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Title: MEASUREMENT OF CHARGE TRAPPING CENTERS IN GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS

Authors:
Publication Date:
Research Org.:
Picatinny Arsenal, Dover, N.J.
OSTI Identifier:
4513198
Report Number(s):
BNL-10545; CONF-660919-1
NSA Number:
NSA-20-045913
DOE Contract Number:
AT(30-2)-GEN-16
Resource Type:
Technical Report
Resource Relation:
Other Information: CONF-660919-1. Orig. Receipt Date: 31-DEC-66
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Subject:
GEOLOGY, METEOROLOGY, AND MINERALOGY; Techniques and Equipment

Citation Formats

Townsend, P.D. MEASUREMENT OF CHARGE TRAPPING CENTERS IN GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS. United States: N. p., 1966. Web. doi:10.2172/4513198.
Townsend, P.D. MEASUREMENT OF CHARGE TRAPPING CENTERS IN GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS. United States. doi:10.2172/4513198.
Townsend, P.D. Thu . "MEASUREMENT OF CHARGE TRAPPING CENTERS IN GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS". United States. doi:10.2172/4513198. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/4513198.
@article{osti_4513198,
title = {MEASUREMENT OF CHARGE TRAPPING CENTERS IN GEOLOGICAL SPECIMENS},
author = {Townsend, P.D.},
abstractNote = {},
doi = {10.2172/4513198},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Thu Aug 11 00:00:00 EDT 1966},
month = {Thu Aug 11 00:00:00 EDT 1966}
}

Technical Report:

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  • Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) represents a technology aimed to reduce atmospheric loading of CO 2 from power plants and heavy industries by injecting it into deep geological formations, such as saline aquifers. A number of trapping mechanisms contribute to effective and secure storage of the injected CO 2 in supercritical fluid phase (scCO 2) in the formation over the long term. The primary trapping mechanisms are structural, residual, dissolution and mineralization. Knowledge gaps exist on how the heterogeneity of the formation manifested at all scales from the pore to the site scales affects trapping and parameterization of contributing mechanismsmore » in models. An experimental and modeling study was conducted to fill these knowledge gaps. Experimental investigation of fundamental processes and mechanisms in field settings is not possible as it is not feasible to fully characterize the geologic heterogeneity at all relevant scales and gathering data on migration, trapping and dissolution of scCO 2. Laboratory experiments using scCO 2 under ambient conditions are also not feasible as it is technically challenging and cost prohibitive to develop large, two- or three-dimensional test systems with controlled high pressures to keep the scCO 2 as a liquid. Hence, an innovative approach that used surrogate fluids in place of scCO 2 and formation brine in multi-scale, synthetic aquifers test systems ranging in scales from centimeter to meter scale developed used. New modeling algorithms were developed to capture the processes controlled by the formation heterogeneity, and they were tested using the data from the laboratory test systems. The results and findings are expected to contribute toward better conceptual models, future improvements to DOE numerical codes, more accurate assessment of storage capacities, and optimized placement strategies. This report presents the experimental and modeling methods and research results.« less
  • Within the research program funded through the Early Career Research Award we designed complexes of colloidal semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) and organic molecules in which the interfacial chemistry controls the electronic structure and dynamics of the excitonic state of the QD. The program included two main projects; (1) investigation of the mechanisms by which organic surfactants control the quantum confinement of excitonic charge carriers; and (2) development of models for electron transfer between QDs and adsorbed molecules as a function of interfacial chemistry. This project was extremely successful in that our achievements in those two areas addressed the great majoritymore » of questions we outlined in the original proposal and answered questions I did not think to ask in that original proposal. Our work led to the discovery of “exciton delocalizing ligands”, which change the electronic structure of colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals by altering, with small synthetic modifications to their surfaces, their most defining characteristic – the quantum confinement of their excited states. It also led to detailed, quantitative descriptions of how the surface chemistry of a QD dictates, thermodynamically and kinetically, the probability of exchange of electrons between the QD and a small molecule. We used two of the three major techniques in the proposal (transient photoluminescence and transient absorption). Electrogenerated chemiluminescence was also proposed, but was too technically difficult with these systems to be useful. Instead, NMR spectroscopy emerged as a major analytical tool in our studies. With the fundamental advancements we made with this project, we believe that we can design QDs to be the next great class of visible-light photocatalysts.« less