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Impact of high-power impulse magnetron sputtering pulse width on the nucleation, crystallization, microstructure, and ferroelectric properties of hafnium oxide thin films

Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A: Vacuum, Surfaces and Films

Jaszewski, Samantha T.; Fields, Shelby S.; Chung, Ching C.; Jones, Jacob L.; Orson, Keithen G.; Reinke, Petra; Ihlefeld, Jon F.

The impact of the high-power impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS) pulse width on the crystallization, microstructure, and ferroelectric properties of undoped HfO2 films is investigated. HfO2 films were sputtered from a hafnium metal target in an Ar/O2 atmosphere, varying the instantaneous power density by changing the HiPIMS pulse width with fixed time-averaged power and pulse frequency. The pulse width is shown to affect the ion-to-neutral ratio in the depositing species with the shortest pulse durations leading to the highest ion fraction. In situ x-ray diffraction measurements during crystallization demonstrate that the HiPIMS pulse width impacts nucleation and phase formation, with an intermediate pulse width of 110 μs stabilizing the ferroelectric phase over the widest temperature range. Although the pulse width impacts the grain size with the lowest pulse width resulting in the largest grain size, the grain size does not strongly correlate with the phase content or ferroelectric behavior in these films. These results suggest that precise control over the energetics of the depositing species may be beneficial for forming the ferroelectric phase in this material.

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Neutron source reconstruction using a generalized expectation-maximization algorithm on one-dimensional neutron images from the Z facility

Review of Scientific Instruments

Ricketts, Sidney A.; Mangan, Michael A.; Mannion, Owen M.; Foulk, James W.; Ampleford, David J.; Volegov, P.; Fittinghoff, D.N.; Adams, M.L.; Morel, J.E.

Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion experiments have been performed at the Z facility at Sandia National Laboratories. These experiments use deuterium fuel, which produces 2.45 MeV neutrons on reaching thermonuclear conditions. To study the spatial structure of neutron production, the one-dimensional imager of neutrons diagnostic was fielded to record axial resolved neutron images. In this diagnostic, neutrons passing through a rolled edge aperture form an image on a CR-39-based solid state nuclear track detector. Here, we present a modified generalized expectation-maximization algorithm to reconstruct an axial neutron emission profile of the stagnated fusion plasma. We validate the approach by comparing the reconstructed neutron emission profile to an x-ray emission profile provided by a time-integrated pinhole camera.

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Comparison of atmospheric radionuclide dispersion models for a risk-informed consequence-driven advanced reactor licensing framework

Journal of Environmental Radioactivity

Wang, Jeffrey; Clayton, Daniel J.; Dewji, Shaheen A.

Current nuclear facility emergency planning zones (EPZs) are based on outdated distance-based criteria, predating comprehensive dose and risk-informed frameworks. Recent advancements in simulation tools have permitted the development of site-specific, dose, and risk-based consequence-driven assessment frameworks. This study investigated the computation of advanced reactor (AR) EPZs using two atmospheric dispersion models: a straight-line Gaussian plume model (GPM) and a semi-Lagrangian Particle in Cell (PIC). Two case studies were conducted: (1) benchmarking the NRC SOARCA study for the Peach Bottom Nuclear Generating Station and (2) analyzing an advanced INL Heat Pipe Design A microreactor's end-of-cycle inventory. The dose criteria for both cases were 10 mSv at mean weather conditions and 50 mSv at 95th percentile weather conditions at 96 h post-release. Results demonstrated that GPM and PIC estimated similar mean peak dose levels for large boiling water reactors in the farfield case, placing EPZ limits beyond current regulations. For ARs with source terms remaining in the nearfield, PIC modeling without specific nearfield considerations could result in excessively high doses and inaccurate EPZ designations. PIC dispersion demonstrated an order of magnitude higher estimate of nearfield inhalation dose contribution when compared to GPM results. Both models significantly reduced EPZ sizing within the nearfield. Thus, reductions in the AR source term may eliminate the need for a separate EPZ.

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Shaded fraction and backtracking in single-axis trackers on rolling terrain

Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy

Anderson, Kevin S.; Jensen, Adam R.

A generalized closed-form equation for the shaded collector fraction in solar arrays on rolling or undulating terrain is provided for single-axis tracking and fixed-tilt systems. The equation accounts for different rotation angles between the shaded and shading trackers, cross-axis slope between the two trackers, and offset between the collector plane and axis of rotation. The validity of the equation is demonstrated through comparison with numerical ray-tracing simulations and remaining minor sources of error are quantified. Additionally, a simple procedure to determine backtracking rotations for each row in an array installed on the rolling terrain (varying in the direction perpendicular to the tracker axes) is provided. The backtracking equation accounts for a desired shaded fraction (including complete shade avoidance) as well as an axis-collector offset. Test cases are provided to facilitate implementation of these equations.

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Large-scale harmonic balance simulations with Krylov subspace and preconditioner recycling

Nonlinear Dynamics

Kuether, Robert J.; Steyer, Andrew J.

The multi-harmonic balance method combined with numerical continuation provides an efficient framework to compute a family of time-periodic solutions, or response curves, for large-scale, nonlinear mechanical systems. The predictor and corrector steps repeatedly solve a sequence of linear systems that scale by the model size and number of harmonics in the assumed Fourier series approximation. In this paper, a novel Newton–Krylov iterative method is embedded within the multi-harmonic balance and continuation algorithm to efficiently compute the approximate solutions from the sequence of linear systems that arise during the prediction and correction steps. The method recycles, or reuses, both the preconditioner and the Krylov subspace generated by previous linear systems in the solution sequence. A delayed frequency preconditioner refactorizes the preconditioner only when the performance of the iterative solver deteriorates. The GCRO-DR iterative solver recycles a subset of harmonic Ritz vectors to initialize the solution subspace for the next linear system in the sequence. The performance of the iterative solver is demonstrated on two exemplars with contact-type nonlinearities and benchmarked against a direct solver with traditional Newton–Raphson iterations.

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Parasitic Modulation of Microwave Signals by a Hypersonic Plasma Layer

IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science

Roberds, Nicholas A.; Young, Matthew W.; Miller, Nathan E.; Logemann, Caleb; Statom, Tony K.; Wagnild, Ross M.

During hypersonic flight, compressional and viscous heating of the air can form a plasma layer which encases the aircraft. If the boundary layer becomes turbulent, then the electron density fluctuations can effect a parasitic modulation in microwave signals transmitted through the plasma. We developed an approach for studying the interaction of microwave signals with a turbulent, hypersonic plasma layer. The approach affords a great deal of flexibility in both the plasma layer model and the antenna configuration. We then analyzed a situation in which microwaves, transmitted from a rectangular aperture antenna, propagate through a turbulent plasma layer to a distant receiver. We characterized the first- and second-order statistics of the computed parasitic modulation and quantified the depolarization of the signal. The amplitude fluctuations are lognormally distributed at low frequencies and Rice-distributed at high frequencies. Fluctuations in the copolarized phase and amplitude of the far-field signal are strongly anticorrelated. We used a multioutput Gaussian process (MOGP) to model these quantities. The efficacy of the MOGP model is demonstrated by recovering the time evolution of the copolarized phase given the copolarized amplitude and occasional measurements of the phase.

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Inelastic relaxation processes in amorphous sodium silicates

Journal of the American Ceramic Society

Rimsza, Jessica; Jones, Reese E.

During fracture amorphous oxides exhibit irreversible processes, including inelastic and nonrecoverable relaxation effects in the process zone surrounding the crack tip. Here, classical molecular dynamics simulations were used with a reactive forcefield to evaluate inelastic relaxation processes in five amorphous sodium silicate compositions. Overall, the 20% Na2O-SiO2(NS20) composition exhibited the most inelastic relaxation, followed by the 15% Na2O-SiO2(NS15) composition, the 25% Na2O-SiO2(NS25) composition, and finally the 10% (NS10) and 30% (NS30) Na2O-SiO2 compositions. Coordination analysis of the Na+ ions identified that during inelastic relaxation the Na+ ions were increasingly coordinated by nonbridging oxygens (NBOs) for the NS10 and NS15 compositions, which was supported by radial analysis of the O-Na-O bond angles surrounding the crack tip. Across the sodium silicate compositional range, two different inelastic relaxation mechanism were identified based on the amount of bridging oxygens (BOs) and NBOs in the Na+ ion coordination shell. At lower (NS10) and higher (NS30) sodium compositions, the entire structured relaxed toward the crack tip. In contrast at intermediate sodium concentrations (NS20) the Na+ ion migrates toward the crack tip separately from the network structure. By developing a fundamental understanding of how modified silica systems respond to static stress fields, we will be able to predict how varying amorphous silicate systems exhibit slow crack growth.

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Microstructure-Based Modeling of Laser Beam Shaping During Additive Manufacturing

JOM

Moore, Robert; Orlandi, Giovanni; Rodgers, Theron M.; Moser, Daniel R.; Murdoch, Heather; Abdeljawad, Fadi

Recent experimental studies suggest the use of spatially extended laser beam profiles as a strategy to control the melt pool during laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing. However, linkages connecting laser beam profiles to thermal fields and resultant microstructures have not been established. Herein, we employ a coupled thermal transport-Monte Carlo model to predict the evolution of temperature fields and grain microstructures during LPBF using Gaussian, ring, and Bessel beam profiles. Simulation results reveal that the ring-shaped beam yields lower temperatures compared with the Gaussian beam. Owing to the small melt pool size when using the Bessel beam, the grains are smaller in size and more equiaxed compared to those using the Gaussian and ring beams. Our approach provides future avenues to predict the impact of laser beam shaping on microstructure development during LPBF.

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Summary of the Brine Availability Test in Salt (BATS), Including Extended Plan for Experiments at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP)

Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Mills, Melissa M.; Choens II, Robert C.; Herrick, Courtney G.; Otto, Shawn; Davis, Jon; Stauffer, Philip H.; Wu, Yuxin

This document lays out a set of near-future investigations in salt, the third phase of BATS (BATS 3). This phase is planned to answer the few remaining issues from the first two phases of BATS (BATS 1 and BATS 2), and to prepare for a subsequent large-scale demonstration phase. The BATS experiments are the first part of a larger plan to conduct field experiments to answer specific technical questions, improve the technical basis for disposal of heat-generating radioactive waste in salt (Stauffer et al., 2015; SNL et al., 2020), and demonstrate readiness for disposal of radioactive waste in salt, including large, hot waste packages.

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Results 951–975 of 99,299
Results 951–975 of 99,299