14 results on '"Auxier JD 2nd"'
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2. Isolation and characterization of a californium metallocene.
- Author
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Goodwin CAP, Su J, Stevens LM, White FD, Anderson NH, Auxier JD 2nd, Albrecht-Schönzart TE, Batista ER, Briscoe SF, Cross JN, Evans WJ, Gaiser AN, Gaunt AJ, James MR, Janicke MT, Jenkins TF, Jones ZR, Kozimor SA, Scott BL, Sperling JM, Wedal JC, Windorff CJ, Yang P, and Ziller JW
- Abstract
Californium (Cf) is currently the heaviest element accessible above microgram quantities. Cf isotopes impose severe experimental challenges due to their scarcity and radiological hazards. Consequently, chemical secrets ranging from the accessibility of 5f/6d valence orbitals to engage in bonding, the role of spin-orbit coupling in electronic structure, and reactivity patterns compared to other f elements, remain locked. Organometallic molecules were foundational in elucidating periodicity and bonding trends across the periodic table
1-3 , with a twenty-first-century renaissance of organometallic thorium (Th) through plutonium (Pu) chemistry4-12 , and to a smaller extent americium (Am)13 , transforming chemical understanding. Yet, analogous curium (Cm) to Cf chemistry has lain dormant since the 1970s. Here, we revive air-/moisture-sensitive Cf chemistry through the synthesis and characterization of [Cf(C5 Me4 H)2 Cl2 K(OEt2 )]n from two milligrams of249 Cf. This bent metallocene motif, not previously structurally authenticated beyond uranium (U)14,15 , contains the first crystallographically characterized Cf-C bond. Analysis suggests the Cf-C bond is largely ionic with a small covalent contribution. Lowered Cf 5f orbital energy versus dysprosium (Dy) 4f in the colourless, isoelectronic and isostructural [Dy(C5 Me4 H)2 Cl2 K(OEt2 )]n results in an orange Cf compound, contrasting with the light-green colour typically associated with Cf compounds16-22 ., (© 2021. This is a U.S. government work and not under copyright protection in the U.S.; foreign copyright protection may apply.)- Published
- 2021
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3. Mapping of Uranium in Surrogate Nuclear Debris Using Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS).
- Author
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Shattan MB, Gragston M, Zhang Z, Auxier JD 2nd, McIntosh KG, and Parigger CG
- Abstract
This work describes the use of a laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) system to conduct macroscopic elemental mapping of uranium and iron on the exterior surface and interior center cross-section of surrogate nuclear debris for the first time. The results suggest that similar LIBS systems could be packaged for use as an effective instrument for screening samples during collection activities in the field or to conduct process control measurements during the production of debris surrogates. The technique focuses on the mitigation of chemical and physical matrix effects of four uranium atomic emission lines, relatively free of interferences and of good analytical value. At a spatial resolution of 0.5 mm, a material fractionation pattern in the surrogate debris is identified and discussed in terms of constituent melting temperatures and thermal gradients experienced.
- Published
- 2019
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4. Establishing Cost-Effective Computational Models for the Prediction of Lanthanoid Binding in [Ln(NO 3 )] 2+ (with Ln = La to Lu).
- Author
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Peterson CC, Penchoff DA, Auxier JD 2nd, and Hall HL
- Abstract
Evaluating the efficiency of predictive methods is critical to the processes of upscaling laboratory processes to full-scale operations on an industrial scale. With regard to separation of lanthanoids, there is a considerable motivation to optimize these processes because of immediate use in nuclear fuel cycle operations, nuclear forensics applications, and rare-earth metal recovery. Efficient predictive capabilities in Gibbs free energies of reaction are essential to optimize separations and ligand design for selective binding needed for various radiochemical applications such as nuclear fuel disposition and recycling of lanthanoid fission products into useful radioisotope products. Ligand design is essential for selective binding of lanthanoids, as separating contiguous lanthanoids is challenging because of the similar behavior these elements exhibit. Modeling including electronic structure calculations of lanthanoid-containing compounds is particularly challenging because of the associated computational cost encountered with the number of electrons correlated in these systems and relativistic considerations. This study evaluates the predictive capabilities of various ab initio methods in the calculation of Gibbs free energies of reaction for [Ln(NO
3 )]2+ compounds (with Ln = La to Lu), as nitrates are critical in traditional separation processes utilizing nitric acid. The composite methodologies evaluated predict Gibbs free energies of reaction for [Ln(NO3 )]2+ compounds within 5 kcal mol-1 in most cases from the target method [CCSD(T)-FSII/cc-pwCV∞Z-DK3+SO] at a fraction of the computational cost., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest.- Published
- 2019
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5. Structural Characteristics, Population Analysis, and Binding Energies of [An(NO 3 )] 2+ (with An = Ac to Lr).
- Author
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Penchoff DA, Peterson CC, Quint MS, Auxier JD 2nd, Schweitzer GK, Jenkins DM, Harrison RJ, and Hall HL
- Abstract
Efficient predictive capabilities are essential for the actinide series since regulatory constraints for radioactive work, associated costs needed for specialized facilities, and the short half-lives of many actinides present great challenges in laboratory settings. Improved predictive accuracy is advantageous for numerous applications including the optimization and design of separation agents for nuclear fuel and waste. One limitation of calculations in support of these applications is that the large variations observed from predictions obtained with currently available methods can make comparisons across studies uncertain. Benchmarking currently available computational methodologies is essential to establish reliable practices across the community to guarantee an accurate physical description of the systems studied. To understand the performance of a variety of common theoretical methods, a systematic analysis of differences observed in the prediction of structural characteristics, electron withdrawing effects, and binding energies of [An(NO
3 )]2+ (with An = Ac to Lr) in gas and aqueous phases is reported. Population analysis obtained with Mulliken and Löwdin reflect a large dependence on the level of theory of choice, whereas those obtained with natural bond orbital show larger consistency across methodologies. Predicted stability across the actinide series calculated with coupled cluster with perturbative doubles and triples at the triple ζ level is equivalent to the one obtained when extrapolated to the complete basis set limit. The ground state of [Fm(NO3 )]2+ and [Md(NO3 )]2+ is predicted to have an electronic structure corresponding to An III state in gas and An IV in aqueous phase, whereas the ground state of [An(NO3 )]2+ (with An = Ac to Es, Lr) presents an electronic structure corresponding to An IV in the gas and aqueous phase. The compounds studied with No in gas and aqueous phase present a preferred No III state, and the Lr compounds did not follow trends predicted for the rest of the actinide series, as previously observed in studies regarding its unusual electronic structure relative to its position in the periodic table., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest.- Published
- 2018
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6. Structural Analysis of the Complexation of Uranyl, Neptunyl, Plutonyl, and Americyl with Cyclic Imide Dioximes.
- Author
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Penchoff DA, Peterson CC, Camden JP, Bradshaw JA, Auxier JD 2nd, Schweitzer GK, Jenkins DM, Harrison RJ, and Hall HL
- Abstract
Knowledge-based design of extracting agents for selective binding of actinides is essential in stock-pile stewardship, environmental remediation, separations, and nuclear fuel disposal. Robust computational protocols are critical for in depth understanding of structural properties and to further advance the design of selective ligands. In particular, rapid radiochemical separations require predictive capabilities for binding in the gas phase. This study focuses on gas-phase binding preferences of cyclic imide dioximes to uranyl, neptunyl, plutonyl, and americyl. Structural properties, electron withdrawing effects, and their effects on binding preferences are studied with natural bond-order population analysis. The aromatic amidoximes are found to have a larger electron-donation effect than the aliphatic amidoximes. It is also found that plutonyl is more electron withdrawing than uranyl, neptunyl, and americyl when bound to the cyclic imide dioximes studied., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest.
- Published
- 2018
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7. Utilization of outer-midplane collector probes with isotopically enriched tungsten tracer particles for impurity transport studies in the scrape-off layer of DIII-D (invited).
- Author
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Donovan DC, Unterberg EA, Stangeby PC, Zamperini S, Auxier JD 2nd, Rudakov DL, Wampler WR, Zach M, Abrams T, Duran JD, Elder JD, and Neff AL
- Abstract
Triplet sets of replaceable graphite rod collector probes (CPs), each with collection surfaces on opposing faces and oriented normal to the magnetic field, were inserted at the outboard mid-plane of DIII-D to study divertor tungsten (W) transport in the Scrape-Off Layer (SOL). Each CP collects particles along field lines with different parallel sampling lengths (determined by the rod diameters and SOL transport) giving radial profiles from the main wall inward to R - R
sep ∼ 6 cm. The CPs were deployed in a first-of-a-kind experiment using two toroidal rings of distinguishable isotopically enriched, W-coated divertor tiles installed at 2 poloidal locations in the divertor. Post-mortem Rutherford backscatter spectrometry of the surface of the CPs provided areal density profiles of elemental W coverage. Higher W content was measured on the probe side facing along the field lines toward the inner target indicating higher concentration of W in the plasma upstream of the CP, even though the W-coated rings were in the outer target region of the divertor. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy validates the isotopic tracer technique through analysis of CPs exposed during L-mode discharges with the outer strike point on the isotopically enriched W coated-tile ring. The contribution from each divertor ring of W to the deposition profiles found on the mid-plane collector probes was able to be de-convoluted using a stable isotope mixing model. The results provided quantitative information on the W source and transport from specific poloidal locations within the lower divertor region.- Published
- 2018
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8. Review of current nuclear fallout codes.
- Author
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Auxier JP, Auxier JD 2nd, and Hall HL
- Subjects
- Explosions, Nuclear Warfare, Nuclear Weapons, Radiation Protection methods, Radiation Monitoring, Radiation Protection standards, Radioactive Fallout
- Abstract
The importance of developing a robust nuclear forensics program to combat the illicit use of nuclear material that may be used as an improvised nuclear device is widely accepted. In order to decrease the threat to public safety and improve governmental response, government agencies have developed fallout-analysis codes to predict the fallout particle size, dose, and dispersion and dispersion following a detonation. This paper will review the different codes that have been developed for predicting fallout from both chemical and nuclear weapons. This will decrease the response time required for the government to respond to the event., (Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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9. Gas chemical adsorption characterization of lanthanide hexafluoroacetylacetonates.
- Author
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Stratz SA, Jones SJ, Mullen AD, Mathuthu M, Oldham CJ, Auxier JD 2nd, and Hall HL
- Abstract
Newly-established adsorption enthalpy and entropy values of 12 lanthanide hexafluoroacetylacetonates, denoted Ln[hfac]
4 , along with the experimental and theoretical methodology used to obtain these values, are presented for the first time. The results of this work can be used in conjunction with theoretical modeling techniques to optimize a large-scale gas-phase separation experiment using isothermal chromatography. The results to date indicate average adsorption enthalpy and entropy values of the 12 Ln[hfac]4 complexes ranging from -33 to -139 kJ/mol K and -299 to -557 J/mol, respectively.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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10. Characterization and thermogravimetric analysis of lanthanide hexafluoroacetylacetone chelates.
- Author
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Shahbazi S, Stratz SA, Auxier JD 2nd, Hanson DE, Marsh ML, and Hall HL
- Abstract
This work reports the thermodynamic characterizations of organometallic species as a vehicle for the rapid separation of volatile nuclear fission products via gas chromatography due to differences in adsorption enthalpy. Because adsorption and sublimation thermodynamics are linearly correlated, there is considerable motivation to determine sublimation enthalpies. A method of isothermal thermogravimetric analysis, TGA-MS and melting point analysis are employed on thirteen lanthanide 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoroacetylacetone complexes to determine sublimation enthalpies. An empirical correlation is used to estimate adsorption enthalpies of lanthanide complexes on a quartz column from the sublimation data. Additionally, four chelates are characterized by SC-XRD, elemental analysis, FTIR and NMR.
- Published
- 2017
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11. Production of Synthetic Nuclear Melt Glass.
- Author
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Molgaard JJ, Auxier JD 2nd, Giminaro AV, Oldham CJ, Gill J, and Hall HL
- Subjects
- Freezing, Hot Temperature, Glass chemistry
- Abstract
Realistic surrogate nuclear debris is needed within the nuclear forensics community to test and validate post-detonation analysis techniques. Here we outline a novel process for producing bulk surface debris using a high temperature furnace. The material developed in this study is physically and chemically similar to trinitite (the melt glass produced by the first nuclear test). This synthetic nuclear melt glass is assumed to be similar to the vitrified material produced near the epicenter (ground zero) of any surface nuclear detonation in a desert environment. The process outlined here can be applied to produce other types of nuclear melt glass including that likely to be formed in an urban environment. This can be accomplished by simply modifying the precursor matrix to which this production process is applied. The melt glass produced in this study has been analyzed and compared to trinitite, revealing a comparable crystalline morphology, physical structure, void fraction, and chemical composition.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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12. Gas-phase detection of solid-state fission product complexes for post-detonation nuclear forensic analysis.
- Author
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Stratz SA, Jones SA, Oldham CJ, Mullen AD, Jones AV, Auxier JD 2nd, and Hall HL
- Abstract
This study presents the first known detection of fission products commonly found in post-detonation nuclear debris samples using solid sample introduction and a uniquely coupled gas chromatography inductively-coupled plasma time-of-flight mass spectrometer. Rare earth oxides were chemically altered to incorporate a ligand that enhances the volatility of the samples. These samples were injected (as solids) into the aforementioned instrument and detected for the first time. Repeatable results indicate the validity of the methodology, and this capability, when refined, will prove to be a valuable asset for rapid post-detonation nuclear forensic analysis.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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13. Thermodynamic analysis of volatile organometallic fission products.
- Author
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Auxier JD 2nd, Jordan JA, Stratz SA, Shahbazi S, Hanson DE, Cressy D, and Hall HL
- Abstract
The ability to perform rapid separations in a post nuclear weapon detonation scenario is an important aspect of national security. In the past, separations of fission products have been performed using solvent extraction, precipitation, etc. The focus of this work is to explore the feasibility of using thermochromatography, a technique largely employed in superheavy element chemistry, to expedite the separation of fission products from fuel components. A series of fission product complexes were synthesized and the thermodynamic parameters were measured using TGA/DSC methods. Once measured, these parameters were used to predict their retention times using thermochromatography.
- Published
- 2016
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14. Development of synthetic nuclear melt glass for forensic analysis.
- Author
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Molgaard JJ, Auxier JD 2nd, Giminaro AV, Oldham CJ, Cook MT, Young SA, and Hall HL
- Abstract
A method for producing synthetic debris similar to the melt glass produced by nuclear surface testing is demonstrated. Melt glass from the first nuclear weapon test (commonly referred to as trinitite) is used as the benchmark for this study. These surrogates can be used to simulate a variety of scenarios and will serve as a tool for developing and validating forensic analysis methods.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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