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Institution

Sandia National Laboratories

FacilityLivermore, California, United States
About: Sandia National Laboratories is a facility organization based out in Livermore, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Laser & Thin film. The organization has 21501 authors who have published 46724 publications receiving 1484388 citations. The organization is also known as: SNL & Sandia National Labs.
Topics: Laser, Thin film, Hydrogen, Combustion, Silicon


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In situ TEM experiments reveal the mechanical degradation of CNFs through formation of longitudinal cracks near the c-C/d-C interface during sodiation and potassiation, shedding light onto the development of carbon-based electrodes for NIBs and KIBs.
Abstract: Carbonaceous materials have great potential for applications as anodes of alkali-metal ion batteries, such as Na-ion batteries and K-ion batteries (NIB and KIBs). We conduct an in situ study of the electrochemically driven sodiation and potassiation of individual carbon nanofibers (CNFs) by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The CNFs are hollow and consist of a bilayer wall with an outer layer of disordered-carbon (d-C) enclosing an inner layer of crystalline-carbon (c-C). The d-C exhibits about three times volume expansion of the c-C after full sodiation or potassiation, thus suggesting a much higher storage capacity of Na or K ions in d-C than c-C. For the bilayer CNF-based electrode, a steady sodium capacity of 245 mAh/g is measured with a Coulombic efficiency approaching 98% after a few initial cycles. The in situ TEM experiments also reveal the mechanical degradation of CNFs through formation of longitudinal cracks near the c-C/d-C interface during sodiation and potassiation. Geometrical changes...

254 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, stable state two-dimensional results obtained from numerical solutions to the transient Navier-Stokes equations are given for laminar convective motion of a gas in an enclosed vertical slot with large horizontal temperature differences.
Abstract: Steady-state two-dimensional results obtained from numerical solutions to the transient Navier-Stokes equations are given for laminar convective motion of a gas in an enclosed vertical slot with large horizontal temperature differences. We present results for air using the ideal-gas law and Sutherland-law transport properties, although the results are also valid for hydrogen. Wide ranges of aspect-ratio, Rayleigh-number and temperature-difference parameters are examined. The results are compared in detail with the exact solution in the conduction and fully developed merged boundary-layer limits for arbitrary temperature difference, and to the well-established Boussinesq limit for small temperature difference. It is found that the static pressure, and temperature and velocity distributions are very sensitive to property variations, even though the average heat flux is not. In addition we observe a net vertical heat flux to be the same as that obtained from the Boussinesq equations. We concentrate on the boundary-layer regime, but we present a rather complete picture of different flow regimes in Rayleigh-number, aspect-ratio and temperaturedifference parameter space. We observe that, with increasing temperature difference, lower critical Rayleigh numbers for stationary and oscillatory instabilities are obtained. In addition we observe that in some cases the physical nature of the instability changes with increasing temperature difference.

253 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the methanol permeability of directly copolymerized 4,4′-biphenol based disulfonated poly(arylene ether sulfone) copolymers.

253 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two nonlinear feedback control laws are presented to reestablish a desired J2 invariant relative orbit by dealing with mean orbit elements and a numerical study compares and contrasts the two feedback laws.
Abstract: Two nonlinear feedback control laws are presented for reestablishing a desired J2 invariant relative orbit. Since it is convenient to describe the relative orbit of a deputy with respect to a chief satellite in terms of mean orbit element differences, and because the conditions for a relative orbit being J2 invariant are expressed in terms of mean orbit elements, the first control law feeds back errors in terms of mean orbit elements. Dealing with mean orbit elements has the advantage that short period oscillations are not perceived as tracking errors; rather, only the long term tracking errors are compensated for. The second control law feeds back traditional Cartesian position and velocity tracking errors. For both of the control laws, the desired orbit is computed using mean orbit elements. A numerical study compares and contrasts the two feedback laws.

253 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors link the indentation size effect (ISE) to a ratio between the energy of newly created surface and plastic strain energy dissipation, and propose an analytical model of hardness versus depth.
Abstract: For very shallow indentations in W, Al, Au, and Fe-3wt%Si single crystals, hardness decreased with increasing depth irrespective of increasing or decreasing strain gradients. As such, strain gradient theory appears insufficient to explain the indentation size effect (ISE) at depths less than several hundred nanometers. Present research links the ISE to a ratio between the energy of newly created surface and plastic strain energy dissipation. Also, the contact surface to plastic volume ratio was nearly constant for a range of shallow depths. Based on the above, an analytical model of hardness versus depth provides a satisfactory fit to the experimental data and correlates well with embedded atom simulations. ©2002 ASME

253 citations


Authors

Showing all 21652 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Lily Yeh Jan16246773655
Jongmin Lee1502257134772
Jun Liu13861677099
Gerbrand Ceder13768276398
Kevin M. Smith114171178470
Henry F. Schaefer111161168695
Thomas Bein10967742800
David Chandler10742452396
Stephen J. Pearton104191358669
Harold G. Craighead10156940357
Edward Ott10166944649
S. Das Sarma10095158803
Richard M. Crooks9741931105
David W. Murray9769943372
Alán Aspuru-Guzik9762844939
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202340
2022245
20211,510
20201,580
20191,535
20181,514