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Coulombic friction in metamaterials to dissipate mechanical energy

Extreme Mechanics Letters

Garland, Anthony G.; Adstedt, Katarina M.; Casias, Adrian L.; Laros, James H.; White, Benjamin C.; Mook, William M.; Kaehr, Bryan J.; Jared, Bradley H.; Lester, Brian T.; Leathe, Nicholas L.; Schwaller, Eric; Boyce, Brad B.

Product designs from a wide range of industries such as aerospace, automotive, biomedical, and others can benefit from new metamaterials for mechanical energy dissipation. In this study, we explore a novel new class of metamaterials with unit cells that absorb energy via sliding Coulombic friction. Remarkably, even materials such as metals and ceramics, which typically have no intrinsic reversible energy dissipation, can be architected to provide dissipation akin to elastomers. The concept is demonstrated at different scales (centimeter to micrometer), with different materials (metal and polymer), and in different operating environments (high and low temperatures), all showing substantial dissipative improvements over conventional non-contacting lattice unit cells. Further, as with other ‘programmable’ metamaterials, the degree of Coulombic absorption can be tailored for a given application. An analytic expression is derived to allow rapid first-order optimization. This new class of Coulombic friction energy absorbers can apply broadly to many industrial sectors such as transportation (e.g. monolithic shock absorbers), biomedical (e.g. prosthetics), athletic equipment (e.g. skis, bicycles, etc.), defense (e.g. vibration tolerant structures), and energy (e.g. survivable electrical grid components).

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Pitch Variation Experiments in Water-Moderated Square-Pitched U(6.90)O2 Fuel Rod Lattices with Fuel to Water Volume Ratios Spanning 0.08 to 0.67

Laros, James H.

The US Department of Energy (DOE) Nuclear Energy Research Initiative funded the design and construction of the Seven Percent Critical Experiment (7uPCX) at Sandia National Laboratories. The start-up of the experiment facility and the execution of the experiments described here were funded by the DOE Nuclear Criticality Safety Program. The 7uPCX is designed to investigate critical systems with fuel for light water reactors in the enrichment range above 5 % 235U. The 7uPCX assembly is a water-moderated and -reflected array of aluminum-clad square-pitched U(6.90 %)O2 fuel rods. Other critical experiments performed in the 7uPCX assembly are documented in LEU-COMP-THERM-078, LEU-COMP-THERM-080, LEU-COMPTHERM- 096, LEU-COMP-THERM-097, and LEU-COMP-THERM-101. The fuel used in these experiments was fabricated using unirradiated 6.90 % enriched UO2 fuel pellets from fuel elements designed to be used in the internal nuclear superheater section of the Pathfinder boiling water reactor operated in South Dakota by the Northern States Power Company in the 1960s. The fuel elements were obtained from The Pennsylvania State University where they had been stored for many years. The fuel pellets in those fuel elements were removed from the original Incoloy cladding and reclad in 3003 aluminum tubes and end caps for use in the experiments reported here. The purpose of these experiments was to measure the effects of decreasing the fuel-to-water volume ratio on the critical array size. This was accomplished by removing fuel rods from fully fueled configurations, effectively increasing the pitch of the fuel arrays in the assembly. The fuel rod pitch variations provided assembly configurations that ranged from strongly undermoderated to slightly overmoderated.

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GDSA Repository Systems Analysis Investigations (FY2020)

LaForce, Tara; Chang, Kyung W.; Laros, James H.; Lowry, Thomas S.; Basurto, Eduardo B.; Jayne, Richard S.; Brooks, Dusty M.; Jordan, Spencer H.; Stein, Emily S.; Leone, Rosemary C.; Nole, Michael A.

The Spent Fuel and Waste Science and Technology (SFWST) Campaign of the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Energy, Office of Spent Fuel and Waste Disposition (SFWD), has been conducting research and development on generic deep geologic disposal systems (i.e., geologic repositories). This report describes specific activities in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2020 associated with the Geologic Disposal Safety Assessment (GDSA) Repository Systems Analysis (RSA) work package within the SFWST Campaign. The overall objective of the GDSA RSA work package is to develop generic deep geologic repository concepts and system performance assessment (PA) models in several host-rock environments, and to simulate and analyze these generic repository concepts and models using the GDSA Framework toolkit, and other tools as needed.

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Optical and Polarimetric SAR Data Fusion Terrain Classification Using Probabilistic Feature Fusion

International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)

West, Roger D.; Yocky, David A.; Redman, Brian J.; Laros, James H.; Anderson, Dylan Z.

Deciding on an imaging modality for terrain classification can be a challenging problem. For some terrain classes a given sensing modality may discriminate well, but may not have the same performance on other classes that a different sensor may be able to easily separate. The most effective terrain classification will utilize the abilities of multiple sensing modalities. The challenge of utilizing multiple sensing modalities is then determining how to combine the information in a meaningful and useful way. In this paper, we introduce a framework for effectively combining data from optical and polarimetric synthetic aperture radar sensing modalities. We demonstrate the fusion framework for two vegetation classes and two ground classes and show that fusing data from both imaging modalities has the potential to improve terrain classification from either modality, alone.

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Optical and Polarimetric SAR Data Fusion Terrain Classification Using Probabilistic Feature Fusion

International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)

West, Roger D.; Yocky, David A.; Redman, Brian J.; Laros, James H.; Anderson, Dylan Z.

Deciding on an imaging modality for terrain classification can be a challenging problem. For some terrain classes a given sensing modality may discriminate well, but may not have the same performance on other classes that a different sensor may be able to easily separate. The most effective terrain classification will utilize the abilities of multiple sensing modalities. The challenge of utilizing multiple sensing modalities is then determining how to combine the information in a meaningful and useful way. In this paper, we introduce a framework for effectively combining data from optical and polarimetric synthetic aperture radar sensing modalities. We demonstrate the fusion framework for two vegetation classes and two ground classes and show that fusing data from both imaging modalities has the potential to improve terrain classification from either modality, alone.

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Quantification of rotor thrust and momentum deficit evolution in the wake using Nalu-Wind simulations

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Herges, Thomas H.; Kelley, Christopher L.; Laros, James H.; Brown, Kenneth; Maniaci, David C.; Naughton, Jonathan

Nalu-Wind simulations of the neutral inflow Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWiFT) benchmark were used to analyze which quantities of interest within the wind turbine wake and surrounding control volume are important in performing a momentum deficit analysis of the wind turbine thrust force. The necessary quantities of interest to conduct a full Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) formulation analysis were extracted along the control volume surfaces within the Nalu simulation domain over a 10 minute period. The thrust force calculated within the wake from two to eight diameters downstream using the control volume surfaces and the full RANS approach matched the thrust force that the wind turbine applied to the flowfield. A simplified one-dimension momentum analysis was included to determine if the inflow and wake velocities typically acquired during field campaigns would be sufficient to perform a momentum deficit analysis within a wind turbine wake. The one-dimensional analysis resulted in a 70% difference relative to the coefficient of thrust (Ct ) determined by the full RANS method at 2D downstream and a 40% difference from 5D to 8D, where D is the diameter of the turbine. This suggests that the quantities typically captured during field campaigns are insufficient to perform an accurate momentum deficit analysis unless streamwise pressure distribution is acquired, which reduced the relative difference to less than 10% for this particular atmospheric inflow.

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Large-eddy simulations of the Northeastern US coastal marine boundary layer

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Cheung, Lawrence C.; Kaul, Colleen M.; Laros, James H.; Blaylock, Myra L.; Churchfield, Matthew J.

In this study, large eddy simulations (LES) of offshore boundary layers near the Nantucket coast are performed using Nalu-Wind. The marine boundary layer conditions are chosen to match the predominantly unstable and neutral conditions measured by the Cape Wind platform. The appropriate domain, resolution, and boundary condition settings required for the LES are established through this work. Differences between stable and unstable cases are found in the wind speed profiles, averaged statistics, and wind spectra, and explained in terms of stratification effects. Sandia National Laboratories is a multimission laboratory managed and operated by National Technology & Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-NA0003525. SAND2020-5996C.

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Uncertainty Quantification of Leading Edge Erosion Impacts on Wind Turbine Performance

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Maniaci, David C.; Westergaard, Carsten H.; Laros, James H.; Paquette, Joshua P.

Many factors that influence the effect of leading edge erosion on annual energy production are uncertain, such as the time to initiation, damage growth rate, the blade design, operational conditions, and atmospheric conditions. In this work, we explore how the uncertain parameters that drive leading edge erosion impact wind turbine power performance using a combination of uncertainty quantification and wind turbine modelling tools, at both low and medium fidelity. Results will include the predicted effect of erosion on several example wind plant sites for representative ranges of wind turbine designs, with a goal of helping wind plant operators better decide mitigation strategies.

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Representation of coherent structures and turbulence spectra from a virtual SpinnerLidar for future les wake validation

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Brown, Kenneth; Laros, James H.; Herges, Thomas H.; Maniaci, David C.

Work has begun towards model validation of wake dynamics for the large-eddy simulation (LES) code Nalu-Wind in the context of research-scale wind turbines in a neutral atmospheric boundary layer (ABL). Interest is particularly directed at the structures and spectra which are influential for wake recovery and downstream turbine loading. This initial work is to determine the feasibility of using nacelle-mounted, continuous-wave lidars to measure and validate wake physics via comparisons of full actuator line simulation results with those obtained from a virtual lidar embedded within the computational domain. Analyses are conducted on the dominant large-scale flow structures via proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) and on the various scales of wake-added turbulence through spectral comparisons. The virtual lidar adequately reproduces spatial structures and energies compared to the full simulation results. Correction of the higher-frequency turbulence spectra for volume-averaging attenuation was most successful at locations where mean gradients were not severe. The results of this work will aid the design of experiments for validation of high-fidelity wake models.

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Enhancing Graphene Plasmonic Device Performance via its Dielectric Environment

Physical Review Applied

Jarzembski, Amun J.; Goldflam, Michael G.; Siddiqui, Aleem M.; Ruiz, Isaac R.; Laros, James H.

Graphene plasmons provide a compelling avenue toward chip-scale dynamic tuning of infrared light. Dynamic tunability emerges through controlled alterations in the optical properties of the system defining graphene’s plasmonic dispersion. Typically, electrostatic induced alterations of the carrier concentration in graphene working in conjunction with mobility have been considered the primary factors dictating plasmonic tunability. We find here that the surrounding dielectric environment also plays a primary role, dictating not just the energy of the graphene plasmon but so too the magnitude of its tuning and spectral width. To arrive at this conclusion, poles in the imaginary component of the reflection coefficient are used to efficiently survey the effect of the surrounding dielectric on the tuning of the graphene plasmon. By investigating several common polar materials, optical phonons (i.e., the Reststrahlen band) of the dielectric substrate are shown to appreciably affect not only the plasmon’s spectral location but its tunability, and its resonance shape as well. In particular, tunability is maximized when the resonances are spectrally distant from the Reststrahlen band, whereas sharp resonances (i.e., high-Q) are achievable at the band’s edge. Overall, these observations both underscore the necessity of viewing the dielectric environment in aggregate when considering the plasmonic response derived from two-dimensional materials and provide heuristics to design dynamically tunable graphene-based infrared devices.

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Fast rise breakdown in dielectric filled air gap for surge protection

Journal of Applied Physics

Yang, Pin Y.; Sorenson, Josef S.; Laros, James H.; Laros, James H.; Moffatt, William C.

Electric discharge across an air gap can be self-healing, providing a unique capability for repetitive, fast, high-voltage/current switching applications through arc conduction. Furthermore, incorporating dielectric granules in the air gap stimulates gas ionization, which lowers the breakdown voltage and narrows breakdown voltage distribution, thereby enabling engineered surge protection from multiple lightning strikes on aerospace vehicles and sensitive solid-state electronics in critical systems. This study investigates the effect of the permittivity of dielectric granules, gap filling, surface roughness, and metal work function on fast-rising, high-voltage breakdowns. In addition to the air gap width, these factors play important roles in gas ionization, field concentration, and initiation of electrical discharge and arcing. Therefore, they could potentially be used to control and narrow operational breakdown voltages for practical applications. Additionally, a modified Langevin-Debye model is developed to correlate the breakdown voltage and the permittivity of the dielectric filler. These investigations identify and highlight key underpinning mechanisms governing the gas discharge behavior across a dielectric filled air gap during voltage surge events.

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Performance of CsI:Tl Cyrstal with a Spectrum Matching Photomultiplier Tube

Yang, Pin Y.; Laros, James H.; Harmon, Charles D.

This report documents an effort to improve the energy resolution for a thallium doped cesium iodide (CsI:T1) scintillator paired with a spectrum matching photomultiplier tube (PMT). A comparison of the differences in the pulse height spectra from thallium doped (CsI:T1) and sodium doped (CsI:Na) single crystals with PMTs of different spectrum responses was performed. Results show that energy resolution of the detector only improves 0.5% at room temperature when these scintillators are coupled with a spectrum matching PMT. Based on a spectrum matching PMT, the best results for energy resolution are 7.39% and 7.88% for CsI:T1 and CsI:Na scintillators, respectively. The improvement is primarily attributed to the increase of photon statistics from the increase of photons (N) being detected in the spectrum matching PMT. Other factors, such as optical quantum yield and non-proportionality of the CsI:T1 and CsI:Na crystals, that can affect the energy resolution were also studied and reported. The results indicate that although the use of a spectrum matching PMT enhances the photon statistics, it also exacerbates the nonproportionality response. Consequently, a promised improvement on energy resolution due solely to photon statistics was not fully realized.

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AniMACCS User Guide

Laros, James H.; Bixler, Nathan E.; Leute, Jennifer E.; Whitener, Dustin H.; Eubanks, Lloyd L.

AniMACCS is a utility code in the MELCOR Accident Consequence Code System (MACCS) software suite that allows for certain MACCS output information to be visually displayed and overlaid onto a geospatial map background. AniMACCS was developed by Sandia National Laboratories for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. MACCS is designed to calculate health and economic consequences following a release of radioactive material in the atmosphere. MACCS accomplishes this by modeling the atmospheric dispersion, deposition, and consequences of the release, which depend on several factors including the source term, weather, population, economic, and land-use characteristics of the impacted geographical area. From these inputs, MACCS determines the characteristics of the plume, as well as ground and air concentrations as a function of time and radionuclide.

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Enhancing graphene plasmonic device performance via its dielectric environment

Physical Review Applied

Jarzembski, Amun J.; Goldflam, Michael G.; Siddiqui, Aleem M.; Ruiz, Isaac R.; Laros, James H.

Graphene plasmons provide a compelling avenue toward chip-scale dynamic tuning of infrared light. Dynamic tunability emerges through controlled alterations in the optical properties of the system defining graphene's plasmonic dispersion. Typically, electrostatic induced alterations of the carrier concentration in graphene working in conjunction with mobility have been considered the primary factors dictating plasmonic tunability. We find here that the surrounding dielectric environment also plays a primary role, dictating not just the energy of the graphene plasmon but so too the magnitude of its tuning and spectral width. To arrive at this conclusion, poles in the imaginary component of the reflection coefficient are used to efficiently survey the effect of the surrounding dielectric on the tuning of the graphene plasmon. By investigating several common polar materials, optical phonons (i.e., the Reststrahlen band) of the dielectric substrate are shown to appreciably affect not only the plasmon's spectral location but its tunability, and its resonance shape as well. In particular, tunability is maximized when the resonances are spectrally distant from the Reststrahlen band, whereas sharp resonances (i.e., high-Q) are achievable at the band's edge. These observations both underscore the necessity of viewing the dielectric environment in aggregate when considering the plasmonic response derived from two-dimensional materials and provide heuristics to design dynamically tunable graphene-based infrared devices.

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Pre-Symptomatic COVID Screening

Laros, James H.

Temperature checks for fever are extensively used for preliminary COVID screenings but are ineffective during the incubation stage of infection when a person is asymptotic. Researchers at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control concluded that approximately 75% of passengers infected with COVID-19 and traveling from affected Chinese cities would not be detected by early screening. Core body temperature is normally kept within a narrow range and has the smallest relative standard deviation of all vital signs. Heat in the body is prioritized around internal organs at the expense of the periphery by controlling blood flow. In fact, blood flow to the skin may vary by a factor of 100 depending on thermal conditions. This adaptation causes rapid temperature fluctuations in different skin regions from changes in cardiac output, metabolism, and likely cytokine diffusion during inflammation that would not be seen in average core body temperature. Current IR and thermal scanners used for temperature checks are not necessarily reflective of core body temperatures and require cautious interpretation as they frequently result in false positive and false negative diagnosis. Hand held thermometers measure average skin temperatures and can get readings that differ from core body temperature by as much as 7°. Rather than focusing on a core body temperature threshold assessment we believe that variability of temperature patterns using a novel wearable transdermal microneedle sensor will be more sensitive to infections in the incubation stage and propose to develop a wearable transdermal temperature sensor using established Sandia microneedle technology for pre-symptomatic COVID screening that can additionally be used to monitor disease progression at later stages.

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Results 826–850 of 2,290
Results 826–850 of 2,290