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Impact of Gold Thickness on Interfacial Evolution and Subsequent Embrittlement of Tin–Lead Solder Joints

Journal of Electronic Materials

Wheeling, Rebecca W.; Vianco, Paul; Williams, Shelley W.; Jauregui, Luis J.; Sava Gallis, Dorina F.

Although gold remains a preferred surface finish for components used in high-reliability electronics, rapid developments in this area have left a gap in the fundamental understanding of solder joint gold (Au) embrittlement. Furthermore, as electronic designs scale down in size, the effect of Au content is not well understood on increasingly smaller solder interconnections. As a result, previous findings may have limited applicability. The current study focused on addressing these gaps by investigating the interfacial microstructure that evolves in 63Sn-37Pb solder joints as a function of Au layer thickness. Those findings were correlated to the mechanical performance of the solder joints. Increasing the initial Au concentration decreased the mechanical strength of a joint, but only to a limited degree. Kirkendall voids were the primary contributor to low-strength joints, while brittle fracture within the intermetallic compounds (IMC) layers is less of a factor. The Au embrittlement mechanism appears to be self-limiting, but only once mechanical integrity is degraded. Sufficient void evolution prevents continued diffusion from the remaining Au.

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A laser parameter study on enhancing proton generation from microtube foil targets

Scientific Reports

Strehlow, Joseph; Al, et; Hansen, Stephanie B.

The interaction of an intense laser with a solid foil target can drive ∼ TV/m electric fields, accelerating ions to MeV energies. In this study, we experimentally observe that structured targets can dramatically enhance proton acceleration in the target normal sheath acceleration regime. At the Texas Petawatt Laser facility, we compared proton acceleration from a 1μm flat Ag foil, to a fixed microtube structure 3D printed on the front side of the same foil type. A pulse length (140–450 fs) and intensity ((4–10) × 10 20 W/cm2) study found an optimum laser configuration (140 fs, 4 × 10 20 W/cm2), in which microtube targets increase the proton cutoff energy by 50% and the yield of highly energetic protons (> 10 MeV) by a factor of 8×. When the laser intensity reaches 10 21 W/cm2, the prepulse shutters the microtubes with an overcritical plasma, damping their performance. 2D particle-in-cell simulations are performed, with and without the preplasma profile imported, to better understand the coupling of laser energy to the microtube targets. The simulations are in qualitative agreement with the experimental results, and show that the prepulse is necessary to account for when the laser intensity is sufficiently high.

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Solar Energy Implementation Strategies on Picuris Pueblo

Begay, Sandra K.; Hammond, Dylan T.

Picuris Pueblo is a small tribal community in Northern New Mexico consisting of about 306 members and 86 homes. Picuris Pueblo has made advances with renewable energy implementation, including the installation of a 1 megawatt photovoltaic (PV) array. This array has provided the tribe with economic and other benefits that contribute toward the tribe's goal of tribal sovereignty. The tribe is seeking to implement more PV generation as well as battery energy storage systems. Picuris Pueblo is considering different implementation methods, including the formation of a microgrid system. This report studies the potential implementation of a PV and battery storage microgrid system and the associated benefits and challenges. The benefits of a microgrid system include cost savings, increased resiliency, and increased tribal sovereignty and align with the tribe's goals of becoming energy independent and lowering the cost of electricity.

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Low-dimensional physics of clay particle size distribution and layer ordering

Scientific Reports

Wang, Yifeng

Clays are known for their small particle sizes and complex layer stacking. We show here that the limited dimension of clay particles arises from the lack of long-range order in low-dimensional systems. Because of its weak interlayer interaction, a clay mineral can be treated as two separate low-dimensional systems: a 2D system for individual phyllosilicate layers and a quasi-1D system for layer stacking. The layer stacking or ordering in an interstratified clay can be described by a 1D Ising model while the limited extension of individual phyllosilicate layers can be related to a 2D Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless transition. This treatment allows for a systematic prediction of clay particle size distributions and layer stacking as controlled by the physical and chemical conditions for mineral growth and transformation. Clay minerals provide a useful model system for studying a transition from a 1D to 3D system in crystal growth and for a nanoscale structural manipulation of a general type of layered materials.

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Permeability-controlled migration of induced seismicity to deeper depths near Venus in North Texas

Scientific Reports

Chang, Kyung W.; Yoon, Hongkyu Y.

Migration of seismic events to deeper depths along basement faults over time has been observed in the wastewater injection sites, which can be correlated spatially and temporally to the propagation or retardation of pressure fronts and corresponding poroelastic response to given operation history. The seismicity rate model has been suggested as a physical indicator for the potential of earthquake nucleation along faults by quantifying poroelastic response to multiple well operations. Our field-scale model indicates that migrating patterns of 2015–2018 seismicity observed near Venus, TX are likely attributed to spatio-temporal evolution of Coulomb stressing rate constrained by the fault permeability. Even after reducing injection volumes since 2015, pore pressure continues to diffuse and steady transfer of elastic energy to the deep fault zone increases stressing rate consistently that can induce more frequent earthquakes at large distance scales. Sensitivity tests with variation in fault permeability show that (1) slow diffusion along a low-permeability fault limits earthquake nucleation near the injection interval or (2) rapid relaxation of pressure buildup within a high-permeability fault, caused by reducing injection volumes, may mitigate the seismic potential promptly.

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Self-Adhesive Ionomers for Alkaline Electrolysis: Optimized Hydrogen Evolution Electrode

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Tee, Hui M.; Park, Habin; Shah, Parin N.; Trindell, Jamie T.; Sugar, Joshua D.; Kohl, Paul A.

Hydrogen produced through low-temperature water electrolysis using anion exchange membranes (AEM) combines the benefits of liquid-electrolyte alkaline electrolysis and solid-polymer proton exchange membrane electrolysis. The anion conductive ionomers in the oxygen-producing anode and hydrogen-producing cathode are a critical part of the three-dimensional electrodes. The ionomer in the hydrogen-producing cathode facilitates hydroxide ion conduction from the cathode catalyst to the anode catalyst, and water transport from the anode to the cathode catalyst through the AEM. This ionomer also binds the catalyst particles to the porous transport layer. In this study, the cathode durability was improved by use of a self-adhesive cathode ionomer to chemically bond the cathode catalyst particles to the porous transport layer. It was found that the cathode ionomers with high ion exchange capacity (IEC) were more effective than low IEC ionomers because of the need to transport water to the cathode catalyst and transport hydroxide away from the cathode. The cathode durability was improved by using ionomers which were soluble in the spray-coated cathode ink. Optimization of the catalyst and ionomer content within the cathode led to electrolysis cells which were both mechanically durable and operated at low voltage.

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Designing Resilient Communities: Hardware demonstration of resilience nodes concept

Reno, Matthew J.; Ropp, Michael E.; Tamrakar, Ujjwol; Darbali-Zamora, Rachid; Broderick, Robert J.

As part of the project “Designing Resilient Communities (DRC): A Consequence-Based Approach for Grid Investment,” funded by the United States (US) Department of Energy’s (DOE) Grid Modernization Laboratory Consortium (GMLC), Sandia National Laboratories (Sandia) is partnering with a variety of government, industry, and university participants to develop and test a framework for community resilience planning focused on modernization of the electric grid. This report provides a summary of the section of the project focused on hardware demonstration of “resilience nodes” concept.

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Code verification for practically singular equations

Journal of Computational Physics

Freno, Brian A.; Matula, Neil M.

We report the method-of-moments implementation of the electric-field integral equation (EFIE) yields many code-verification challenges due to the various sources of numerical error and their possible interactions. Matters are further complicated by singular integrals, which arise from the presence of a Green's function. To address these singular integrals, an approach is presented in wherein both the solution and Green's function are manufactured. Because the arising equations are poorly conditioned, they are reformulated as a set of constraints for an optimization problem that selects the solution closest to the manufactured solution. In this paper, we demonstrate how, for such practically singular systems of equations, computing the truncation error by inserting the exact solution into the discretized equations cannot detect certain orders of coding errors. On the other hand, the discretization error from the optimal solution is a more sensitive metric that can detect orders less than those of the expected convergence rate.

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Closed-loop optimization of fast trapped-ion shuttling with sub-quanta excitation

npj Quantum Information

Sterk, Jonathan D.; Coakley, Henry J.; Goldberg, Joshua D.; Hietala, Vincent; Lechtenberg, Jason L.; McGuinness, Hayden J.; McMurtrey, Daniel L.; Parazzoli, L.P.; Van Der Wall, Jay W.; Stick, Daniel L.

Shuttling ions at high speed and with low motional excitation is essential for realizing fast and high-fidelity algorithms in many trapped-ion-based quantum computing architectures. Achieving such performance is challenging due to the sensitivity of an ion to electric fields and the unknown and imperfect environmental and control variables that create them. Here we implement a closed-loop optimization of the voltage waveforms that control the trajectory and axial frequency of an ion during transport in order to minimize the final motional excitation. The resulting waveforms realize fast round-trip transport of a trapped ion across multiple electrodes at speeds of 0.5 electrodes per microsecond (35 m·s−1 for a one-way transport of 210 μm in 6 μs) with a maximum of 0.36 ± 0.08 mean quanta gain. This sub-quanta gain is independent of the phase of the secular motion at the distal location, obviating the need for an electric field impulse or time delay to eliminate the coherent motion.

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Carbon dioxide-enhanced metal release from kerogen

Scientific Reports

Ho, Tuan A.; Wang, Yifeng

Heavy metals released from kerogen to produced water during oil/gas extraction have caused major enviromental concerns. To curtail water usage and production in an operation and to use the same process for carbon sequestration, supercritical CO2 (scCO2) has been suggested as a fracking fluid or an oil/gas recovery agent. It has been shown previously that injection of scCO2 into a reservoir may cause several chemical and physical changes to the reservoir properties including pore surface wettability, gas sorption capacity, and transport properties. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we here demonstrate that injection of scCO2 might lead to desorption of physically adsorbed metals from kerogen structures. This process on one hand may impact the quality of produced water. On the other hand, it may enhance metal recovery if this process is used for in-situ extraction of critical metals from shale or other organic carbon-rich formations such as coal.

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Results 2676–2700 of 96,771
Results 2676–2700 of 96,771