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Instabilities and soot formation in high-pressure, rich, iso-octane-air explosion flames - 1. Dynamical structure
Simultaneous OH planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) and Rayleigh scattering measurements have been performed on 2-bar rich iso-octane–air explosion flames obtained in the optically accessible Leeds combustion bomb. Separate shadowgraph high-speed video images have been obtained from explosion flames under similar mixture conditions. Shadowgraph images, quantitative Rayleigh images, and normalized OH concentration images have been presented for a selection of these explosion flames. Normalized experimental equilibrium OH concentrations behind the flame fronts have been compared with normalized computed equilibrium OH concentrations as a function of equivalence ratio. The ratio of superequilibrium OH concentration in the flame front to equilibrium OH concentration behind the flame front reveals the response of the flame to the thermal–diffusive instability and the resistance of the flame front to rich quenching. Burned gas temperatures have been determined from the Rayleigh scattering images in the range 1.4⩽ϕ⩽1.9 and are found to be in good agreement with the corresponding predicted adiabatic flame temperatures. Soot formation was observed to occur behind deep cusps associated with large-wavelength cracks occurring in the flame front for equivalence ratio ϕ⩾1.8 (C/O⩾0.576). The reaction time-scale for iso-octane pyrolysis to soot formation has been estimated to be approximately 7.5–10 ms
SYSTEM STUDIES OF FISSION-FUSION HYBRID MOLTEN SALT REACTORS
This work proposes and evaluates a Fission-Fusion Hybrid Molten Salt Reactor (FFHMSR), combining two subsystems, a deuterium + tritium (DT) fusion reactor surrounded by a neutron-absorbing Fusion Blanket (FB) and a critical Molten Salt fission Reactor (MSR). The molten salt, which contains dissolved actinides, circulates at a high rate between them.
As envisioned the MSR exhibits the large Conversion Ratio of graphite moderated reactors having small fissile and large fertile inventories. DT fusion neutrons irradiating actinides in the molten salt release additional neutrons which increase isotope conversion and fission. Actinide fuel is continually added while fission products are continually removed so the system\u27s operation never requires refueling interruptions.
The choice of molten salt as a eutectic mixture of the fluorides of lithium, sodium, and actinide fuel is explained by eliminating other options.
System behavior is explored through simulations invoking modules from the Scale 6.1 code package. Modules include ORIGEN which simulates evolution over time of an isotope inventory and others for neutronics transport, criticality and cross section weighting. The simulation automatically adjusts the ratio of fission to fusion power to maintain MSR criticality, implemented through FORTRAN codes and associated files developed as part of this work.
Simulations showed actinide inventories stabilizing to steady levels while fresh actinide fuel from feedstocks of Spent Nuclear Fuel or uranium-238 or thorium-232 continued to be added and fissioned. Required fusion was less than 1% of total power and adequate tritium breeding was obtained. The non-removal strategy was also tried with long-lived fission products (FPs) with the mixed results that some inventories stabilized while others did not.
FFHMSR benefits of consuming all actinides and some long-lived FPs are that waste issues are ameliorated while available fission energy is increased by two orders of magnitude. Proliferation resistance is enhanced by the absence of fuel reprocessing and related transportation, by low fissile inventories and by denaturing all fissile by nonfissile isotopes. Safety is enhanced by liquid fuel characteristics allowing emergency draining of fuel to a passively cooled safe location while also providing a stronger negative power coefficient than feasible with solid fuel
Optimal Designs of Mobile Nuclear Engines to Power Manned Vehicles On Mars
This work develops original conceptual designs for compact nuclear fission reactor engines to power robust mobile equipment operating on the surface of the planet Mars. This is a nuclear application area not well explored in previous publications. Some novel analytical approaches are developed herein, including the application of optimal control theory to minimize radiation shielding mass. This work also provides the first study of using another planet\u27s atmosphere to implement open-cycle thermal conversion systems.
To power equipment on Mars for extended durations at sustained power levels ranging from one hundred horsepower to several thousand horsepower, there is no practical alternative to a nuclear fission heat source. Design difficulties arise from mobility\u27s need to restrict engine size and mass, each of which is, in turn, determined by the schemes chosen for thermal conversion waste heat rejection and for neutron and gamma radiation shielding.
The conceptual design solutions pursued herein entirely avoid a large waste heat rejection radiator or low pressure heat exchanger by instead using the martian air directly as the thermal conversion fluid. This Open Brayton Cycle implementation unconventionally employs large-diameter radial-flow compressor/turbine designs for the lower pressure air-flow stages in order to obtain sufficient efficiency from the low pressure martian air. Design prescriptions and analyses for these rotating components are included.
The radiation shielding mass has been minimized by numerical algorithms developed as part of this work to solve the Euler-Lagrange equations for a minimum mass shield meeting stated radiation leakage requirements. In addition, a risk-balancing approach is taken to setting those radiation requirements in order to avoid excessive conservatism
AE-C attitude determination and control prelaunch analysis and operations plan
A description of attitude control support being supplied by the Mission and Data Operations Directorate is presented. Included are descriptions of the computer programs being used to support the missions for attitude determination, prediction, and control. In addition, descriptions of the operating procedures which will be used to accomplish mission objectives are provided
Quantum interface between an electrical circuit and a single atom
We show how to bridge the divide between atomic systems and electronic
devices by engineering a coupling between the motion of a single ion and the
quantized electric field of a resonant circuit. Our method can be used to
couple the internal state of an ion to the quantized circuit with the same
speed as the internal-state coupling between two ions. All the well-known
quantum information protocols linking ion internal and motional states can be
converted to protocols between circuit photons and ion internal states. Our
results enable quantum interfaces between solid state qubits, atomic qubits,
and light, and lay the groundwork for a direct quantum connection between
electrical and atomic metrology standards.Comment: Supplemental material available on reques
Nonlinear metrology with a quantum interface
We describe nonlinear quantum atom-light interfaces and nonlinear quantum
metrology in the collective continuous variable formalism. We develop a
nonlinear effective Hamiltonian in terms of spin and polarization collective
variables and show that model Hamiltonians of interest for nonlinear quantum
metrology can be produced in Rb ensembles. With these Hamiltonians,
metrologically relevant atomic properties, e.g. the collective spin, can be
measured better than the "Heisenberg limit" . In contrast to other
proposed nonlinear metrology systems, the atom-light interface allows both
linear and non-linear estimation of the same atomic quantities.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure
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