant application engineering to establish new cross-laboratory collaborations on these topics. As an initial exemplar, this project focused efforts on improving multi-scale modeling capabilities that are utilized to predict the electrical power delivery on large-scale pulsed power accelerators. Specifically, this LDRD was structured into three primary research thrusts that, when integrated, enable complex simulations of these devices: (1) the exploration of multi-scale models describing the desorption of contaminants from pulsed power electrodes, (2) the development of improved algorithms and code technologies to treat the multi-physics phenomena required to predict device performance, and (3) the creation of a rigorous verification and validation infrastructure to evaluate the codes and models across a range of challenge problems. These components were integrated into initial demonstrations of the largest simulations of multi-level vacuum power flow completed to-date, executed on the leading HPC computing machines available in the NNSA complex today. These preliminary studies indicate relevant pulsed power engineering design simulations can now be completed in (of order) several days, a significant improvement over pre-LDRD levels of performance.

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Results 976–1000 of 9,998
Results 976–1000 of 9,998
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