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Zero-bias conductance peak in Dirac semimetal-superconductor devices

Physical Review Research

W Yu, Rafael H.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Lee, Stephen R.; Zhang, F.; Franz, M.; Pikulin, D.I.; Pan, Wei

Majorana zero modes (MZMs), fundamental building blocks for realizing topological quantum computers, can appear at the interface between a superconductor and a topological material. One of the experimental signatures that has been widely pursued to confirm the existence of MZMs is the observation of a large, quantized zero-bias conductance peak (ZBCP) in the differential conductance measurements. In this Letter, we report observation of such a large ZBCP in junction structures of normal metal (titanium/gold Ti/Au)-Dirac semimetal (cadmium-arsenide Cd3As2)-conventional superconductor (aluminum Al), with a value close to four times that of the normal state conductance. Our detailed analyses suggest that this large ZBCP is most likely not caused by MZMs. We attribute the ZBCP, instead, to the existence of a supercurrent between two far-separated superconducting Al electrodes, which shows up as a zero-bias peak because of the circuitry and thermal fluctuations of the supercurrent phase, a mechanism conceived by Ivanchenko and Zil'berman more than 50 years ago [Ivanchenko and Zil'berman, JETP 28, 1272 (1969)]. Our results thus call for extreme caution when assigning the origin of a large ZBCP to MZMs in a multiterminal semiconductor or topological insulator/semimetal setup. We thus provide criteria for identifying when the ZBCP is definitely not caused by an MZM. Furthermore, we present several remarkable experimental results of a supercurrent effect occurring over unusually long distances and clean perfect Andreev reflection features.

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WIPP MLU Shipment Preliminary Document

Allardice, Amber; Walton, Edward; Kemp, Justin P.

The following SNL document contains required information as part of final preparation for the LANL MLU shipping team. The documents pertain to MLU shipment activities scheduled at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) in TA-5, for the week of July 20th— 24th: EILOT (Escort In Lieu Of Training) for MLU team members and crane operators and SNL-RP characterization surveys for the 11 SCA due for shipment. The EILOT document is listed first. The remaining pages are the radiation and contamination surveys completed on the 11 SCA containers that are being loaded and shipped to WIPP.

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Modeling Failure of Electrical Transformers due to Effects of a HEMP Event

Hansen, Clifford; Catanach, Thomas A.; Glover, Austin M.; Huerta, Jose G.; Stuart, Zach; Guttromson, Ross

Understanding the effect of a high-altitude electromagnetic pulse (HEMP) on the equipment in the United States electrical power grid is important to national security. A present challenge to this understanding is evaluating the vulnerability of transformers to a HEMP. Evaluating vulnerability by direct testing is cost-prohibitive, due to the wide variation in transformers, their high cost, and the large number of tests required to establish vulnerability with confidence. Alternatively, material and component testing can be performed to quantify a model for transformer failure, and the model can be used to assess vulnerability of a wide variety of transformers. This project develops a model of the probability of equipment failure due to effects of a HEMP. Potential failure modes are cataloged, and a model structure is presented which can be quantified by the results of small-scale coupon tests.

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International Collaborations on Radioactive Waste Disposal in Salt (FY20)

Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Matteo, Edward N.; Mills, Melissa M.; Jayne, Richard; Reedlunn, Benjamin; Sobolik, Steven; Foulk, James W.; Stein, Emily; Gross, Mike

This report is a summary of the international collaboration work conducted by Sandia and funded by the US Department of Energy Office (DOE) of Nuclear Energy Spent Fuel and Waste Science & Technology (SFWST) as part of the Sandia National Laboratories Salt R&D and Salt International work packages. This report satisfies milestone level-three milestone M3SF-205N010303062. Several stand-alone sections make up this summary report, each completed by the participants. The first two sections discuss international collaborations on geomechanical benchmarking exercises (WEIMOS), granular salt reconsolidation (KOMPASS), engineered barriers (RANGERS), and documentation of Features, Events, and Processes (FEPs).

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NTESS Savings and Income Plan Summary Plan Description

Mitchell, Leah J.; Lee, Connie

National Technology & Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC (NTESS) is pleased to sponsor the NTESS Savings and Income Plan (401(k) Plan), formerly known as the Sandia Corporation Savings and Income Plan, which is designed to help you build financial resources for the future. The 401(k) Plan can be an important part of saving for your retirement. This Summary Plan Description (SPD) explains how to determine if you are eligible to participate in the 401(k) Plan by saving directly from your wages, if you are eligible to receive employer contributions, when you may make withdrawals from your 401(k) Plan Account, and other important information about the 401(k) Plan. More detailed information is contained in the official NTESS Savings and Income Plan document, which governs the operation of the 401(k) Plan. In the event there is or appears to be any discrepancy between the terms of the 401(k) Plan document and this SPD, the terms of the 401(k) Plan document control.

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NTESS Retirement Income Plan Summary Plan Description

Mitchell, Leah J.; Lee, Connie

National Technology & Engineering Solutions of Sandia LLC (NTESS) is pleased to sponsor for your benefit the NTESS Retirement Income Plan (RIP or Pension Plan), formerly known as the Sandia Corporation Retirement Income Plan, which is designed to provide a source of continuing income during retirement for covered employees. This Summary Plan Description (SPD) explains how to determine if you will be eligible for a benefit from the Pension Plan when you retire or terminate your employment. Under certain circumstances, reduced pension benefits can be continued to your Spouse or a contingent annuitant, following your death. This SPD includes the provisions of the RIP as of January 1, 2020. The pension benefits described in this SPD apply to Eligible Employees (as defined in Questions 1 and 2) who experience a Termination of Employment (as defined in Appendix A) with NTESS or another Affiliated Company (as defined in Appendix A) on or after this date. More detailed information is contained in the NTESS Retirement Income Plan document, which governs the operation of this Pension Plan. In the event there is or appears to be any discrepancy between the terms of the RIP document and this SPD, the terms of the RIP document control.

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WIPP MLU Incoming Vehicles Survey Document

Rollins, Andrew; Walton, Edward; Kegeler, Stephen; Brasure, Ryan W.

The following SNL document contains requested radiological survey information, as part of the documentation for the TRU-waste shipment being performed by the LANL MLU team. The surveys were performed in TA-5, on July 20th, 2020: Incoming WIPP TRU-Pact trailers survey: 1-20200720-4, and, Incoming MLU trailer and mobile crane survey: 1-20200720-8 The first survey was of 2 WIPP trailers carrying 2 empty TRU Half-Pacts each. The second survey was for a trailer with the MLU team's equipment, and for the contracted mobile crane that be used for loading Half-Pacts. All information contained was completed, reviewed, and approved by SNL RP personnel, and is released for receipt and use by the LANL MLU Team and WIPP personnel at their discretion.

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Applying Waveform Correlation to Mining Blasts Using a Global Sparse Network

Sundermier, Amy; Tibi, Rigobert; Young, Christopher J.

Agencies that monitor for underground nuclear tests are interested in techniques that automatically characterize mining blasts to reduce the human analyst effort required to produce high-quality event bulletins. Waveform correlation is effective in finding similar waveforms from repeating seismic events, including mining blasts. We report the results of an experiment that uses waveform templates recorded by multiple International Monitoring System stations of the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization for up to 10 years prior to the time period of interest to detect and identify mining blasts that occur during single weeks of study. We discuss approaches for template selection, threshold setting, and event detection that are specialized for mining blasts and a sparse, global network. We apply the approaches to two different weeks of study for each of two geographic regions, Wyoming and Scandinavia, to evaluate the potential for establishing a set of standards for waveform correlation processing of mining blasts that can be effective for operational monitoring systems with a sparse network. We compare candidate events detected with our processing methods to the Reviewed Event Bulletin of the International Data Centre to develop an intuition about potential reduction in analyst workload.

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Results 16701–16800 of 99,299
Results 16701–16800 of 99,299