Frank Fierro
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Frank Fierro.
Fusion Science and Technology | 2009
Robert D. Day; Frank Fierro; Felix P. Garcia; Douglass J. Hatch; Randall B. Randolph; Patrick T. Reardon; Gerald Rivera
Abstract During the course of machining targets for various experiments, it sometimes becomes necessary to take fixtures or machines that are designed for one function and adapt them to another function. When adapting a machine or fixture is not adequate, it may be necessary to acquire a machine specifically designed to produce the component required. In addition to the above scenarios, the features of a component may dictate that multistep machining processes are necessary to produce the component. This paper discusses the machining of four components where adaptation, specialized machine design, or multistep processes were necessary to produce the components.
Fusion Science and Technology | 2006
Kimberly A. DeFriend; Brent F. Espinoza; A. Nobile; Kenneth V. Salazar; Robert D. Day; Norman E. Elliott; Timothy Pierce; Joyce Elliott; D. W. Schmidt; Frank Fierro; David Sandoval; Jeff Griego; Adelaida C. Valdez; Michael Droege
Abstract Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) energy hohlraums are composed of a high-Z material filled with foam. Because of the small pore size and transparency, silica aerogels are used in some ICF targets. The traditional synthesis of silica aerogels require sol-gel polymerization of silicon alkoxide followed by supercritical drying. Some constituents in sol-gel polymerization have been found to contribute to leaching of certain metals at the silica/metal interface. Since the hohlraums are composed of metals, possible chemical reactivity at the silica aerogel and metal hohlraum interface was investigated. The hohlraums studied are aluminum lined with either copper or copper/chromium. Upon initial inspection, the aerogel appeared transparent and uniform, however, closer inspection of the copper wall suggested possible leaching. Alternatively the quality of the aerogel in the copper-chromium hohlraum was very poor with the chromium layer of the hohlraum and some copper completely etched. Control experiments were used to determine the cause of the leaching. When copper is in the presence of sol-gel constituents, Cu2+ ion formed, thus leaching copper from the hohlraum walls. In the presence of chromium, Cr2O72- or CrO42- was identified in solution with the Cu2+, these anions are believed to form copper chromite under the aerogel synthesis procedures utilized.
Physics of Plasmas | 2018
A.M. Rasmus; C. A. Di Stefano; K. A. Flippo; F. W. Doss; J. L. Kline; Jonathan Hager; E. C. Merritt; T. R. Desjardins; Weigang Wan; T. Cardenas; D. W. Schmidt; P. M. Donovan; Frank Fierro; J. I. Martinez; J. S. Zingale; C. C. Kuranz
We derive a model describing vorticity deposition on a high-Atwood number interface with a sinusoidal perturbation by an oblique shock propagating from a heavy into a light material. Limiting cases of the model result in vorticity distributions that lead to Richtmyer-Meshkov and Kelvin-Helmholtz instability growth. For certain combinations of perturbation amplitude, wavelength, and tilt of the shock, a regime is found in which discrete, co-aligned, vortices are deposited on the interface. The subsequent interface evolution is described by a discrete vortex model, which is found to agree well with both RAGE simulations and experiments at early times.
Physics of Plasmas | 2018
K. A. Flippo; F. W. Doss; E. C. Merritt; B. G. DeVolder; C. A. Di Stefano; P. A. Bradley; D. Capelli; T. Cardenas; T. R. Desjardins; Frank Fierro; C. M. Huntington; J. L. Kline; L. Kot; S. Kurien; E. N. Loomis; S. A. MacLaren; T. J. Murphy; S. R. Nagel; T. S. Perry; R. B. Randolph; A.M. Rasmus; D. W. Schmidt
The LANL Shear Campaign uses millimeter-scale initially solid shock tubes on the National Ignition Facility to conduct high-energy-density hydrodynamic plasma experiments, capable of reaching energy densities exceeding 100 kJ/cm3. These shock-tube experiments have for the first time reproduced spontaneously emergent coherent structures due to shear-based fluid instabilities [i.e., Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH)], demonstrating hydrodynamic scaling over 8 orders of magnitude in time and velocity. The KH vortices, referred to as “rollers,” and the secondary instabilities, referred to as “ribs,” are used to understand the turbulent kinetic energy contained in the system. Their evolution is used to understand the transition to turbulence and that transitions dependence on initial conditions. Experimental results from these studies are well modeled by the RAGE (Radiation Adaptive Grid Eulerian) hydro-code using the Besnard-Harlow-Rauenzahn turbulent mix model. Information inferred from both the experimental data and the mix model allows us to demonstrate that the specific Turbulent Kinetic Energy (sTKE) in the layer, as calculated from the plan-view structure data, is consistent with the mixing width growth and the RAGE simulations of sTKE.The LANL Shear Campaign uses millimeter-scale initially solid shock tubes on the National Ignition Facility to conduct high-energy-density hydrodynamic plasma experiments, capable of reaching energy densities exceeding 100 kJ/cm3. These shock-tube experiments have for the first time reproduced spontaneously emergent coherent structures due to shear-based fluid instabilities [i.e., Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH)], demonstrating hydrodynamic scaling over 8 orders of magnitude in time and velocity. The KH vortices, referred to as “rollers,” and the secondary instabilities, referred to as “ribs,” are used to understand the turbulent kinetic energy contained in the system. Their evolution is used to understand the transition to turbulence and that transitions dependence on initial conditions. Experimental results from these studies are well modeled by the RAGE (Radiation Adaptive Grid Eulerian) hydro-code using the Besnard-Harlow-Rauenzahn turbulent mix model. Information inferred from both the experimental data and t...
Fusion Science and Technology | 2018
D. W. Schmidt; T. Cardenas; F. W. Doss; Carlos Di Stefano; Patrick Mark Donovan; Frank Fierro; K. A. Flippo; J. I. Martinez; Alex Martin Rasmus
Abstract The High Energy Density Physics program at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) has had a multiyear campaign to verify the predictive capability of the interface evolution of shock propagation through different profiles machined into the face of a plastic package with an iodine-doped plastic center region. These experiments varied the machined surface from a simple sine wave to a double sine wave and finally to a multitude of different profiles with power spectrum ranges and shapes to verify LANL’s simulation capability. The MultiMode-A profiles had a band-pass flat region of the power spectrum, while the MultiMode-B profile had two band-pass flat regions. Another profile of interest was the 1-Peak profile, a band-pass concept with a spike to one side of the power spectrum. All these profiles were machined in flat and tilted orientations of 30 and 60 deg. Tailor-made machining profiles, supplied by experimental physicists, were compared to actual machined surfaces, and Fourier power spectra were compared to see the reproducibility of the machining process over the frequency ranges that physicists require.
Archive | 2004
Warren P. Steckle; Mark E. Smith; J.R. Griego; Frank Fierro
EPJ Web of Conferences | 2013
Kimberly A. Obrey; D. W. Schmidt; Christopher E. Hamilton; Deanna Capelli; James R Williams; Randall B. Randolph; Frank Fierro; Douglas J. Hatch; George J. Havrilla; Brian M. Patterson
international vacuum electronics conference | 2018
Muhammed Zuboraj; William Romero; Frank Fierro; Evgenya I. Simakov; Bruce E. Carlsten
Archive | 2017
Randall B. Randolph; John A. Oertel; T. Cardenas; Christopher E. Hamilton; D. W. Schmidt; Frank Fierro; Deanna Capelli
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
K. A. Flippo; F. W. Doss; J. L. Kline; L. Kot; T.S. Perry; B. G. DeVolder; T. J. Murphy; Eric Loomis; E. C. Merritt; D. W. Schmidt; Deanna Capelli; T. Cardenas; R.B. Randolph; Frank Fierro; G. Rivera; C. M. Huntington; Sabrina R. Nagel; S. A. MacLaren