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Membrane MOT: Trapping Dense Cold Atoms in a Sub-Millimeter Diameter Hole of a Microfabricated Membrane Device

Optics Letter

Lee, Jongmin; Biedermann, Grant; Mudrick, John P.; Douglas, Erica A.; Jau, Yuan-Yu

We present an implementation that can keep a coldatom ensemble within a sub-millimeter diameter hole in a transparent membrane. Based on the effective beam diameter of the magneto-optical trap (MOT), d = 400 mm-hole diameter, we measure the atom number that is 105 times higher than the predicted value using the conventional d6 scaling rule. Atoms trapped by the membrane MOT are cooled down to 10 mK with sub- Doppler cooling process and can be potentially coupled to the photonic/electronic integrated circuits that can be fabricated in the membrane device by taking a step toward the atom trap integrated platform.

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Safeguards Modeling for Advanced Nuclear Facility Design

Journal of Nuclear Materials Management

Cipiti, Benjamin B.

Future nuclear fuel cycle facilities will see a significant benefit from considering materials accountancy requirements early in the design process. The Material Protection, Accounting, and Control Technologies (MPACT) working group is demonstrating Safeguards and Security by Design (SSBD) for a notional electrochemical reprocessing facility as part of a 2020 Milestone. The idea behind SSBD is to consider regulatory requirements early in the design process to provide more optimized systems and avoid costly retrofits later in the design process. Safeguards modeling, using single analyst tools, allows the designer to efficiently consider materials accountancy approaches that meet regulatory requirements. However, safeguards modeling also allows the facility designer to go beyond current regulations and work toward accountancy designs with rapid response and lower thresholds for detection of anomalies. This type of modeling enables new safeguards approaches and may inform future regulatory changes. The Separation and Safeguards Performance Model (SSPM) has been used for materials accountancy system design and analysis. This paper steps through the process of designing a Material Control and Accountancy (MC&A) system, presents the baseline system design for an electrochemical reprocessing facility, and provides performance metrics from the modeling analysis. The most critical measurements in the electrochemical facility are the spent fuel input, electrorefiner salt, and U/TRU product output measurements. Finally, material loss scenario analysis found that measurement uncertainties (relative standard deviations) for Pu would need to be at 1% (random and systematic error components) or better in order to meet domestic detection goals or as high as 3% in order to meet international detection goals, based on a 100 metric ton per year plant size.

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Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor Proliferation Resistance and Physical Protection White Paper

Cipiti, Benjamin B.

The Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor (SFR) system was identified during the Generation IV Technology Roadmap as a promising technology to perform the actinide management mission and, if enhanced economics for the system could be realized, also the electricity and heat production missions. The main characteristics of the SFR that make it especially suitable for the actinide management mission are: Consumption of transuranics in a closed fuel cycle, thus reducing the radiotoxicity and heat load which facilitates waste disposal and geologic isolation; Enhanced utilization of uranium resources through efficient management of fissile materials and multi-recycle; and, High level of safety achieved through inherent and passive means that accommodate transients and bounding events with significant safety margins.

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Overview of Preliminary Concepts for a Port of Alaska Resilient Microgrid

William, Matthew; Flicker, Jack D.

The Port of Alaska in Anchorage enables the economic vitality of the Municipality of Anchorage and State of Alaska. It also provides significant support to defense activities across Alaska, especially to the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER) that is immediately adjacent to the Port. For this reason, stakeholders are interested in the resilience of the Ports operations. This report documents a preliminary feasibility analysis for developing an energy system that increases electric supply resilience for the Port and for a specific location inside JBER. The project concept emerged from prior work led by the Municipality of Anchorage and consultation with Port stakeholders. The project consists of a microgrid with PV, storage and diesel generation, capable of supplying electricity to loads at the Port a specific JBER location during utility outages, while also delivering economic value during blue-sky conditions. The study aims to estimate the size, configuration and concept of operations based on existing infrastructure and limited demand data. It also explores potential project benefits and challenges. The report goal is to inform further stakeholder consultation and next steps.

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A Thermodynamic Reassessment of Lithium-Ion Battery Cathode Calorimetry

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Shurtz, Randy C.

This work demonstrates how staged heat release from layered metal oxide cathodes in the presence of organic electrolytes can be predicted from basic thermodynamic properties. These prediction methods for heat release are an advancement compared to typical modeling approaches for thermal runaway in lithium-ion batteries, which tend to rely exclusively on calorimetry measurements of battery components. These calculations generate useful new insights when compared to calorimetry measurements for lithium cobalt oxide (LCO) as well as the most common varieties of nickel manganese cobalt oxide (NMC) and nickel cobalt aluminum oxide (NCA). Accurate trends in heat release with varying state of charge are predicted for all of these cathode materials. These results suggest that thermodynamic calculations utilizing a recently published database of properties are broadly applicable for predicting decomposition behavior of layered metal oxide cathodes. Aspects of literature calorimetry measurements relevant to thermal runaway modeling are identified and classified as thermodynamic or kinetic effects. The calorimetry measurements reviewed in this work will be useful for development of a new generation of thermal runaway models targeting applications where accurate maximum cell temperatures are required to predict cascading cell-to-cell propagation rates.

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Taking the Air Out of Respiratory Pandemics: An R&D Effort for Developing New, Far Less Disruptive and Frightening Protective Measures to Extinguish Airborne Pathogen Outbreaks

Gupta, Vipin P.; Kelley, John B.

This short concept article discusses four specific ways to eradicate respiratory pandemics once and for all. These include: Protecting the nose, mouth, throat and lungs; New hygiene regimens; Clearing the air; and Biophysical interventions. Technical breakthoughs in all four of these areas would not only protect people from life-threatening pathogens, but also take the dread out of respiratory disease outbreaks.

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Co-Optimization of Boost Converter Reliability and Volumetric Power Density [Brief]

Gill, Lee; Neely, Jason C.; Rashkin, Lee J.; Flicker, Jack D.; Kaplar, Robert

Optimized designs were achieved using a genetic algorithm to evaluate multi-objective trade space, including Mean-Time-Between-Failure (MTBF) and volumetric power density. This work provides a foundational platform that can be used to optimize additional power converters, such as an inverter for the EV traction drive system as well as trade-offs in thermal management due to the use of different device substrate materials.

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Encapsulant Void Breakdown Voltage Modeling & Experiments

Moore, Christopher H.; Clem, Paul; Biedermann, Laura B.; Miller, William K.; Stavig, Mark E.; Turner, Christian D.

For high voltage electrical devices, prevention of high voltage breakdown is critical for device function. Use of polymeric encapsulation such as epoxies is common, but these may include air bubbles or other voids of varying size. The present work aimed to model and experimentally determine the size dependence of breakdown voltage for voids in an epoxy matrix, as a step toward establishing size criteria for void screening. Effects were investigated experimentally for both one-dimensional metal/epoxy/air/epoxy/metal gap sizes from 50 μm to 10 mm, as well as spherical voids of 250 μm, 500 μm, 1 mm and 2 mm sizes. These experimental results were compared to modified Paschen curve and particle-in-cell discharge models; minimum breakdown voltages of 6 - 8.5 kV appeared to be predicted by 1D models and experiments, with minimum breakdown voltage for void sizes of 0.2 - 1 mm. In a limited set of 3D experiments on 250 μm, 500 μm, 1 mm and 2 mm voids within epoxy, the minimum breakdown voltages observed were 18.5 - 20 kV, for 500 μm void sizes. These experiments and models are aimed at providing initial size and voltage criteria for tolerable void sizes and expected discharge voltages to support design of encapsulated high voltage components.

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The effect of laser entrance hole foil thickness on MagLIF-relevant laser preheat

Physics of Plasmas

Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Weis, Matthew R.; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Wei, M.S.; Sefkow, A.B.; Nagayama, Taisuke; Campbell, E.M.; Fooks, J.A.; Glinsky, Michael E.; Peterson, K.J.

The magnetized liner inertial fusion (MagLIF) scheme relies on coupling laser energy into an underdense fuel raising the fuel adiabat at the start of the implosion. To deposit energy into the fuel, the laser must first penetrate a laser entrance hole (LEH) foil which can be a significant energy sink and introduce mix. In this paper, we report on experiments investigating laser energy coupling into MagLIF-relevant gas cell targets with LEH foil thicknesses varying from 0.5 μm to 3 μm. Two-dimensional (2D) axisymmetric simulations match the experimental results well for 0.5 μm and 1 μm thick LEH foils but exhibit whole-beam self-focusing and excessive penetration of the laser into the gas for 2 μm and 3 μm thick LEH foils. Better agreement for the 2 μm-thick foil is found when using a different thermal conductivity model in 2D simulations, while only 3D Cartesian simulations come close to matching the 3 μm-thick foil experiments. The study suggests that simulations may over-predict the tendency for the laser to self-focus during MagLIF preheat when thicker LEH foils are used. This effect is pronounced with 2D simulations where the azimuthally symmetric density channel effectively self-focuses the rays that are forced to traverse the center of the plasma. The extra degree of freedom in 3D simulations significantly reduces this effect. The experiments and simulations also suggest that, in this study, the amount of energy coupled into the gas is highly correlated with the laser propagation length regardless of the LEH foil thickness.

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Disposal Concepts for a High-Temperature Repository in Shale

Stein, Emily; Bryan, C.R.; Dobson, David C.; Hardin, Ernest; Jove-Colon, Carlos F.; Lopez, Carlos M.; Matteo, Edward N.; Mohanty, Sitakanta; Pendleton, Martha W.; Foulk, James W.; Prouty, Jeralyn; Sassani, David C.; Wang, Yifeng; Rutqvist, Jonny; Zheng, Liange; Sauer, Kirsten; Caporuscio, Florie; Howard, Robert; Adeniyi, Abiodun; Joseph, Robby

Disposal of large, heat-generating waste packages containing the equivalent of 21 pressurized water reactor (PWR) assemblies or more is among the disposal concepts under investigation for a future repository for spent nuclear fuel (SNF) in the United States. Without a long (>200 years) surface storage period, disposal of 21-PWR or larger waste packages (especially if they contain high-burnup fuel) would result in in-drift and near-field temperatures considerably higher than considered in previous generic reference cases that assume either 4-PWR or 12-PWR waste packages (Jové Colón et al. 2014; Mariner et al. 2015; 2017). Sevougian et al. (2019c) identified high-temperature process understanding as a key research and development (R&D) area for the Spent Fuel and Waste Science and Technology (SFWST) Campaign. A two-day workshop in February 2020 brought together campaign scientists with expertise in geology, geochemistry, geomechanics, engineered barriers, waste forms, and corrosion processes to begin integrated development of a high-temperature reference case for disposal of SNF in a mined repository in a shale host rock. Building on the progress made in the workshop, the study team further explored the concepts and processes needed to form the basis for a high-temperature shale repository reference case. The results are described in this report and summarized..

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Dakota, A Multilevel Parallel Object-Oriented Framework for Design Optimization, Parameter Estimation, Uncertainty Quantification, and Sensitivity Analysis: Version 6.13 User's Manual

Adams, Brian M.; Bohnhoff, William J.; Dalbey, Keith R.; Ebeida, Mohamed S.; Eddy, John P.; Eldred, Michael S.; Hooper, Russell W.; Hough, Patricia D.; Hu, Kenneth T.; Jakeman, John D.; Khalil, Mohammad; Maupin, Kathryn A.; Monschke, Jason A.; Ridgway, Elliott M.; Rushdi, Ahmad; Seidl, Daniel T.; Stephens, John A.; Winokur, Justin G.

The Dakota toolkit provides a flexible and extensible interface between simulation codes and iterative analysis methods. Dakota contains algorithms for optimization with gradient and nongradient-based methods; uncertainty quantification with sampling, reliability, and stochastic expansion methods; parameter estimation with nonlinear least squares methods; and sensitivity/variance analysis with design of experiments and parameter study methods. These capabilities may be used on their own or as components within advanced strategies such as surrogate-based optimization, mixed integer nonlinear programming, or optimization under uncertainty. By employing object-oriented design to implement abstractions of the key components required for iterative systems analyses, the Dakota toolkit provides a flexible and extensible problem-solving environment for design and performance analysis of computational models on high performance computers. This report serves as a user’s manual for the Dakota software and provides capability overviews and procedures for software execution, as well as a variety of example studies.

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The MPACT 2020 Milestone: Safeguards and Security by Design of Future Nuclear Fuel Cycle Facilities

Journal of Nuclear Materials Management

Cipiti, Benjamin B.

The Materials Protection, Accounting, and Control Technologies (MPACT) campaign, within the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Energy, has developed a Virtual Facility Distributed Test Bed for safeguards and security design for future nuclear fuel cycle facilities. The purpose of the Virtual Test Bed is to bring together experimental and modeling capabilities across the U.S. national laboratory and university complex to provide a one-stop-shop for advanced Safeguards and Security by Design (SSBD). Experimental testing alone of safeguards and security technologies would be cost prohibitive, but testbeds and laboratory processing facilities with safeguards measurement opportunities, coupled with modeling and simulation, provide the ability to generate modern, efficient safeguards and security systems for new facilities. This Virtual Test Bed concept has been demonstrated using a generic electrochemical reprocessing facility as an example, but the concept can be extended to other facilities. While much of the recent work in the MPACT program has focused on electrochemical safeguards and security technologies, the laboratory capabilities have been applied to other facilities in the past (including aqueous reprocessing, fuel fabrication, and molten salt reactors as examples). This paper provides an overview of the Virtual Test Bed concept, a description of the design process, and a baseline safeguards and security design for the example facility. Parallel papers in this issue go into more detail on the various technologies, experimental testing, modeling capabilities, and performance testing.

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Narrowband Self-Emission X-ray Imaging of MagLIF Targets on Z

Gomez, Matthew R.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Dunham, G.S.; Knapp, P.F.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Robertson, G.K.; Speas, Christopher S.; Maurer, Andrew J.; Ampleford, David J.; Rochau, G.A.; Doron, R.; O Nedostup, E.; Stambulchik; Zarnitsky, Y.; Maron, Y.; Paguio, Reny; Tomlinson, Kurt; Huang, H.; Smith, Gary; Taylor, Randy

Abstract not provided.

Results 14701–14800 of 99,299
Results 14701–14800 of 99,299