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Measurements of the operating characteristics of a 1064 nm pumped KTP RISTRA OPO

Armstrong, Darrell J.

Measurements of the operating characteristics of a 1064 nm pumped potassium titanyl phosphte (KTP) optical parametric oscillator (OPO) were carried out at the Electro Optics Systems Laboratory of Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI). The OPO was developed by Sandia National Laboratories and employs a nonplanar image-rotating geometry that is known by the acronym RISTRA, denoting Rotated Image Singly-Resonant Twisted RectAngle. The OPO was configured for pumping by the 1064 nm fundamental wavelength of a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser to generate a signal wavelength at 1627 nm and idler wavelength at 3074.8 nm. GTRI will be incorporate the OPO into a multi-wavelength lidar platform called the Integrated Atmospheric Characterization System (IACS). Prior to completion of the system design for the IACS platform, personnel at GTRI carried out a series of risk reduction experiments to measure the operating characteristics of the OPO. Sandia's role in this effort included technical assistance with numerical modeling of OPO performance, selection of nonlinear optical crystals, specification of cavity-mirror dielectric coatings, selection of vendors for optical components, and advice concerning integration of the RISTRA OPO into the IACS platform. This report describes results of the risk reduction measurements and it also provides some background information on the operating characteristics of RISTRA OPO's but is not intended to be a tutorial. A working knowledge of pulsed solid-state lasers, laser cavity modes, laser beam quality and beam propagation, and three-wave mixing in nonlinear crystals, is useful.

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Risk-informed separation distances for hydrogen refueling stations

International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

Lachance, Jeffrey L.

As part of the US Department of Energy Hydrogen, Fuel Cells & Infrastructure Technologies Program, Sandia National Laboratories is developing the technical basis for assessing the safety of hydrogen-based systems for use in the development/modification of relevant codes and standards. This work includes quantitative risk assessments (QRA) of hydrogen facilities. The QRAs are used to identify and quantify scenarios for the unintended release of hydrogen and thus help identify the code requirements that would reduce the risk at hydrogen facilities to acceptable levels. This paper describes an application of QRA methods to help establish one key code requirement: the minimum separation distances between a hydrogen refueling station and other facilities and the public at large. An example application of the risk-informed approach has been performed to illustrate its utility and to identify key parameters that can influence the resulting selection of separation distances. © 2009 International Association for Hydrogen Energy.

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Impurity production and acceleration in CTIX

Journal of Nuclear Materials

Buchenauer, D.; Clift, W.M.; Klauser, R.; Horton, R.D.; Howard, S.J.; Brockington, S.J.; Evans, R.W.; Hwang, D.Q.

The Compact Toroid Injection Experiment (CTIX) produces a high density, high velocity hydrogen plasma that maintains its configuration in free space on a MHD resistive time scale. In order to study the production and acceleration of impurities in the injector, several sets of silicon collector probes were exposed to spheromak-like CT's exiting the accelerator. Elemental analysis by Auger Electron Spectroscopy indicated the presence of O, Al, Fe, and Cu in films up to 200 Å thickness (1000 CT interactions). Using a smaller number of CT interactions (10-20), implantation of Fe and Cu was measured by Auger depth profiling. The amount of impurities was found to increase with accelerating voltage and number of CT interactions while use of a solenoidal field reduced the amount. Comparison of the implanted Fe and Cu with TRIM simulations indicated that the impurities were traveling more slowly than the hydrogen CT. © 2009 Elsevier B.V.

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Time Resolved Ion Beam Induced Current measurements on MOS capacitors using a cyclotron microbeam

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms

Vizkelethy, G.; Onoda, S.; Hirao, T.; Ohshima, T.; Kamiya, T.

As overlayers on electronic devices become progressively thicker, radiation effects microscopy using traditional microbeams (with ion energies up to a few tens of MeVs) is becoming less and less viable. To penetrate to the sensitive regions of these devices, much higher energies, several hundreds of MeVs are necessary. These high energies are available only from cyclotrons. A nuclear microprobe has been developed on the AVF cyclotron of the Takasaki Ion Accelerators for Advanced Radiation Applications (TIARA) facility. In this paper we will present the first results using 260 MeV Ne and 520 MeV Ar microbeams to perform Time Resolved Ion Beam Induced Current (TRIBIC) measurements on Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (MOS) capacitors. The results will be compared to data taken with a traditional 15 MeV O microbeam. © 2009 Elsevier B.V.

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Phosphors' lifetime measurement employing the Time Between Photons method

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms

Rossi, P.; Doyle, B.L.; Brice, D.K.; Vizkelethy, G.; McDaniel, F.D.; Branson, J.V.

The Time Between Photons theory (hereafter TBP) is applied to the evaluation of the lifetime of phosphors employed in the Ion Photon Emission Microscope (IPEM). IPEM allows Radiation Effects Microscopy (REM) without focused ion beams and appears to be the best tool for the radiation hardness assessment of modern integrated circuit at cyclotron energies. IPEM determines the impact point of a single ion onto the sample by measuring the light spot produced on a thin phosphor layer placed on the sample surface. The spot is imaged by an optical microscope and projected at high magnification onto a Position Sensitive Detector (PSD). Phosphors, when excited by an ion, emit photons with a particular lifetime, which is important to evaluate. We measured the statistical distribution of the Time Between consecutive detected Photons (TBP) for several phosphors and have been able to link it to their lifetime employing a theory that is derived in this paper. The single-photon signals are provided by the IPEM-PSD, or faster photomultipliers when high-speed materials had to be assessed. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Indications of an inward pinch in the inner SOL of DIII-D from 13C deposition experiments

Journal of Nuclear Materials

Elder, J.D.; McLean, A.G.; Stangeby, P.C.; Allen, S.L.; Boedo, J.A.; Bray, B.D.; Brooks, N.H.; Fenstermacher, M.E.; Groth, M.; Leonard, A.W.; Rudakov, D.L.; Wampler, W.R.; Watkins, J.G.; West, W.P.; Whyte, D.G.

13C methane puffing experiments were conducted on DIII-D in both L- and ELMy H-mode conditions. The puffing was toroidally symmetric into the crown of a series of well-characterized lower single-null discharges. The hydrocarbon breakup, carbon transport and deposition were modeled using the OEDGE interpretive code. Three separate hypotheses were tested using OEDGE to try to reproduce the experimental deposition: Radial variation of fast parallel flow, erosion of the puffed 13C deposited in the divertor, and a pinch in the inner scrape off layer (SOL) towards the separatrix. A fast parallel flow was imposed for all hypotheses. The magnitude and the distribution of the 13C deposition resulting from each hypothesis are compared. A fast parallel flow in the SOL toward the inner divertor combined with a pinch/drift of 10-30 m/s in the inner SOL towards the separatrix roughly reproduces the deposition in both the L- and H-mode experiments. © 2009 Elsevier B.V.

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Evaporated lithium surface coatings in NSTX

Journal of Nuclear Materials

Kugel, H.W.; Mansfield, D.; Maingi, R.; Bell, M.G.; Bell, R.E.; Allain, J.P.; Gates, D.; Gerhardt, S.; Kaita, R.; Kallman, J.; Kaye, S.; LeBlanc, B.; Majeski, R.; Menard, J.; Mueller, D.; Ono, M.; Paul, S.; Raman, R.; Roquemore, A.L.; Ross, P.W.; Sabbagh, S.; Schneider, H.; Skinner, C.H.; Soukhanovskii, V.; Stevenson, T.; Timberlake, J.; Wampler, W.R.; Wilgren, J.; Zakharov, L.

Two lithium evaporators were used to evaporate more than 100 g of lithium on to the NSTX lower divertor region. Prior to each discharge, the evaporators were withdrawn behind shutters, where they also remained during the subsequent HeGDC applied for periods up to 9.5 min. After the HeGDC, the shutters were opened and the LITERs were reinserted to deposit lithium on the lower divertor target for 10 min, at rates of 10-70 mg/min, prior to the next discharge. The major improvements in plasma performance from these lithium depositions include: (1) plasma density reduction as a result of lithium deposition; (2) suppression of ELMs; (3) improvement of energy confinement in a low-triangularity shape; (4) improvement in plasma performance for standard, high-triangularity discharges; (5) reduction of the required HeGDC time between discharges; (6) increased pedestal electron and ion temperature; (7) reduced SOL plasma density; and (8) reduced edge neutral density. © 2009 Elsevier B.V.

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THz emission from coherent plasmons in InAs nanowires

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Seletskiy, D.V.; Hasselbeck, M.P.; Sheik-Bahae, M.; Cederberg, Jeffrey G.; Talin, Albert A.

We report the first observation of coherent plasmon emission of THz radiation from arrays of semiconductor nanowires. The THz signal strength from InAs nanowires is comparable to a planar substrate, indicating the nanowires are highly efficient emitters. This is explained by the preferential orientation of plasma motion to the wire surface, which overcomes radiation trapping by total-internal reflection. Using a bulk Drude model, we identify the average donor density and mobility in the nanowires in a non-contact manner. Contact IV transconductance measurements provide order of magnitude agreement with values obtained from the THz spectra. © 2009 SPIE.

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Simulation of blast-induced early-time intracranial wave physics leading to traumatic brain injury

Journal of Biomechanical Engineering

Taylor, Paul A.; Ford, Corey C.

The objective of this modeling and simulation study was to establish the role of stress wave interactions in the genesis of traumatic brain injury (TBI) from exposure to explosive blast. A high resolution (1 mm3 voxels) five material model of the human head was created by segmentation of color cryosections from the Visible Human Female data set. Tissue material properties were assigned from literature values. The model was inserted into the shock physics wave code, CTH, and subjected to a simulated blast wave of 1.3 MPa (13 bars) peak pressure from anterior, posterior, and lateral directions. Three-dimensional plots of maximum pressure, volumetric tension, and deviatoric (shear) stress demonstrated significant differences related to the incident blast geometry. In particular, the calculations revealed focal brain regions of elevated pressure and deviatoric stress within the first 2 ms of blast exposure. Calculated maximum levels of 15 KPa deviatoric, 3.3 MPa pressure, and 0.8 MPa volumetric tension were observed before the onset of significant head accelerations. Over a 2 ms time course, the head model moved only 1 mm in response to the blast loading. Doubling the blast strength changed the resulting intracranial stress magnitudes but not their distribution. We conclude that stress localization, due to early-time wave interactions, may contribute to the development of multifocal axonal injury underlying TBI. We propose that a contribution to traumatic brain injury from blast exposure, and most likely blunt impact, can occur on a time scale shorter than previous model predictions and before the onset of linear or rotational accelerations traditionally associated with the development of TBI. Copyright © 2009 by ASME.

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The impact of specific surface area on the retention of deuterium in carbon fiber composite materials

Fusion Engineering and Design

Kolasinski, Robert; Umstadter, K.R.; Sharpe, J.P.; Causey, Rion A.; Pawelko, R.J.; Whaley, Josh A.; Buchenauer, D.A.; Shimada, M.

In this study, the PISCES-A linear plasma instrument has been used to characterize retention in several carbon fiber composites in order to better understand the factors which lead to elevated retention levels in these materials. The PISCES instrument is capable of subjecting materials to intense fluxes (up to 1022 m-2 s-1) of low energy (150 eV) D+ ions, producing conditions similar to those encountered by plasma facing components in a fusion reactor. In this investigation, three CFCs (fabricated with different manufacturing processes) are compared with the N11 composite used in the Tore Supra reactor. The specific surface areas for these materials were within the range of 0.14-0.55 m2/g. The plasma bombardment conditions were adjusted to provide doses on the order of 1025-1026 m-2 at a sample temperature of 200 °C. After removal from PISCES-A, the amount of D retained in the sample surface was determined via thermal desorption spectroscopy. The measured retention showed a strong correlation with the type of material used and the corresponding BET surface area. By using a CFC with a lower internal porosity, one could expect a reduction in retention by a factor of 5 or more. © 2008 Elsevier B.V.

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Kauai Island Utility Cooperative Energy Storage Study

Murray, Aaron T.

Sandia National Laboratories performed an assessment of the benefits of energy storage for the Kauai Island Utility Cooperative. This report documents the methodology and results of this study from a generation and production-side benefits perspective only. The KIUC energy storage study focused on the economic impact of using energy storage to shave the system peak, which reduces generator run time and consequently reduces fuel and operation and maintenance (O&M) costs. It was determined that a 16-MWh energy storage system would suit KIUC's needs, taking into account the size of the 13 individual generation units in the KIUC system and a system peak of 78 MW. The analysis shows that an energy storage system substantially reduces the run time of Units D1, D2, D3, and D5 - the four smallest and oldest diesel generators at the Port Allen generating plant. The availability of stored energy also evens the diurnal variability of the remaining generation units during the off- and on-peak periods. However, the net economic benefit is insufficient to justify a load-leveling type of energy storage system at this time. While the presence of storage helps reduce the run time of the smaller and older units, the economic dispatch changes and the largest most efficient unit in the KIUC system, the 27.5-MW steam-injected combustion turbine at Kapaia, is run for extra hours to provide the recharge energy for the storage system. The economic benefits of the storage is significantly reduced because the charging energy for the storage is derived from the same fuel source as the peak generation source it displaces. This situation would be substantially different if there were a renewable energy source available to charge the storage. Especially, if there is a wind generation resource introduced in the KIUC system, there may be a potential of capturing the load-leveling benefits as well as using the storage to dampen the dynamic instability that the wind generation could introduce into the KIUC grid. General Electric is presently conducting such a study and results of this study will be available in the near future. Another study conducted by Electric Power Systems, Inc. (EPS) in May 2006 took a broader approach to determine the causes of KIUC system outages. This study concluded that energy storage with batteries will provide stability benefits and possibly eliminate the load shedding while also providing positive voltage control. Due to the lack of fuel diversity in the KIUC generation mix, SNL recommends that KIUC continue its efforts to quantify the dynamic benefits of storage. The value of the dynamic benefits, especially as an enabler of renewable generation such as wind energy, may be far greater than the production cost benefits alone. A combination of these benefits may provide KIUC sufficient positive economic and operational benefits to implement an energy storage project that will contribute to the overall enhancement of the KIUC system.

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Photoneutron effects on pulse reactor kinetics for the Annular Core Research Reactor (ACRR)

Parma, Edward J.

The Annular Core Research Reactor (ACRR) is a swimming-pool type pulsed reactor that maintains an epithermal neutron flux and a nine-inch diameter central dry cavity. One of its uses is neutron and gamma-ray irradiation damage studies on electronic components under transient reactor power conditions. In analyzing the experimental results, careful attention must be paid to the kinetics associated with the reactor to ensure that the transient behavior of the electronic device is understood. Since the ACRR fuel maintains a substantial amount of beryllium, copious quantities of photoneutrons are produced that can significantly alter the expected behavior of the reactor power, especially following a reactor pulse. In order to understand these photoneutron effects on the reactor kinetics, the KIFLE transient reactor-analysis code was modified to include the photoneutron groups associated with the beryllium. The time-dependent behavior of the reactor power was analyzed for small and large pulses, assuming several initial conditions including following several pulses during the day, and following a long steady-state power run. The results indicate that, for these types of initial conditions, the photoneutron contribution to the reactor pulse energy can have a few to tens of percent effect.

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SAR impulse response with residual chirps

Doerry, Armin W.

A Linear Frequency-Modulated (LFM) chirp is a function with unit amplitude and quadratic phase characteristic. In a focused Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) image, a residual chirp is undesired for targets of interest, as it coarsens the manifested resolution. However, for undesired spurious signals, a residual chirp is often advantageous because it spreads the energy and thereby diminishes its peak value. In either case, a good understanding of the effects of a residual LFM chirp on a SAR Impulse Response (IPR) is required to facilitate system analysis and design. This report presents an analysis of the effects of a residual chirp on the IPR. As reference, there is a rich body of publications on various aspects of LFM chirps. A quick search reveals a plethora of articles, going back to the early 1950s. We mention here purely as trivia one of the earlier analysis papers on this waveform by Klauder, et al.

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Sandia National Laboratories/New Mexico existing environmental analyses bounding environmental test facilities

May, Rodney A.

This report identifies current environmental operating parameters for the various test and support facilities at SNL/NM. The intent of this report is solely to provide the limits which bound the facilities' operations. Understanding environmental limits is important to maximizing the capabilities and working within the existing constraints of each facility, and supports the decision-making process in meeting customer requests, cost and schedule planning, modifications to processes, future commitments, and use of resources. Working within environmental limits ensures that mission objectives will be met in a manner that protects human health and the environment. It should be noted that, in addition to adhering to the established limits, other approvals and permits may be required for specific projects.

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Implementation of equilibrium aqueous speciation and solubility (EQ3 type) calculations into Cantera for electrolyte solutions

Moffat, Harry K.; Jove-Colon, Carlos F.

In this report, we summarize our work on developing a production level capability for modeling brine thermodynamic properties using the open-source code Cantera. This implementation into Cantera allows for the application of chemical thermodynamics to describe the interactions between a solid and an electrolyte solution at chemical equilibrium. The formulations to evaluate the thermodynamic properties of electrolytes are based on Pitzer's model to calculate molality-based activity coefficients using a real equation-of-state (EoS) for water. In addition, the thermodynamic properties of solutes at elevated temperature and pressures are computed using the revised Helgeson-Kirkham-Flowers (HKF) EoS for ionic and neutral aqueous species. The thermodynamic data parameters for the Pitzer formulation and HKF EoS are from the thermodynamic database compilation developed for the Yucca Mountain Project (YMP) used with the computer code EQ3/6. We describe the adopted equations and their implementation within Cantera and also provide several validated examples relevant to the calculations of extensive properties of electrolyte solutions.

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IceT users' guide and reference

Moreland, Kenneth D.

The Image Composition Engine for Tiles (IceT) is a high-performance sort-last parallel rendering library. In addition to providing accelerated rendering for a standard display, IceT provides the unique ability to generate images for tiled displays. The overall resolution of the display may be several times larger than any viewport that may be rendered by a single machine. This document is an overview of the user interface to IceT.

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LIVA: A Data Reduction Program for Line-imaging ORVIS Measurements

Ao, Tommy

LIVA (Line-Imaging Velocimetry Analysis) is a program for reducing data of a line-imaging optically recording velocity interferometer system (ORVIS) diagnostic. LIVA uses the Fourier transform method to extract phase information from recorded streak camera images. The extracted phase shift is used to infer target velocity as a function of space and time. The program can be run in any current version of MATLAB (2008a or later) or as a Windows XP executable.

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Results 75251–75275 of 99,299
Results 75251–75275 of 99,299