Publications
Search results
Jump to search filtersEnsuring a Nuclear Power Plant Safe State Following an EMP Event - Task 7 Deliverable: EMP Testing of Secondary Coupling to Instrumentation Cables
Sandia National Laboratories performed tests to address the potential vulnerability concerns of a coupled High-Altitude Electromagnetic Pulse (HEMP) inducing secondary coupling onto critical instrumentation and control cables in a nuclear power plant, with specific focus on early-time HEMP. Three types of receiving cables in nine configurations were tested to determine transfer functions between two electrically separated cables referenced to the common mode input current on the transmitting cable. One type of transfer function related the input short circuit current and resulting open circuit voltage on the receiving cable. The other transfer function related the input short circuit current and the resulting short circuit current on the receiving cable. A 500 A standard HEMP waveform was input into the transfer functions to calculate peak coupling values on the receiving cables. The highest level of coupling using the standard waveform occurred when cables were in direct contact, with a peak short circuit current of 85 A and open circuit voltage of 9.8 kV, while configurations with separated cables predicted coupling levels of less than 5 A or 500 V.
Improving PIC-DSMC Simulations of RF Plasmas via Event Splitting
Abstract not provided.
On Neumann-type Boundary Conditions for Nonlocal ModelsTheoretical
Abstract not provided.
A Medium Frequency RF Sensor for Detection of Magnetized Quark Nuggets
Abstract not provided.
Machine-Learned Interatomic Potential Development for W-ZrC for Nuclear Fusion
Abstract not provided.
Investigating Process-Structure-Property Relations of Shock Loaded Wrought and Additively Manufactured 304L Stainless Steel
Abstract not provided.
Global wave energy resource classification system for regional energy planning and project development
Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
Efforts to streamline and codify wave energy resource characterization and assessment for regional energy planning and wave energy converter (WEC) project development have motivated the recent development of resource classification systems. Given the unique interplay between WEC absorption and resource attributes, viz, available wave power frequency, directionality, and seasonality, various consensus resource classification metrics have been introduced. However, the main international standards body for the wave energy industry has not reached consensus on a wave energy resource classification system designed with clear goals to facilitate resource assessment, regional energy planning, project site selection, project feasibility studies, and selection of WEC concepts or archetypes that are most suitable for a given wave energy climate. A primary consideration of wave energy generation is the available energy that can be captured by WECs with different resonant frequency and directional bandwidths. Therefore, the proposed classification system considers combinations of three different wave power classifications: the total wave power, the frequency-constrained wave power, and the frequency-directionally constrained wave power. The dominant wave period bands containing the most wave power are sub-classification parameters that provide useful information for designing frequency and directionally constrained WECs. The bulk of the global wave energy resource is divided into just 22 resource classes representing distinct wave energy climates that could serve as a common language and reference framework for wave energy resource assessment if codified within international standards.
The Differential Image Transform: Using Image Processing to Verify Printed Circuit Boards
Abstract not provided.
Soot and PAH formation in high pressure spray pyrolysis of gasoline and diesel fuels
Combustion and Flame
Time-resolved soot and PAH formation from gasoline and diesel spray pyrolysis are visualized and quantified using diffuse back illumination (DBI) and laser induced fluorescence (LIF) at 355 nm, respectively, in a constant-volume vessel at 60 bar from 1400 to 1700 K for up to 30 ms. The delay, maximum formation rate, and yield of soot and PAHs are compared across fuels and temperatures and correlated with the yield sooting indices on either the mass or mole basis. The delays generally decrease with increasing temperature, and the formation rates of both PAHs and soot generally increase with temperature. The apparent PAH-LIF yield may decrease with temperature due to PAH growth and conversion into larger species, signal trapping, and thermal quneching. Soot yield generally increases with temperature. The mass-based YSI correlates reasonably well with soot delay, but YSI does not correlate well with soot yield. The mass-based YSI is a more appropriate predictor of sooting propensity than the mole-based YSI.
Hyperdimensional, Adaptive Finite Elements Using Camellia and Intrepid2
Abstract not provided.
C/ SiO2 / Si thin film thicknesses using EPMA and a cold finger
Abstract not provided.
Verification Toolchain for Floating-Point Programs
Abstract not provided.
QSCOUT: Quantum Scientific Computing Open User Testbed
Abstract not provided.
Avoiding cascading failure in battery packs through thermal analysis
Abstract not provided.
High pressure platform development for the Z Machine: compression of platinum to 650 GPa
Abstract not provided.
Contractual Challenges to a Culture of Partnering
Abstract not provided.
A performance portable implementation of high-order, entropy-stable spectral collocation schemes for compressible turbulent flows
Abstract not provided.
Uniform flow in axisymmetric devices through permeability optimization
Abstract not provided.
Novel Diffusion Mechanisms during the Oxidation of Silicon Germanium/Silicon Heterostructures
Abstract not provided.
MARCUS: A Framework for Heterogeneous Cooperative Autonomous Multi-rotor System for Counter Uncrewed Aerial Vehicles
Abstract not provided.
Integrated Power Converters for Optimal Operation of Hybrid Battery Packs
Abstract not provided.
In-silico Glass Transition Behavior of Crosslinked Epoxy/Amine Resins with Prospective Self-Healability
Abstract not provided.
SNL Overview Autonomy and Unmannedy Systems (AUS)
Abstract not provided.
Compatibility of Medium Density Polyethylene (MDPE) for distribution of gaseous hydrogen
Abstract not provided.
Solid particulate mass and number from ducted fuel injection in an optically accessible diesel engine in skip-fired operation
International Journal of Engine Research
Ducted fuel injection (DFI) is a novel combustion strategy that has been shown to significantly attenuate soot formation in diesel engines. While previous studies have used optical diagnostics and optical filter smoke number methods to show that DFI reduces in-cylinder soot formation and engine-out soot emissions, respectively, this is the first study to measure solid particle number (PN) emissions in addition to particle mass (PM). Furthermore, this study quantitatively evaluates the use of transient particle instruments for measuring particles from skip-fired operation in an optical single cylinder research engine (SCRE). Engine-out PN was measured using an engine exhaust particle sizer following a catalytic stripper, and PM was measured using a photoacoustic analyzer. The study improves on earlier preliminary emissions studies by clearly showing that DFI reduces overall PM by 76%–79% and PN for particles larger than 23 nm by 77% relative to conventional diesel combustion at a 1200-rpm, 13.3-bar gross indicated mean effective pressure operating condition. The degree of engine-out PM reduction with DFI was similar across both particulate measurement instruments used in the work. Through the use of bimodal distribution fitting, DFI was also shown to reduce the geometric mean diameter of accumulation mode particles by 26%, similar to the effects of increased injection pressure in conventional diesel combustion systems. This work clearly shows the significant solid particulate matter reductions enabled by DFI while also demonstrating that engine-out PN can be accurately measured from an optical SCRE operating in a skip-fired mode. Based on these results, it is believed that DFI has the potential to enable fuel savings when implemented in multi-cylinder engines, both by lowering the required frequency of active diesel particulate filter regeneration, and by reducing the backpressure imposed by exhaust filtration systems.
Data-driven design and discovery for Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion at Sandia?s Z Pulsed Power Facility
Abstract not provided.
Improved Scalability and Uniformity of Palladium Nanocrystal Synthesis
Abstract not provided.
Numerical Simulations of Plasmas in Galaxy Clusters
Abstract not provided.
In situ/Operando studies of Energy storage Materials using Neutrons
Abstract not provided.
Limitations for Data-driven Safeguards at Enrichment Facilities
Abstract not provided.
Assessing Vulnerabilities of a Bioproduction Facility Using Digital Twins
Abstract not provided.
An application of the Dulmage-Mendelsohn partition to the analysis of a discretized dynamic chemical looping reactor model
Abstract not provided.
Pyrometry measurements on shocked samarium
Abstract not provided.
Template-Based Trojan Detection
Abstract not provided.
DUF
Abstract not provided.
Randomized Spectral Graph Partitioning
Abstract not provided.
Characterizing the AC Zeeman Effect in Microfabricated Surface Traps
Abstract not provided.
COMPARATIVE RESULTS FROM APPLYING A MULTILAYERED NETWORK FRAMEWORK TO ENGINEER NUCLEAR SECURITY SYSTEMS
Abstract not provided.
Quantifying Pb in Microelectronic Electrodes to Mitigate Sn Whisker Growth With The Use of Energy Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy (EDS) and Image Analysis
Abstract not provided.
X-ray diffraction of material under ramp compression on the Thor pulsed-power generator
Abstract not provided.
Elucidating Novel Diffusion Mechanisms during Si/SiGe Oxidation
Abstract not provided.
Focused Ion Beam Characterization of Low Melting Point Metals at Cryogenic Temperatures
Abstract not provided.
High Energy Density Physics at the Next Generation Pulsed Power Facility
Abstract not provided.
Aerosol Jet Printing of Carbon Nanotubes for Electronic Interconnects
Abstract not provided.
Classification of Photovoltaic Failures with Hidden Markov Modeling, an Unsupervised Statistical Approach
Energies
A Bayesian Network Pipeline for Detection of Cyberattacks
Abstract not provided.
Non-invasive Regional Multigrid for Semi-structured Grids
Abstract not provided.
High Security Operations Summer Undergraduate Internship Program
Abstract not provided.
Using Shockless Ramp Compression to Investigate Melting in the Earth?s Mantle
Abstract not provided.
Molecular dynamics studies of helium bubble effects on grain boundary fracture vulnerabilities in an Fe70Ni11Cr19–1%H austenitic stainless steel
Journal of Nuclear Materials
Comprehensive molecular dynamics tensile test simulations have been performed to study the delamination processes of seven different grain boundaries / cleavage planes (Σ1{111}, Σ3{111}, Σ5{100}, Σ7{111}, Σ9{411}, Σ11{311}, and R{100}/{411}) containing a helium bubble. Combinations of a variety of conditions are explored including different strain rates, system dimensions, bubble density, bubble radius, bubble pressure, and temperature. We found that in general, grain boundaries absorb less energies with decreasing strain rate but increasing bubble areal density, bubble pressure, bubble radius, and temperature. The propensity of grain boundary delamination is sensitive to grain boundary type: The random grain boundary R{100}/{411} is one of the most brittle boundaries whereas the Σ1{111} cleavage plane and the Σ3{111} twin boundary are two of the toughest boundaries. The sorted list of grain boundary fracture vulnerability obtained from our dynamic tensile test simulations differs from the one obtained from our decohesion energy calculations, confirming the important role of plastic deformation during fracture. Detailed mechanistic analyses are performed to interpret the simulated results.
Uncertainty Quantification and Active Learning in Atomistic Computations
Abstract not provided.
Avoiding Cascading Failure in Battery Packs through Thermal Analysis and Considerations for Electric Aviation
Abstract not provided.
Review of Uncertain Parameters in ICRP 66 Human Respiratory Tract Model
Abstract not provided.
Sewer System Management Plan
The Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-mission laboratory managed and operated by National Technology & Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC (NTESS), a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration (DOE/NNSA) under contract DE-NA0003525. In 2008, a Notice of Intent (NOI) was filed for the Sandia National Laboratories, California (SNL/CA) facility to be covered under the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) Order No. 2006-0003-DWQ Statewide General Waste Discharge Requirements (WDR) for Sanitary Sewer Systems (General Permit) and was issued the WDID No. 2SSO11605. The General Permit requires a proactive approach to reduce the number and frequency of sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) within the State. Provision D.11 of the General Permit requires the development and implementation of a written Sewer System Management Plan (SSMP). This SSMP is prepared according to the mandatory elements required by Provision D.13 and D.14, as well as the schedule for a population less than 2,500 as outlined in Provision D.15.
Unraveling Thermodynamic and Kinetic Contributions to the Stability of Doped Nanocrystalline Alloys using Nanometallic Multilayers
Advanced Materials
Targeted doping of grain boundaries is widely pursued as a pathway for combating thermal instabilities in nanocrystalline metals. However, certain dopants predicted to produce grain-boundary-segregated nanocrystalline configurations instead form small nanoprecipitates at elevated temperatures that act to kinetically inhibit grain growth. Here, thermodynamic modeling is implemented to select the Mo–Au system for exploring the interplay between thermodynamic and kinetic contributions to nanostructure stability. Using nanoscale multilayers and in situ transmission electron microscopy thermal aging, evolving segregation states and the corresponding phase transitions are mapped with temperature. The microstructure is shown to evolve through a transformation at lower homologous temperatures (<600 °C) where solute atoms cluster and segregate to the grain boundaries, consistent with predictions from thermodynamic models. An increase in temperature to 800 °C is accompanied by coarsening of the grain structure via grain boundary migration but with multiple pinning events uncovered between migrating segments of the grain boundary and local solute clustering. Direct comparison between the thermodynamic predictions and experimental observations of microstructure evolution thus demonstrates a transition from thermodynamically preferred to kinetically inhibited nanocrystalline stability and provides a general framework for decoupling contributions to complex stability transitions while simultaneously targeting a dominant thermal stability regime.
Localized Corrosion and Stress Corrosion Cracking: Prediction, Prevention, and Advanced Materials for Protection
Abstract not provided.
Assessment of Collisions in Crossed-Field Devices
Abstract not provided.
Assessing the Quality of Uncertainty Estimates in Deep Learning
Abstract not provided.
Python Data-Driven Model Integration for the Xyce Circuit Simulator
Abstract not provided.
Applications of Autonomous Sensor Task Planner for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance
Abstract not provided.
Water in Silicates: A Combined Shock & Spectroscopy Study
Abstract not provided.
Get ROL-ing: An Introduction to Sandia's Rapid Optimization Library
Abstract not provided.
Local stress measurements in microelectronic devices using HREBSD
Abstract not provided.
Automating Component-Level Stress Measurements for Inverter Reliability Estimation
Energies
In the near future, grid operators are expected to regularly use advanced distributed energy resource (DER) functions, defined in IEEE 1547-2018, to perform a range of grid-support operations. Many of these functions adjust the active and reactive power of the device through commanded or autonomous operating modes which induce new stresses on the power electronics components. In this work, an experimental and theoretical framework is introduced which couples laboratory-measured component stress with advanced inverter functionality and derives a reduction in useful lifetime based on an applicable reliability model. Multiple DER devices were instrumented to calculate the additional component stress under multiple reactive power setpoints to estimate associated DER lifetime reductions. A clear increase in switch loss was demonstrated as a function of irradiance level and power factor. This is replicated in the system-level efficiency measurements, although magnitudes were different—suggesting other loss mechanisms exist. Using an approximate Arrhenius thermal model for the switches, the experimental data indicate a lifetime reduction of 1.5% when operating the inverter at 0.85 PF—compared to unity PF—assuming the DER failure mechanism thermally driven within the H-bridge. If other failure mechanisms are discovered for a set of power electronics devices, this testing and calculation framework can easily be tailored to those failure mechanisms.
Imaging in vivo Lipid Nanoparticle Delivery
Abstract not provided.
Single Event Upset and Total Ionizing Dose Response of 12LP FinFET Digital Circuits
Abstract not provided.
Impact of Modeling Assumptions on Traveling Wave Protective Relays in Hardware in the Loop
Abstract not provided.
Enabling Taint Analysis of Proprietary Packaged Programs
Abstract not provided.
Mathematics Careers at Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract not provided.
X-Ray CT Scans - Rodents Set 5
A collection of x-ray computed tomography scans of specimens from the Museum of Southwestern Biology.
Capital Acquisition Estimating Framework CECOP 2022 Presentation
Abstract not provided.
Modeling for Design of Microgrid Protection
Abstract not provided.
X-ray Scintillation of ZnO:Zn and ZnO:Ga for Thermometry
Abstract not provided.
The ultrafast pixel array camera system and its applications in high energy density physics
Review of Scientific Instruments
Diagnostics in high energy density physics, shock physics, and related fields are primarily driven by a need to record rapidly time-evolving signals in single-shot events. These measurements are often limited by channel count and signal degradation issues on cable links between the detector and digitizer. We present the Ultrafast Pixel Array Camera (UPAC), a compact and flexible detector readout system with 32 waveform-recording channels at up to 10 Gsample/s and 1.8 GHz analog bandwidth. The compact footprint allows the UPAC to be directly embedded in the detector environment. A key enabling technology is the PSEC4A chip, an eight-channel switch-capacitor array sampling device with up to 1056 samples/channel. The UPAC system includes a high-density input connector that can plug directly into an application-specific detector board, programmable control, and serial readout, with less than 5 W of power consumption in full operation. We present the UPAC design and characterization, including a measured timing resolution of ∼20 ps or better on acquisitions of sub-nanosecond pulses with minimal system calibrations. Example applications of the UPAC are also shown to demonstrate operation of a solid-state streak camera, an ultrafast imaging array, and a neutron time-of-flight spectrometer.
The Quantum Scientific Computing Open User Testbed (QSCOUT)
Abstract not provided.
Testing of Medium Density Polyethylene (MDPE) in Hydrogen
Abstract not provided.
Statistical perspective on embrittling potency for intergranular fracture
Physical Review Materials
Embrittling potency is a thermodynamic metric that assesses the influence of solute segregation to a grain boundary (GB) on intergranular fracture. Historically, authors of studies have reported embrittling potency as a single scalar value, assuming a single segregation site of importance at a GB and a particular cleavage plane. However, the topography of intergranular fracture surfaces is not generally known a priori. Accordingly, in this paper, we present a statistical ensemble approach to compute embrittling potency, where many free surface (FS) permutations are systematically considered to model fracture of a GB. The result is a statistical description of the thermodynamics of GB embrittlement. As a specific example, embrittling potency distributions are presented for Cr segregation to sites at two Ni (111) symmetric tilt GBs using atomistic simulations. We show that the average embrittling potency for a particular GB site, considering an ensemble of FS permutations, is not equal to the embrittling potency computed using the lowest energy pair of FSs. A mean GB embrittlement is proposed, considering both the likelihood of formation of a particular FS and the probability of solute occupancy at each GB site, to compare the relative embrittling behavior of two distinct GBs.
Atomic Structure Transformations of C-doped Ge2Sb2Te5 Using In-Situ X-ray Techniques
Abstract not provided.
Peridynamic Modeling of the Dynamic Failure of Additively Manufactured Steel
Abstract not provided.
FPGA Partial Reconfiguration
Abstract not provided.
FY22 Progress on Multicontinuum Methods in Containment
Estimation of two-phase fluid flow properties is important to understand and predict water and gas movement through the vadose zone for agricultural, hydrogeological, and engineering applications, such as containment transport and/or containment of gases in the subsurface. To estimate rock fluid flow properties and subsequently predict physically realistic processes such as patterns and timing of water, gas, and energy (e.g., heat) movement in the subsurface, laboratory spontaneous water imbibition with simultaneous temperature measurement and numerical modeling methods are presented in the FY22 progress report. A multiple-overlapping-continua conceptual model is used to explain and predict observed complex multi-phenomenological laboratory test behavior during spontaneous imbibition experiments. This report primarily addresses two complexities that arise during the experiments: 1) capturing the late-time behavior of spontaneous imbibition tests with dual porosity; and 2) understanding the thermal perturbation observed at or ahead of the imbibing wetting front, which are associated with adsorption of water in initially dry samples. We use numerical approaches to explore some of these issues, but also lay out a plan for further laboratory experimentation and modeling to best understand and leverage these unique observations.
Internal energy balance and aerodynamic heating predictions for hypersonic turbulent boundary layers
Physical Review Fluids
The elemental equation governing heat transfer in aerodynamic flows is the internal energy equation. For a boundary layer flow, a double integration of the Reynolds-averaged form of this equation provides an expression of the wall heat flux in terms of the integrated effects, over the boundary layer, of various physical processes: turbulent dissipation, mean dissipation, turbulent heat flux, etc. Recently available direct numerical simulation data for a Mach 11 cold-wall turbulent boundary layer allows a comparison of the exact contributions of these terms in the energy equation to the wall heat flux with their counterparts modeled in the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) framework. Various approximations involved in RANS, both closure models as well as approximations involved in adapting incompressible RANS models to a compressible form, are assessed through examination of the internal energy balance. There are a number of potentially problematic assumptions and terms identified through this analysis. The effect of compressibility corrections of the dilatational dissipation type is explored, as is the role of the modeled turbulent dissipation, in the context of wall heat flux predictions. The results indicate several potential avenues for RANS model improvement for hypersonic cold-wall boundary-layer flows.
Synchronous and Asynchronous Time Integration for Multiscale Simulations Using Hybridized Finite Element Methods
Abstract not provided.
Using Reinforcement Learning to Increase Grid Security under Contingency Conditions
Abstract not provided.
Kokkos Resilience
Abstract not provided.
Neutron Capture Gamma-Ray Multiplicity Analysis for Characterization of Moderated Special Nuclear Material
Abstract not provided.
Development of Thermoset Resins for Additive Manufacturing
Abstract not provided.
Precise prophage mapping
Abstract not provided.
Embedded uncertainty estimation for data-driven surrogates to enable trustworthy ML for UQ
Abstract not provided.
Assessing Aerosol Jet Printed Gold Inks for Printed Electronics Applications
Abstract not provided.
A novel approach to determine manufacturing processing parameters that are correlated to end-of-manufacturing test performance using multivariate analysis and iterative predictive modeling
Abstract not provided.
Project Tantrum
Abstract not provided.
Training Machine Learned Interatomic Potentials for Chemical Complexity - Application to Refractory Complex Concentrated Alloys
Abstract not provided.
Electric Field Noise in Microfabricated Ion Traps with Varied Capacitor Types and Trap Materials
Abstract not provided.
Using Simulation Modeling to Inform Resource Needs
Abstract not provided.
Cybersecurity for Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure
As the U.S. electrifies the transportation sector, cyberattacks targeting vehicle charging could impact several critical infrastructure sectors including power systems, manufacturing, medical services, and agriculture. This is a growing area of concern as charging stations increase power delivery capabilities and must communicate to authorize charging, sequence the charging process, and manage load (grid operators, vehicles, OEM vendors, charging network operators, etc.). The research challenges are numerous and complicated because there are many end users, stakeholders, and software and equipment vendors interests involved. Poorly implemented electric vehicle supply equipment (EVSE), electric vehicle (EV), or grid operator communication systems could be a significant risk to EV adoption because the political, social, and financial impact of cyberattacks — or public perception of such — would ripple across the industry and produce lasting effects. Unfortunately, there is currently no comprehensive EVSE cybersecurity approach and limited best practices have been adopted by the EV/EVSE industry. There is an incomplete industry understanding of the attack surface, interconnected assets, and unsecured inter faces. Comprehensive cybersecurity recommendations founded on sound research are necessary to secure EV charging infrastructure. This project provided the power, security, and automotive industry with a strong technical basis for securing this infrastructure by developing threat models, determining technology gaps, and identifying or developing effective countermeasures. Specifically, the team created a cybersecurity threat model and performed a technical risk assessment of EVSE assets across multiple manufacturers and vendors, so that automotive, charging, and utility stakeholders could better protect customers, vehicles, and power systems in the face of new cyber threats.
Validation of the compression regime of a new nickel equation of state
Abstract not provided.
A direct numerical simulation study of NO and N2O formation in turbulent premixed ammonia/hydrogen/nitrogen-air flames
Abstract not provided.
X-ray CT Scans - Rodents - Set 4
A collection of x-ray computed tomography scans of specimens from the Museum of Southwestern Biology.