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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: A two-dimensional model for metalorganic chemical vapor deposition of GaAs in a horizontal reactor is presented. The model is characterized by the following parameters: reactor geometry and operating pressure, thermal boundary conditions, ratio of reactants, chemical reactions, total inlet gas flow rate, as well as molecular weights, thermal conductivities, heat capacities, viscosities, and binary diffusion coefficients of the gas-phase species. Film thickness profiles predicted by the model are compared with those of GaAs thin films grown in the modeled reactor. Results obtained show a good agreement between the predictions and data over the entire length of the deposition region for the low pressure and high flow rate run. Attention is also given to the reactor design and growth conditions.
    Keywords: SOLID-STATE PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Crystal Growth (ISSN 0022-0248); 109; 241-245
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-06-02
    Description: NASA Glenn Research Center s Capillary Flow Experiments (CFE) program is developing experiment payloads to explore fluid interfaces in microgravity on the International Space Station. The information to be gained from the CFE is relevant to the design of fluid-bearing systems in which capillary forces predominate, for example in the passive positioning of liquids in spacecraft fuel tanks. To achieve the science goals of CFE, Glenn researchers constructed several types of experiment vessels. One type of vessel, known as the interior corner flow (ICF), will be used to determine important transients for low-gravity liquid management in a two-phase system. Each vessel has a cylindrical fluid reservoir connected to each end of the test chamber by internal transport tubes, each with a quarter-turn shutoff valve (see the following photograph). These multipiece vessels are made from polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) because of its excellent optical properties (i.e., the fluids can be observed easily in the vessel). Because of the complexity of certain vessels, the test chamber had to be manufactured in pieces and welded chemically. Some past experience with adhesive bonded plastic showed that the experiment fluid degraded the adhesive to the point of failure. Therefore, it was necessary to see if the fluid also degraded the chemically welded PMMA joints.
    Keywords: Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics
    Type: Research and Technology 2004; NASA/TM-2005-213419
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The source of the asymmetry in the dislocation morphology exhibited in the epitaxial growth of compound semiconductors on (100) was investigated. A thickness wedge of p- and n-type GaAs(0.95)P(0.05) was grown on GaAs by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition, and the effect of misorientation on the resolved shear stress for each slip system was calculated and eliminated as the source of the asymmetry. Another potential source of asymmetry, the thickness gradient, was also eliminated. Results show that the substrate misorientation and the thickness gradient do not significantly contribute to the asymmetry and that the dominant contributor to the asymmetry of misfit dislocations in the (001) epitaxial interface can be attributed to the differences in the Peierls barriers between the two types of dilocations in GaAsP/GaAs.
    Keywords: SOLID-STATE PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Applied Physics (ISSN 0021-8979); 68; 2739-274
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-10
    Description: The elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) transition temperature was measured for a Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) sounder filter wheel bearing in a vacuum tribometer. Conditions included both an 89 N (20 lb.) hard and soft load, 600 rpm, temperatures between 23 C (73 F) and 85 C (185 F), and a vacuum of approximately 1.3 x 10(exp -5) Pa. Elastohydrodynamic to mixed lubrication started to occur at approximately 70 C (158 F).
    Keywords: Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics
    Type: NASA/TM-2001-210670 , E-12576 , NAS 1.15:210670
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: A model is developed for lattice-mismatched epitaxial layers, which makes it possible to calculate both the equilibrium critical thickness as well as the kinetic rate of misfit accommodations. The technique for calculating the equilibrium critical thickness is similar to that of Matthews (1966) in that it uses the force balance approach and the Volterra description of the dislocation line. For the kinetic component of misfit accommodation, the model uses a dynamic frictional force. A simple criterion is proposed for determining whether the generation of misfit dislocations will be controlled by the equilibrium or the kinetic factors.
    Keywords: SOLID-STATE PHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Applied Physics (ISSN 0021-8979); 68; 2801-280
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-11
    Description: Aeropropulsion components, such as disks, blades, and shafts, are commonly subjected to multiaxial stress states at elevated temperatures. Experimental results from loadings as complex as those experienced in service are needed to help guide the development of accurate viscoplastic, multiaxial deformation models that can be used to improve the design of these components. During a recent study on multiaxial deformation (ref. 1) on a common aerospace material, Inconel 718, it was shown that the material in the aged state exhibits a strength differential effect (SDE), whereby the uniaxial compressive yield and subsequent flow behavior are significantly higher than those in uniaxial tension. Thus, this material cannot be described by a standard von Mises yield formulation. There have been other formulations postulated (ref. 2) that involve other combinations of the stress invariants, including the effect of hydrostatic stress. The question remained as to which invariants are necessary in the flow model. To capture the physical mechanisms occurring during deformation and reflect them in the plasticity formulation, researchers examined the flow of Inconel 718 under various amounts of hydrostatic stress to determine whether or not hydrostatic stress is needed in the formulation. Under NASA Grant NCC3-464, monitored by the NASA Glenn Research Center, a series of tensile tests were conducted at Case Western Reserve University on aged (precipitation hardened) Inconel 718 at 650 C and with superimposed hydrostatic pressure. Dogbone shaped tensile specimens (3-mm-diameter gauge by 16-mm gauge length) and cylindrical compression specimens (3-mm-diameter gauge by 6-mm gauge length) were strain gauged and loaded in a high-pressure testing apparatus. Hydrostatic pressures were obtained with argon and ranged from 210 to 630 MPa. The aged Inconel 718 showed a pronounced difference in the tension and compression yield strength (i.e., an SDE), as previously observed. Also, there were no significant effects of hydrostatic pressure on either the tensile and compressive yield strength (see the graph) or on the magnitude of the SDE. This behavior is not consistent with the pressure-dependent theory of the SDE, which postulates that the SDE is associated with pressure-dependent and/or internal friction dependent deformation associated with non-Schmid effects at the crystal level (refs. 3 and 4). Flow in Inconel 718 appears to be independent of hydrostatic pressure, suggesting that this invariant may be removed from the phenomenological constitutive model. As part of an ongoing effort to develop advanced constitutive models, Glenn s Life Prediction Branch coordinated this work with that of research on the multiaxial deformation behavior of Inconel 718 being conducted at Pennsylvania State University under NASA Grant NCC597.
    Keywords: Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics
    Type: Research and Technology 2002; NASA/TM-2003-211990
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