4,248 research outputs found
Additional development of large diameter carbon monofilament
The chemical vapor process for preparing a large diameter carbon-base monofilament from a BCl3, Ch4 and H2 gas mixture with a carbon substrate fiber was studied. The effect of reactor geometry, total gas flows and deposition temperature on the tensile strength of the monofilament were investigated. It was noted that consistent results could only be obtained when the carbon substrate fiber was cleaned. The strength of the monofilament was found to depend on the highest temperature and the temperature profile of the monofilament in the reactor. The strength of monofilament produced in the dc and RF reactors were found to be similar and similar alloy compositions in the monofilament were attained when the same gas ratios were used. The tensile strength of the monofilament at 500 C was found to be 60 to 70% of the room temperature tensile strength. No degradation was noted after exposure to molten aluminum
Design and optimization of a laser-PIXE beamline for material science applications
Multi-MeV proton beams can be generated by irradiating thin solid foils with ultra-intense (>10^18 W/cm^2) short laser pulses. Several of their characteristics, such as high bunch charge and short pulse duration, make them a complementary alternative to conventional radio frequency-based accelerators. A potential material science application is the chemical analysis of cultural heritage (CH) artifacts. The complete chemistry of the bulk material (ceramics, metals) can be retrieved through sophisticated nuclear techniques such as particle-induced X-ray emission (PIXE). Recently, the use of laser-generated proton beams was introduced as diagnostics in material science (laser-PIXE or laser-driven PIXE): Coupling laser-generated proton sources to conventional beam steering devices successfully enhances the capture and transport of the laser-accelerated beam. This leads to a reduction of the high divergence and broad energy spread at the source. The design of our hybrid beamline is composed of an energy selector, followed by permanent quadrupole magnets aiming for better control and manipulation of the final proton beam parameters. This allows tailoring both, mean proton energy and spot sizes, yet keeping the system compact. We performed a theoretical study optimizing a beamline for laser-PIXE applications. Our design enables monochromatizing the beam and shaping its final spot size. We obtain spot sizes ranging between a fraction of mm up to cm scale at a fraction of nC proton charge per shot. These results pave the way for a versatile and tunable laserPIXE at a multi-Hz repetition rate using modern commercially available laser systems
Study of high resistance inorganic coatings on graphite fibers
Coatings made of boron, silicon carbide, silica, and silica-like materials were studied to determine their ability to increase resistance of graphite fibers. The most promising results were attained by chemical vapor depositing silicon carbide on graphite fiber followed by oxidation, and drawing graphite fiber through ethyl silicate followed by appropriate heat treatments. In the silicon carbide coating studies, no degradation of the graphite fibers was observed and resistance values as high as three orders of magnitude higher than that of the uncoated fiber was attained. The strength of a composite fabricated from the coated fiber had a strength which compared favorably with those of composites prepared from uncoated fiber. For the silica-like coated fiber prepared by drawing the graphite fiber through an ethyl silicate solution followed by heating, coated fiber resistances about an order of magnitude greater than that of the uncoated fiber were attained. Composites prepared using these fibers had flexural strengths comparable with those prepared using uncoated fibers, but the shear strengths were lower
Coatings for graphite fibers
Graphite fibers released from composites during burning or an explosion caused shorting of electrical and electronic equipment. Silicon carbide, silica, silicon nitride and boron nitride were coated on graphite fibers to increase their electrical resistances. Resistances as high as three orders of magnitude higher than uncoated fiber were attained without any significant degradation of the substrate fiber. An organo-silicone approach to produce coated fibers with high electrical resistance was also used. Celion 6000 graphite fibers were coated with an organo-silicone compound, followed by hydrolysis and pyrolysis of the coating to a silica-like material. The shear and flexural strengths of composites made from high electrically resistant fibers were considerably lower than the shear and flexural strengths of composites made from the lower electrically resistant fibers. The lower shear strengths of the composites indicated that the coatings on these fibers were weaker than the coating on the fibers which were pyrolyzed at higher temperature
Laser-Generated Proton Beams for High-Precision Ultra-Fast Crystal Synthesis
We present a method for the synthesis of micro-crystals and micro-structured surfaces using laseraccelerated
protons. In this method, a solid surface material having a low melting temperature is
irradiated with very-short laser-generated protons, provoking in the ablation process thermodynamic
conditions that are between the boiling and the critical point. The intense and very quick proton energy
deposition (in the ns range) induces an explosive boiling and produces microcrystals that nucleate in a
plasma plume composed by ions and atoms detached from the laser-irradiated surface. The synthesized
particles in the plasma plume are then deposited onto a cold neighboring, non-irradiated, solid
secondary surface. We experimentally verify the synthesizing methods by depositing low-meltingmaterial
microcrystals - such as gold - onto nearby silver surfaces and modeling the proton/matter
interaction via a Monte Carlo code, confrming that we are in the above described thermodynamic
conditions. Morphological and crystallinity measurements indicate the formation of gold octahedral
crystals with dimensions around 1.2 μm, uniformly distributed onto a silver surface with dimensions
in the tens of mm2. This laser-accelerated particle based synthesis method paves the way for the
development of new material synthesis using ultrashort laser-accelerated particle beams
Model for the spatio-temporal intermittency of the energy dissipation in turbulent flows
Modeling the intermittent behavior of turbulent energy dissipation processes
both in space and time is often a relevant problem when dealing with phenomena
occurring in high Reynolds number flows, especially in astrophysical and space
fluids. In this paper, a dynamical model is proposed to describe the
spatio-temporal intermittency of energy dissipation rate in a turbulent system.
This is done by using a shell model to simulate the turbulent cascade and
introducing some heuristic rules, partly inspired by the well known -model,
to construct a spatial structure of the energy dissipation rate. In order to
validate the model and to study its spatially intermittency properties, a
series of numerical simulations have been performed. These show that the level
of spatial intermittency of the system can be simply tuned by varying a single
parameter of the model and that scaling laws in agreement with those obtained
from experiments on fully turbulent hydrodynamic flows can be recovered. It is
finally suggested that the model could represent a useful tool to simulate the
spatio-temporal intermittency of turbulent energy dissipation in those high
Reynolds number astrophysical fluids where impulsive energy release processes
can be associated to the dynamics of the turbulent cascade.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
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