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Non-traditional ion beam analyses

Doyle, Barney L.

Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS), elastic recoil detection (ERD), proton induced x-ray emission (PIXE) and nuclear reaction analysis (NRA) are among the most commonly used, or traditional, ion beam analysis (IBA) techniques. In this review, several adaptations of these IBA techniques are described where either the approach used in the analysis or the application area is clearly non-traditional or unusual. These analyses and/or applications are summarized in this paper.

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1/f noise and oxide traps in MOSFETs

Fleetwood, D.M.

MOSFETs historically have exhibited large 1/f noise magnitudes because of carrier-defect interactions that cause the number of channel carriers and their mobility to fluctuate. Uncertainty in the type and location of defects that lead to the observed noise have made it difficult to optimize MOSFET processing to reduce the level of 1/f noise. This has limited one`s options when designing devices or circuits (high-precision analog electronics, preamplifiers, etc.) for low-noise applications at frequencies below {approximately}10--100 kHz. We have performed detailed comparisons of the low-frequency 1/f noise of MOSFETs manufactured with radiation-hardened and non-radiation-hardened processing. We find that the same techniques which reduce the amount of MOSFET radiation-induced oxide-trap charge can also proportionally reduce the magnitude of the low-frequency 1/f noise of both unirradiated and irradiated devices. MOSFETs built in radiation-hardened device technologies show noise levels up to a factor of 10 or more lower than standard commercial MOSFETs of comparable dimensions, and our quietest MOSFETs show noise magnitudes that approach the low noise levels of JFETS.

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The impact of 3D seismic technology on the petroleum market

Bruch, V.L.

Three dimensional (3D) seismic technology is regarded as one of the most significant improvements in oil exploration technology to come along in recent years. This report provides an assessment of the likely long-term effect on the world oil price and some possible implications for the firms and countries that participate in the oil market. The potential reduction in average finding costs expected from the use of 3D seismic methods and the potential effects these methods may have on the world oil price were estimated. Three dimensional seismic technology is likely to have a more important effect on the stability rather than on the level of oil prices. The competitive position of US oil production will not be affected by 3D seismic technology.

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A programming tool for detailed analysis of Fortran operation counts

Pollock, Guylaine M.

A programming tool has been developed to allow detailed analysis of Fortran programs for massively parallel architectures. The tool obtains counts for various arithmetic, logical, and input/output operations by data types as desired by the user. The tool operates on complete programs and recognizes user-defined and intrinsic language functions as operations that may be counted. The subset of functions recognized by the tool, STOPCNTR, can be extended by altering the input data sets. This feature facilitates analysis of programs targeted for different architectures. The basic usage and operation of the tool is described along with the more important data structures and more interesting algorithmic aspects before identifying future directions in continued development of the tool and discussing STOPCNTR`s inherent advantages and disadvantages.

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Tensile properties of epoxy encapsulants

Guess, Tommy R.

Tensile properties were measured for nineteen different formulations of epoxy encapsulating materials. Formulations were of different combinations of two neat resins (Epon 828 and Epon 826, with and without CTBN modification), three fillers (ALOX, GNM and mica) and four hardeners (Z, DEA, DETDA-SA and ANH-2). Five of the formulations were tested at -55, -20, 20 and 60C, one formulation at -55, 20 and 71C; and the remaining formulations at 20C. Complete stress-strain curves are presented along with tables of tensile strength, initial modulus and Poisson`s ratio. The stress-strain responses are nonlinear and are temperature dependent. The reported data provide information for comparing the mechanical properties of encapsulants containing the suspected carcinogen Shell Z with the properties of encapsulants containing noncarcinogenic hardeners. Also, calculated shear moduli, based on measured tensile moduli and Poisson`s ratio, are in very good agreement with reported shear moduli from experimental torsional pendulum tests.

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Plane Shock Generator Explosive Lens: PH 13-8 Mo stainless steel versus 4340 steel shock wave separators and LX-13 versus PBX-9501 explosive particle velocity-time profiles

Vigil, Manuel G.

Sandia National Laboratories is currently involved in the optimization of a Plane Shock Generator Explosive Lens (PSGEL). This PSGEL component is designed to generate a planar shock wave transmitted to perform a function through a steel bulkhead without rupturing or destroying the integrity of the bulkhead. The PSGEL component consists of a detonator, explosive, brass cone and tamper housing. The purpose of the PSGEL component is to generate a plane shock wave input to 4340 steel bulkhead (wave separator) with a ferro-electric (PZT) ceramic disk attached to the steel on the surface opposite the PSGEL. The planar shock wave depolarizes the PZT 65/35 ferroelectric ceramic to produce an electrical output. Elastic, plastic I and plastic II waves with different velocities are generated in the steel bulkhead. The depolarization of the PZT ceramic is produced by the elastic wave of specific amplitude (10--20 Kilobars) and this process must be completed before (about 0. 15 microseconds) the first plastic wave arrives at the PZT ceramic. Measured particle velocity versus time profiles, using a Velocity Interferometer System for Any Reflector (VISAR) are presented for the brass and steel output free surfaces. Peak pressures are calculated from the particle velocities for the elastic, plastic I and plastic 11 waves in the steel. The work presented here investigates replacing the current 4340 steel with PH 13-8 Mo stainless steel in order to have a more corrosion resistant, weldable and more compatible material for the multi-year life of the component. Therefore, the particle velocity versus time profile data are presented comparing the 4340 steel and PH 13-8 Mo stainless steel. Additionally, in order to reduce the amount of explosive, data are presented to show that LX-13 can replace PBX-9501 explosive to produce more desirable results.

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DMBA induces tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-{gamma}1 and activates the tyrosine kinases lck and fyn in the HPB-ALL human T-cell line

Archuleta, Melecita M.

Previous studies in this laboratory have demonstrated that DMBA alters biochemical events associated with lymphocyte activation including formation of the second messenger IP{sub 3} and the release of intracellular Ca{sup 2+}. The purpose of the present studies was to evaluate the mechanisms by which DMBA induces IP{sub 3} formation and Ca{sup 2+} release by examining phosphorylation of membrane associated proteins and activation of protein tyrosine kinases lck and fyn. These studies demonstrated that exposure of HPB-ALL cells to 10{mu}M DMBA resulted in a time- and dose-dependent increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-{gamma}1 that correlated with our earlier findings of IP{sub 3} formation and Ca{sup 2+} release. These results indicate that the effects of DMBA on the PI-PLC signaling pathway are in part, the result of DMBA-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the PLC-{gamma}1 enzyme. The mechanism of DMBA- induced tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-{gamma}1 may be due to activation of fyn or lck kinase activity, since it was found that DMBA increased the activity of these PTKs by more than 2-fold. Therefore, these studies demonstrate that DMBA may disrupt T cell activation by stimulating PTK activation with concomitant tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-{gamma}1, release of IP{sub 3}, and mobilization of intracellular Ca{sup 2+}.

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The Natural Excitation Technique (NExT) for modal parameter extraction from operating wind turbines

James III, G.H.; Carne, T.G.; Lauffer, J.P.

The Natural Excitation Technique (NExT) is a method of modal testing that allows structures to be tested in their ambient environments. This report is a compilation of developments and results since 1990, and contains a new theoretical derivation of NExT, as well as a verification using analytically generated data. In addition, we compare results from NExT with conventional modal testing for a parked, vertical-axis wind turbine, and, for a rotating turbine, NExT is used to calculate the model parameters as functions of the rotation speed, since substantial damping is derived from the aeroelastic interactions during operation. Finally, we compare experimental results calculated using NExT with analytical predictions of damping using aeroelastic theory.

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Low-pump-rate multi-millisecond atomic xenon laser

Patterson, E.L.; Samlin, G.E.

Characteristics of a long pulse, low-pump rate, atomic xenon (XeI) laser are described. Energy loading up to 170 mJ/cc at pulse widths between 5 and 55 ms is achieved with an electron beam in transverse geometry. The small-signal gain coefficient, loss coefficient, and saturation intensity are inferred from a modified Rigrod analysis. For pump rates between 12 and 42 W/cc the small-signal gain coefficient varies between 0.64 and 0.91%/cm, the loss coefficient varies between 0.027 and 0.088%/cm, and the saturation intensity varies between 61 and 381 W/cm{sup 2}. Laser energy as a function of pulse width and the effects of air and CO{sub 2} impurities are described. The intrinsic laser energy efficiency has a maximum at a pulse width of 10 ms corresponding to a pump rate of 1.6 W/cc. No maximum is observed in the intrinsic power efficiency, A drastic reduction of laser output power is observed for impurity concentrations of greater than {approx}0.01%. An investigation of the dominant laser wavelength in a high Q cavity indicates that the 2.6-{mu}m radiation dominates. A comparison of dominant wavelength with reactor pumped results indicates good agreement when the same cavity optics are used.

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A source-term method for determining spent-fuel transport cask containment requirements: Executive summary

Sanders, Thomas L.

This Executive Summary presents the methodology for determining containment requirements for spent-fuel transport casks under normal and hypothetical accident conditions. Three sources of radioactive material are considered: (1) the spent fuel itself, (2) radioactive material, referred to as CRUD, attached to the outside surfaces of fuel rod cladding, and (3) residual contamination adhering to interior surfaces of the cask cavity. The methodologies for determining the concentrations of freely suspended radioactive materials within a spent-fuel transport cask for these sources are discussed in much greater detail in three companion reports: ``A Method for Determining the Spent-Fuel Contribution to Transport Cask Containment Requirements,`` ``Estimate of CRUD Contribution to Shipping Cask Containment Requirements,`` and ``A Methodology for Estimating the Residual Contamination Contribution to the Source Term in a Spent-Fuel Transport Cask.`` Examples of cask containment requirements that combine the individually determined containment requirements for the three sources are provided, and conclusions from the three companion reports to this Executive Summary are presented.

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Downstream evolution of turbulence from heated screens: Experimental and analytical results

O'Hern, Timothy J.

This report discusses recent efforts to characterize the flow and density nonuniformities downstream of heated screens placed in a uniform flow. The Heated Screen Test Facility (HSTF) at Sandia National Laboratories and the Lockheed Palo Alto Flow Channel (LPAFC) were used to perform experiments over wide ranges of upstream velocities and heating rates. Screens of various mesh configurations were examined, including multiple screens sequentially positioned in the flow direction. Diagnostics in these experiments included pressure manometry, hot-wire anemometry, interferometry, Hartmann wavefront slope sensing, and photorefractive schlieren photography. A model was developed to describe the downstream evolution of the flow and density nonuniformities. Equations for the spatial variation of the mean flow quantities and the fluctuation magnitudes were derived by incorporating empirical correlations into the equations of motion. Numerical solutions of these equations are in fair agreement with previous and current experimental results.

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Testing and evaluation of large-area heliostats for solar thermal applications

Strachan, John W.

Two heliostats representing the state-of-the-art in glass-metal designs for central receiver (and photovoltaic tracking) applications were tested and evaluated at the National Solar Thermal Test Facility in Albuquerque, New Mexico from 1986 to 1992. These heliostats have collection areas of 148 and 200 m{sup 2} and represent low-cost designs for heliostats that employ glass-metal mirrors. The evaluation encompassed the performance and operational characteristics of the heliostats, and examined heliostat beam quality, the effect of elevated winds on beam quality, heliostat drives and controls, mirror module reflectance and durability, and the overall operational and maintenance characteristics of the two heliostats. A comprehensive presentation of the results of these and other tests is presented. The results are prefaced by a review of the development (in the United States) of heliostat technology.

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Thermal test options

Koski, Jorman A.

Shipping containers for radioactive materials must be qualified to meet a thermal accident environment specified in regulations, such at Title 10, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 71. Aimed primarily at the shipping container design, this report discusses the thermal testing options available for meeting the regulatory requirements, and states the advantages and disadvantages of each approach. The principal options considered are testing with radiant heat, furnaces, and open pool fires. The report also identifies some of the facilities available and current contacts. Finally, the report makes some recommendations on the appropriate use of these different testing methods.

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Fracture analysis and rock quality designation estimation for the Yucca Mountain Site Characterization Project; Yucca Mountain Site Characterization Project

Bauer, Stephen J.

Within the Yucca Mountain Site Characterization Project, the design of drifts and ramps and evaluation of the impacts of thermomechanical loading of the host rock requires definition of the rock mass mechanical properties. Ramps and exploratory drifts will intersect both welded and nonwelded tuffs with varying abundance of fractures. The rock mass mechanical properties are dependent on the intact rock properties and the fracture joint characteristics. An understanding of the effects of fractures on the mechanical properties of the rock mass begins with a detailed description of the fracture spatial location and abundance, and includes a description of their physical characteristics. This report presents a description of the abundance, orientation, and physical characteristics of fractures and the Rock Quality Designation in the thermomechanical stratigraphic units at the Yucca Mountain site. Data was reviewed from existing sources and used to develop descriptions for each unit. The product of this report is a data set of the best available information on the fracture characteristics.

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A doubly logarithmic communication algorithm for the Completely Connected Optical Communication Parallel Computer

Goldberg, L.A.

In this paper we consider the problem of interprocessor communication on a Completely Connected Optical Communication Parallel Computer (OCPC). The particular problem we study is that of realizing an h-relation. In this problem, each processor has at most h messages to send and at most h messages to receive. It is clear that any 1-relation can be realized in one communication step on an OCPC. However, the best known p-processor OCPC algorithm for realizing an arbitrary h-relation for h > 1 requires {Theta}(h + log p) expected communication steps. (This algorithm is due to Valiant and is based on earlier work of Anderson and Miller.) Valiant`s algorithm is optimal only for h = {Omega}(log p) and it is an open question of Gereb-Graus and Tsantilas whether there is a faster algorithm for h = o(log p). In this paper we answer this question in the affirmative by presenting a {Theta} (h + log log p) communication step algorithm that realizes an arbitrary h-relation on a p-processor OCPC. We show that if h {le} log p then the failure probability can be made as small as p{sup -{alpha}} for any positive constant {alpha}.

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Stability and Accuracy of Differencing Methods for Viscoplastic Models in Wavecodes

Journal of Computational Physics

Silling, Stewart A.

The numerical stability and truncation error of a family of differencing schemes for viscoplastic constitutive relations in wavecodes is investigated. A von Neumann stability analysis is performed for a one-dimensional model problem. This analysis identifies two differencing methods that have no restriction on the time step size beyond the usual Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy condition. One of these methods is first-order accurate, and the other is second-order accurate. Implementation of one of these methods in the three-dimensional wavecode CTH is discussed. © 1993 Academic Press. All rights reserved.

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Characteristics and pulsed radiation response of non-ideal quartz shock stress gauges

Reed, R.P.; Greenwoll, J.I.

This cautionary paper reminds users of quartz shock stress gauges that sensors that ignore the design rules of the Sandia quartz gauge'' may produce substantial and unrecognized deviations from normal sensitivity, waveform distortion, and anomalous conduction. Each deviant design must be extensively characterized. The consequence of non-standard gauge designs, like the shorted quartz gauge'' designs, are given for prompt response to pulsed radiation while stressed.

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Performance of the CPG 7. 5-kW[sub e] Dish-Stirling system

Bean, J.R.; Diver, R.B.

Through the Dish-Stirling Joint Venture Program (JVP) sponsored by the US Department of Energy (DOE), Cummins Power Generation, Inc., (CPG) and Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) have entered into a joint venture to develop and commercialize economically competitive dish-Stirling systems for remote power applications. The $14 million JVP is being conducted in three phases over a 3 1/2-year period in accordance with the Cummins Total Quality System (TQS) for new product development. The JVP is being funded equally by CPG, including its industrial partners, and the DOE. In June 1992, a concept validation'' (prototype) 5-kW[sub e], dish-Stirling system became operational at the CPG test site m Abilene, TX. And on January 1, 1993, the program advanced to phase 2. On the basis of the performance of the 5-kW[sub e] system, a decision was made to increase the rated system output to 7.5-kW[sub e]. The CPG system uses advanced components that have the potential for low cost and reliable operation, but which also have technical risks. In this paper, the status of the advanced components and results from system integration testing are presented and discussed. Performance results from system testing of the 5-kW[sub e] prototype along with phase 2 goals for the 7.5-kW[sub e] system are also discussed.

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A ten year review of performance of photovoltaic systems

Rosenthal, A.L.; Durand, S.J.; Thomas, M.G.

This paper presents data compiled by the Photovoltaic Design Assistance Center at Sandia National Laboratories from more than eighty field tests performed at over thirty-five photovoltaic systems in the United States during the last ten years. The recorded performance histories, failure rates, and degradation of post-Block IV modules and balance-of-system (BOS) components are described in detail.

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The spatial variance of ionospherically-induced phase errors in SAR imagery

Brown, W.D.; Cable, G.D.

Images taken with a synthetic aperture radar (SAR) on an airplane were distorted with phase errors generated by a computer program that simulates the propagation of radar waves through the disturbed ionosphere. The simulation is for an orbiting SAR imaging a scene on the ground. Both the spatially-invariant (decorrelation length projected onto the ground much larger than the scene size) and spatially-variant (decorrelation length much smaller than the scene size) cases are described. The spatially-invariant phase errors can be removed using several different algorithms. Problems and strategies in restoring SAR images distorted with spatially-variant phase errors are discussed.

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An experimental/analytical study of strains in encapsulated assemblies

Journal of Electronic Packaging, Transactions of the ASME

Guess, Tommy R.

A combined experimental and analytical study of strains that develop in encapsulated assemblies during casting, curing, and thermal excursions is described. The experimental setup, designed to measure in situ strains, consisted of thin,’ closed-end, metal tubes that were instrumented with strain gages and thermocouples before being over-potted with an encapsulant. Three epoxy-based materials were studied. After cure of the encapsulant, tube strains were measured over the temperature range of —55°C to 90°C. The thermal excursion experiments were then numerically modeled using finite element analyses and the results were compared to the experimental results. The predicted strains were overestimated (conservative) when a linear, elastic, temperature-dependent material model was assumed for the encapsulant and the stress free temperature was assumed to correspond to the cure temperature of the encapsulant. Very good agreement was obtained with the linear elastic calculations provided that the stress free temperature corresponded to the onset of the glassy-to-rubbery transition range of the encapsulant. Finally, very good agreement was obtained when a viscoelastic material model was utilized and a stress free temperature corresponding to the cure temperature was assumed. © 1993 by ASME.

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PVDF measurement of soft X-ray induced shock and filter debris impulse. [PVDF (polyvinylidene fluoride)]

Johnson, David J.

PVDF piezoelectric polymer shock stress sensors have been used to measure the shock and impulse generated by soft X-rays and by filter debris in the SATURN Plasma Radiation Source at Sandia National Laboratories, NM. SATURN was used to generate 30 to 40 kJ, 20-ns duration, line radiation at 2 to 3 keV. Fluence on samples was nominally 40, 200, and 400 kJ/m[sup 2] (1, 5, and 10 cal/cm[sup 2]). Measurements of X-ray induced material shock response exposing both aluminum and PMMA acrylic samples agree well with companion measurements made with single crystal X-cut quartz gauges. Time-of-flight, stress, and impulse produced by Kimfol (polycarbonate/aluminum) filter debris were also measured with the PVDF gauges.

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Slim-hole drilling for geothermal exploration

Finger, John T.

Drilling production-size holes for geothermal exploration puts a large expense at the beginning of the project, and thus requires a long period of debt service before those costs can be recaptured from power sales. If a reservoir can be adequately defined and proved by drilling smaller, cheaper slim-holes, production well drilling can be delayed until the power plant is under construction, saving years of interest payments. In the broadest terms, this project's objective is to demonstrate that a geothermal resevoir can be identified and evaluated with data collected in slim holes. We have assembled a coordinated working group, including personnel from Sandia, Lawrence Berkeley Lab, University of Utah Research Institute, US Geological Survey, independent consultants, and geothermal operators, to focus on the development of this project. This group is involved to a greater or lesser extent in all decisions affecting the direction of the research. Specific tasks being pursued include: Correlation of fluid flow and injection tests between slim-holes and production size wells. Transfer of slim-hole exploration drilling and reservoir assessment to industry so that slim-hole drilling becomes an accepted method for geothermal exploration.Development and validation of a coupled wellbore-reservoir flow simulator which can be used for reservoir evaluation from slim-hole flow data. Collection of applicable data from commercial wells in existing geothermal fields. Drilling of at least one new slim-hole and use it to evaluate a geothermal reservoir.

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Pulsed radiation response of stressed PVDF shock stress gauges

Reed, R.P.; Greenwoll, J.I.; Bauer, F.; Lee, L.M.; Davies, F.W.; Johnson, D.J.

PVDF shock stress sensors were subjected to X-ray deposition at nominal absorbed levels of 1, 1[1/2], 3, and 5 cal/gm (SiO[sub 2] equiv.) and to neutron fluence above 10[sup 13] n/cm[sup 2] while stressed at a peak level of about 2 GPa. Moderate transitory electrical noise that occurred briefly during the radiation did not persist. PVDF shock sensors with aluminum electrodes appear satisfactory for measurement within these exposure limits. Reference quartz gauges were severely affected.

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Future technology for nonproliferation

Mangan, Dennis L.

Future challenges facing the nonproliferation community will undoubtedly change the normal way of doing business'' in international safeguards. New technology will emerge in support of compliance concepts such as transparency and openness, regional security assurance, bilateral cooperation, and special. or non-routine inspections. Technologies address in remote unattended monitoring, integrated on-site monitoring, environmental monitoring, satellite and aerial over-flight systems, equipment for special inspectios, and sharable data information fusion and management, are just a few examples of potential technologics for new nonproliferation monitoring regimes.

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Microstructural mechanisms that enhance electromigration resistance in Al--Cu thin films

Frear, D.R.

Evolution of the microstructure of Al-2wt.%Cu thin films is examined with respect to how the presence of copper can influence electromigration behavior. After an anneal that simulates a thin film sintering step, the microstructure of the Al-Cu films consisted of 1 [mu]m aluminum grains with [theta]-phase A1[sub 2]Cu precipitates at grain boundaries and triple points. The grain size and precipitation distribution did not change with subsequent heat treatments. Upon cooling to room temperature the heat treatment of the films near the Al/Al+[theta] solvus temperature results in depletion of copper at the aluminum grain boundaries. Heat treatments lower in the two phase region (200 to 300C) result in enrichment of copper at the aluminum grain boundaries. Here, it is proposed that electromigration behavior of aluminum is improved by adding copper because the copper enrichment in the form of A1[sub 2]Cu phase may hinder aluminum diffusion along the grain boundaries.

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C++ as a language for object-oriented numerics

Budge, Kent G.

C++ is commonly described as an object-oriented programming language because of its strong support for classes with multiple inheritance and polymorphism. However, for a growing community of numerical programmers, an equally important feature of C++ is its support of operator overloading on abstract data types. The authors choose to call the resulting style of programming object-oriented numerics. They believe that much of object-oriented numerics is orthogonal to conventional object-oriented programming. As a case study, they discuss two strong shock physics codes written in C++ that they're currently developing. These codes use both polymorphic classes (typical of traditional object-oriented programming) and abstract data types with overloaded operators (typical of object-oriented numerics). They believe that C++ translators can generate efficient code for many numerical objects. However, for the important case of smart arrays (which are used to represent matrices and the fields found in partial differential equations) fundamental difficulties remain. The authors discuss the two most important of these, namely, the aliasing ambiguity and the proliferation of temporaries, and present some possible solutions.

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Beyond core: Making parallel computer I/O practical

Womble, David E.

The solution of Grand Challenge Problems will require computations which are too large to fit in the memories of even the largest machines. Inevitably new designs of I/O systems will be necessary to support them. Through our implementations of an out-of-core LU factorization we have learned several important lessons about what I/O systems should be like. In particular we believe that the I/O system must provide the programmer with the ability to explicitly manage storage. One method of doing so is to have a partitioned secondary storage in which each processor owns a logical disk. Along with operating system enhancements which allow overheads such as buffer copying to be avoided, this sort of I/O system meets the needs of high performance computing.

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Modeling ignition chemistry

Hobbs, Michael L.

An eXplosive CHEMical kinetics code, XCHEM was developed to solve the reactive diffusion equations associated with thermal ignition of energetic material. This method-of-lines code uses stiff numerical methods and adaptive meshing. Solution accuracy is maintained between multilayered materials consisting of blends of reactive components and/or inert materials. Phase change and variable properties are included in one-dimensional slab, cylindrical and spherical geometries. Temperature-dependent thermal properties was incorporated and modification of thermal conductivities to include decomposition effects are estimated using solid/gas volume fractions determined by species fractions. Gas transport properties are also included. Time varying temperature, heat flux, convective and thermal radiation boundary conditions, and layer to layer contact resistances are also implemented. The global kinetic mechanism developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) by McGuire and Tarver used to fit One-Dimensional Time to eXplosion (ODTX) data for the conventional energetic materials (HMX, RDX, TNT, and TATB) are presented as sample calculations representative of multistep chemistry. Calculated and measured ignition times for explosive mixtures of Comp B (RDX/TNT), Octol, (HMX/TNT), PBX 9404 (HMX/NC), and RX-26-AF (HMX/TATB) are compared. Geometry and size effects are accurately modeled, and calculations are compared to experiments with time varying boundary conditions. Finally, XCHEM calculations of initiation of an AN/oil/water emulsion, resistively heated, are compared to measurements.

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Correlations of the growth, structure and stress with the adhesion of diamond films on tungsten

Peebles, Diane E.

Diamond films were deposited on tungsten substrates by a filament-assisted chemical vapor deposition process as a function of seven different processing parameters. The effect of variations in measured film characteristics such as growth rate, texture, diamond-to-nondiamond carbon Raman band intensity ratio and strain on the adhesion between the diamond film/tungsten substrate pairs as measured by a tensile pull method were investigated. The measured adhesion values do not correlate with any of the measured film characteristics mentioned above. The problem arises because of the non-reproducibility of the adhesion test results, due to the non-uniformity of film thickness, surface preparation and structural homogeneity across the full area of the substrate.

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Rapid thermal processing for strained-layer semiconductor devices

Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings

Zolper, John C.

Strained-layer semiconductors have revolutionized modern heterostructure devices by exploiting the modification of semiconductor band structure associated with the coherent strain of lattice-mismatched heteroepitaxy. The modified band structure improves transport of holes in heterostructures and enhances the operation of semiconductor lasers. Strained-layer epitaxy also can create materials whose band gaps match wavelengths (e.g. 1.06 μm and 1.32 μm) not attainable in ternary epitaxial systems lattice matched to binary substrates. Other benefits arise from metallurgical effects of modulated strain fields on dislocations. Lattice mismatched epitaxial layers that exceed the limits of equilibrium thermodynamics will degrade under sufficient thermal processing by converting the as-grown coherent epitaxy into a network of strain-relieving dislocations. After presenting the effects of strain on band structure, we describe the stability criterion for rapid-thermal processing of strained-layer structures and the effects of exceeding the thermodynamic limits. Finally, device results are reviewed for structures that benefit from high temperature processing of strained-layer superlattices.

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Amorphous sol-gel insulating films

Brinker, C.J.

The porosity of sol-gel thin films may be tailored for specific applications through control of the size and structure of inorganic polymers within the coating sol, the extent of polymer reaction and interpenetration during film formation, and the magnitude of the capillary pressure exerted during the final stage of drying. By maximizing the capillary pressure and avoiding excessive condensation, dense insulating films may be prepared as passivation layers on silicon substrates. Such films can exhibit excellent dielectric integrity, viz., low interface trap densities and insulating properties approaching those of thermally grown SiO[sub 2]. Alternatively, through exploitation of the scaling relationship of mass and density of fractal objects, silica films can be prepared that show a variation in porosity (7--29 %) and refractive index (1.42--1.31) desired for applications in sensors, membranes, and photonics.

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A perspective on AVS in an engineering sciences environment

Glass, Micheal W.

At Sandia National Laboratories, the Engineering Sciences Center has made a commitment to integrate AVS into our computing environment as the primary tool for scientific visualization. AVS will be used on an everyday basis by a broad spectrum of users ranging from the occasional computer user to AVS module developers. Additionally, AVS will be used to visualize structured grid, unstructured grid, gridless, 1D, 2D, 3D, steady-state, transient, computational, and experimental data. The following is one user's perspective on how AVS meets this task. Several examples of how AVS is currently being utilized will be given along with some future directions.

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Environmentally conscious manufacturing life cycle analysis

Watkins, R.D.; Baca, A.

Sandia National Laboratories and the Allied Signal-Kansas City Plant (AS-KCP) are engaged in a program called the Integrated Manufacturing and Design Initiative, or IMDI. The focus of IMDI is to develop and implement concurrent engineering processes for the realization of weapon components.'' An explicit part of each of the activities within IMDI is an increased concern for environmental impacts associated with design, and a desire to minimize those impacts through the implementation of Environmentally Conscious Manufacturing, or ECM. These same concerns and desires are shared within the Department of Energy's Manufacturing Complex, and are gaining strong support throughout US industrial sectors as well. Therefore, the development and application of an environmental life cycle analysis framework, the thrust of this specific effort, is most consistent not only with the overall objectives of IMDI, but with those of DOE and private industry.

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Coupled thermal response of objects and participating media in fires and large combustion systems

American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Heat Transfer Division, (Publication) HTD

Gritzo, Louis A.

When an object is subjected to the flow of combustion gas at a different temperature, the thermal responses of the object and the surrounding gas become coupled. The ability to model this interaction is of primary interest in the design of components which must withstand fire environments. One approach has been to decouple the problem and treat the incident flux on the surface of the object as being emitted from a blackbody at an approximate gas temperature. By neglecting the presence of the participating media, this technique overpredicts the heat fluxes initially acting on the object surface. The main goal of this work is to quantify the differences inherent in treating the combustion media as a blackbody as opposed to a gray gas. This objective is accomplished by solving the coupled participating media radiation and conduction heat transfer problem. A transient conduction analysis of a vertical flat plate was performed using a gray gas model to provide a radiation boundary condition. A 1-D finite difference algorithm was used to solve the conduction problem at locations along the plate. The results are presented in terms of nondimensional parameters and include both average and local heat fluxes as a function of time. Early in the transient, a reduction in net heat fluxes of up to 65% was observed for the gray gas results as compared to the blackbody cases. This reduction in the initial net heat flux results in lower surface temperatures for the gray gas case. Due to the initially reduced surface temperatures, the gray gas net heat flux exceeds the net blackbody heat flux with increasing time. For radiation Biot numbers greater than 5, or values of the radiation parameter less than 10-2, the differences inherent in treating the media as a gray gas are negligible and the blackbody assumption is valid. Overall, the results clearly indicate the importance of participating media treatment in the modeling of the thermal response of objects in fires and large combustion systems.

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An estimate of the cost of electricity production from hot-dry rock

Pierce, K.G.

This paper gives an estimate of the cost to produce electricity from hot-dry rock (HDR). Employment of the energy in HDR for the production of electricity requires drilling multiple wells from the surface to the hot rock, connecting the wells through hydraulic fracturing, and then circulating water through the fracture system to extract heat from the rock. The basic HDR system modeled in this paper consists of an injection well, two production wells, the fracture system (or HDR reservoir), and a binary power plant. Water is pumped into the reservoir through the injection well where it is heated and then recovered through the production wells. Upon recovery, the hot water is pumped through a heat exchanger transferring heat to the binary, or working, fluid in the power plant. The power plant is a net 5.1-MW[sub e] binary plant employing dry cooling. Make-up water is supplied by a local well. In this paper, the cost of producing electricity with the basic system is estimated as the sum of the costs of the individual parts. The effects on cost of variations to certain assumptions, as well as the sensitivity of costs to different aspects of the basic system, are also investigated.

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An improved spectral load balancing method

Leland, Robert

We describe an algorithm for the static load balancing of scientific computations that generalizes and improves upon spectral bisection. Through a novel use of multiple eigenvectors, our new spectral algorithm can divide a computation into 4 or 8 pieces at once. This leads to balanced partitions that have lower communication overhead and are less expensive to compute than those of spectral bisection. In addition, our approach automatically works to minimize message contention on a hypercube or mesh architecture.

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Automating a precision braze paste dispensing operation using non- contact sensing

Schmitt, D.J.

This paper describes a collaborative effort between Sandia National Laboratories and the Rocketdyne Division of Rockwell International Corporation to develop an automated braze paste dispensing system for rocket engine nozzle manufacturing. The motivation for automating this manufacturing process is to reduce the amount of labor and excess material required. A critical requirement for this system is the automatic location of key nozzle features using non-contact sensors. Sandia has demonstrated that the low-cost Multi-Axis Seam Tracking (MAST) capacitive sensor can be used to accurately locate the nozzle surface and tube gaps.

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Parallel processor for real-time structural control

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Tise, Bertice L.

A parallel processor that is optimized for real-time linear control has been developed. This modular system consists of A/D modules, D/A modules, and floating-point processor modules. The scalable processor uses up to 1,000 Motorola DSP96002 floating-point processors for a peak computational rate of 60 GFLOPS. Sampling rates up to 625 kHz are supported by this analog-in to analog-out controller. The high processing rate and parallel architecture make this processor suitable for computing state-space equations and other multiply/accumulate-intensive digital filters. Processor features include 14-bit conversion devices, low input-to-output latency, 240 Mbyte/s synchronous backplane bus, low-skew clock distribution circuit, VME connection to host computer, parallelizing code generator, and look-up-tables for actuator linearization. This processor was designed primarily for experiments in structural control. The A/D modules sample sensors mounted on the structure and the floating-point processor modules compute the outputs using the programmed control equations. The outputs are sent through the D/A module to the power amps used to drive the structure's actuators. The host computer is a Sun workstation. An OpenWindows-based control panel is provided to facilitate data transfer to and from the processor, as well as to control the operating mode of the processor. A diagnostic mode is provided to allow stimulation of the structure and acquisition of the structural response via sensor inputs.

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High speed imaging for rash radiography using PIN diodes

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Selph, M.M.

A high speed readout imaging system utilizing a commercial flash X-ray machine and miniature X-ray detectors has been developed. This system was designed to operate in the environment near a nuclear detonation where film or camera imaging cannot be used. The temporal resolution of the system is set by the 20 nanosecond FWHM of the X-ray pulse. The spatial resolution of the system was determined by the size and close packing of the PIN diodes used as the X-ray detectors. In the array used here, the PIN diodes have an active area of 2mm in diameter and were placed 3.8mm center to center. Computer-generated images using algorithms developed for this system are presented and compared with an image captured on film in the laboratory.

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Hts-Based Switched Filter Banks and Delay Lines

IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity

Martens, J.S.; Hietala, V.M.; Ginley, D.S.; Tigges, C.P.; Plut, T.A.; Truman, J.K.; Track, E.K.; Young, K.H.; Young, R.T.

For a number of communications and other applications, switched filter banks (some channelizers) and switched delay lines (phase shifters) are extremely useful. Since YBaCuO and TICaBaCuO filters and delay lines have shown significant performance enhancements over their conventional counterparts, a purely superconducting version of the switched assemblies could result in additional improvements. A thermal switch has been developed that provides good isolation and insertion loss with adequate switching times to allow a monolithic approach to the switched lines and filter banks. Filter banks in the 8-11 GHz range have been demonstrated with insertion losses < 1 dB and out-of-band rejection greater than a package-limited 50 dB. Switched delay lines have been fabricated with insertion losses less than 0.3 dB/bit and peak phase deviations from linearity of less than 5 degrees over 30 GHz bandwidths. © 1993 IEEE

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Condensed phase thermochemistry of reactor core debris

Powers, Dana A.

This paper discusses a nonideal solution model of the metallic phases of reactor core debris. The metal phase model is based on the Kohler equation for a 37 component system. The binary subsystems are assumed to have subregular interactions. The model is parameterized by comparison to available data and by estimating subregular interactions using the methods developed by Miedama et al. The model is shown to predict phase separation in the metallic phase of core debris. The model also predicts reduced chemical activities of zirconium and tellurium in the metal phase. A model of the oxide phase of core debris is described briefly. The model treats the oxide phase as an associated solution. The chemical activities of solution components are determined by the existence and interactions of species formed from the components.

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NaK pool-boiler bench-scale receiver durability test: Test design and initial results

Andraka, Charles E.

Pool-boiler reflux receivers have been considered as an alternative to heat pipes for the input of concentrated solar energy to Stirling-cycle engines in dish-Stirling electric generation systems. Fool boilers offer simplicity in desip and fabrication. Pool-boiler solar receiver operation has been demonstrated for short periods of time. However, in order to generate cost-effective electricity, the receiver must operate without significant maintenance for the entire system life. At least one theory explaining incipient-boiling behavior of alkali metals indicates that favorable start-up behavior should deteriorate over time. Many factors affect the stability and startup behavior of the boiling system. Therefore, it is necessary to simulate the full-scale design in every detail as much as possible, including flux levels materials, and operating cycles. On-sun testing is impractical due to the limited test time available. No boiling system has been demonstrated with the current porous boiling enhancement surface and materials for a significant period of time. A test vessel was constructed with a Friction Coatings Inc. porous boiling enhancement surface. The vessel is heated with a quartz lamp array providing about 92 W/Cm[sup 2] peak incident thermal flux. The vessel is charged with NaK-78, which is liquid at room temperature. This allows the elimination of costly electric preheating, both on this test and on full-scale receivers. The vessel is fabricated from Haynes 230 alloy, selected for its high temperature strength and oxidation resistance. The vessel operates at 750[degrees]C around the clock, with a 1/2-hour shutdown cycle to ambient every 8 hours. Temperature data is continually collected. The test design and initial (first 2500 hours and 300 start-ups) test data are presented here. The test is designed to operate for 10,000 hours, and will be complete in the spring of 1994.

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Assurance and assessment techniques for nuclear weapon related software

Blackledge, M.A.

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A pulsed power design for the linear inductive accelerator modules for the Laboratory Microfusion Facility

Smith, David L.

Upon achieving ignition and gain, the Laboratory Microfusion Facility (LMF) will be a major tool for Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) research and defense applications. Our concept for delivering [approximately]10 MJ with a peak on-target light ion power of [approximately]700 TW involves a multi-modular approach using an extension of the compact inductively isolated cavity and Magnetically Insulated Transmission Line (MITL) Voltage Adder technology that is presently being used in several large accelerators at Sandia/New Mexico. The LMF driver design consists of twelve 8-TW and twelve 38-TW accelerating modules, each with a triaxial MITL/Adder that delivers power to a two stage ion extraction diode. The desired energy, power pulse shape, and deposition uniformity on an ICF target can be achieved by controlling the energy and firing sequence of the A'' and B'' accelerator modules, plus optimizing the beam transport and focusing. The multi-modular configuration reduces risk by not scaling significantly beyond existing machines and offers the flexibility of staged construction. It permits modular driver testing at the full operating level required by the LMF.

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Out of core, out of mind: Practical parallel I/O

Proceedings of Scalable Parallel Libraries Conference, SPLC 1993

Womble, David E.

Parallel computers are becoming more powerful and more complex in response to the demand for computing power by scientists and engineers. Inevitably, new and more complex I/O systems will be developed for these systems. In particular we believe that the I/O system must provide the programmer with the ability to explicitly manage storage (despite the trend toward complex parallel file systems and caching schemes). One method of doing so is to have a partitioned secondary storage in which each processor owns a logical disk. Along with operating system enhancements which allow overheads such as buffer copying to be avoided and libraries to support optimal remapping of data, this sort of I/O system meets the needs of high performance computing.

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Laboratory studies of gas generation for the waste isolation pilot plant

Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings

Brush, Laurence H.

The design-basis, defense-related, transuranic waste to be emplaced in the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant may, if sufficient H2O, nutrients, and viable microorganisms are present, generate significant quantities of gas in the repository after filling and sealing. We summarize recent results of laboratory studies of anoxic corrosion and microbial activity, the most potentially significant processes. We also discuss possible implications for the repository gas budget.

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Hypervelocity impact tests and simulations of single whipple bumper shield concepts at 10km/s

International Journal of Impact Engineering

Chhabildas, Lalit C.

A series of experiments has been performed to evaluate the effectiveness of a Whipple bumper shield to orbital space debris at impact velocities of ∼ 10 km/s. Upon impact by a 19 mm (0.87 mm thick, L/D ∼0.5) flier plate, the thin aluminum bumper shield disintegrates into a debris cloud. The debris cloud front propagates axially at velocities of ∼14 km/s and expands radially at a velocity of ∼7 km/s. Subsequent loading by the debris on a 3.2 mm thick aluminum substructure placed 114 mm from the bumper penetrates the substructure completely. However, when the diameter of the flier plate is reduced to 12.7 mm, the substructure, although damaged is not perforated. Numerical simulations performed using the multi-dimensional hydrodynamics code CTH also predict complete perforation of the substructure by the subsequent debris cloud for the larger flier plate. The numerical simulation for a 12.7 mm flier plate, however, shows a strong dependence on assumed impact geometry, i. e., a spherical projectile impact geometry does not result in perforation of the substructure by the debris cloud, while the flat plate impact geometry results in perforation. © 1993.

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Results 94701–94750 of 96,771
Results 94701–94750 of 96,771