Texas Attorney General Opinion: JM-309 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: JM-309

Document issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Jim Mattox, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Whether foreign nation admitted to the United States under an F-1 "student" visa be charged a higher tuition rate at a state university than that charged to Texas residents or residents of another state
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: JM-310 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: JM-310

Document issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Jim Mattox, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Whether a county clerk may purchase an interest in a title company and serve as its part-time manager.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
SPR-8 multi-mega watt space power system (MMW-SPS) concept description and concept refinement plan (open access)

SPR-8 multi-mega watt space power system (MMW-SPS) concept description and concept refinement plan

The SPR-8 MMW-SPS concept can satisfy both continuous and burst mode power requirements. At 10 MWe continuous mode power for 5 yr and 75 MWe burst mode power for 200 sec, the SPR-8 concept can power radar systems for detecting ballistic missile launchings and for discriminating between warheads and decoys. When enemy action is detected the SPR-8 MMW-SPS can power a rail gun, free electron laser, or particle beam and destroy the missile in the boost phase or warheads in space flight. The SPR-8 concept is based on the SPR-6 system (ref. 1) for providing continuous mode power. The system uses a fast UN-fueled, lithium-cooled reactor. Heat is transferred from the lithium coolant to potassium in a shell and tube heat exchanger-boiler. Potassium vapor is expanded through a turbine in a saturated Rankine cycle. After passing through the turbine the potassium is condensed in a compact heat exchanger by transferring heat to the radiator working fluid. An advanced radiator design is envisioned. Much work will be required in radiator technology to achieve low mass and plan form. For completeness of the SPR-8 system concept, a charged liquid droplet radiator is assumed but other types should be considered. Mechanical pumps are …
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Walter, C.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
(Performance evaluation of fabric bag filters on a bench-scale coal gasifier) (open access)

(Performance evaluation of fabric bag filters on a bench-scale coal gasifier)

The objective of this proposed work is to demonstrate the operational and economic feasibility of using high-temperature ceramic filters for particulate control in a variety of coal gasification power generating systems.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics modeling of tandem mirror devices with high-field test cell inserts (open access)

Physics modeling of tandem mirror devices with high-field test cell inserts

Recently developed plasma physics models of tandem mirror operation with a high-field technology test cell insert in the central cell are described in detail. These models have been incorporated in the TMRBAR tandem mirror reactor physics code. Results of a benchmark case for the code models against previous analysis of the MFTF - ..cap alpha.. /sup +/ T configuration are given. A brief users guide to the new TMRBAR with the test cell models is also presented. Some description of the applications of the models to MFTF - ..cap alpha.. /sup +/ T and FPD - II + T configurations is made. References are given to separate reports on these studies.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Fenstermacher, M. E. & Campbell, R. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Concept for the intrinsic dielectric strength of electrical insulation materials (open access)

Concept for the intrinsic dielectric strength of electrical insulation materials

A concept is described for a possible definition of the intrinsic dielectric strength of insulating materials, which can be considered as a fundamental material property similar to other material properties, such as Young's modulus, index of refraction, and expansion coefficients. The events leading to the recognition of this property are reported, and the property is defined. This intrinsic dielectric strength concept should facilitate interpretation of results from accelerated and/or natural aging programs intended to predict electrical insulation service life of encapsulants in photovoltaic modules. As a practical application, this new concept enabled a possible explanation of the cause of failures in buried high-voltage cables with polyethylene insulation, and a possible explanation of the causes of electrical trees in polyethylene; these also are described.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Cuddihy, E. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scoping studies of vapor behavior during a severe accident in a metal-fueled reactor (open access)

Scoping studies of vapor behavior during a severe accident in a metal-fueled reactor

Scoping calculations have been performed examining the consequences of fuel melting and pin failures for a reactivity-insertion type accident in a sodium-cooled, pool-type reactor fueled with a metal alloy fuel. The principal gas and vapor species released are shown to be Xe, Cs,and bond sodium contained within the fuel porosity. Fuel vapor pressure is insignificant, and there is no energetic fuel-coolant interaction for the conditions considered. Condensation of sodium vapor as it expands into the upper sodium pool in a jet mixing regime may occur as rapidly as the vapor emerges from the disrupted core (although reactor-material experiments are needed to confirm these high condensation rates). If the predictions of rapid direct-contact condensation can be verified experimentally for the sodium system, the implication is that the ability of vapor expansion to perform appreciable work on the system is largely eliminated. Furthermore, the ability of an expanding vapor bubble to transport fuel and fission product species to the cover gas region where they may be released to the containment is also largely eliminated. The radionuclide species except for fission gas are largely retained within the core and sodium pool.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Spencer, B.W. & Marchaterre, J.F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical aspects of magnetic helicity (open access)

Theoretical aspects of magnetic helicity

None
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Hammer, J. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress in inertial fusion at LLNL (open access)

Progress in inertial fusion at LLNL

Experiments at LLNL using the 10 TW Novette laser have led to significantly increased understanding of laser/plasma coupling. Tests using 1.06 ..mu..m, 0.53 ..mu..m and 0.26 ..mu..m light have shown increased light absorption, increased efficiency of conversion to x-rays, and decreased production of suprathermal electrons as the wavelength of the incident light decreases. The data indicate that stimulated Raman scattering is the source of the excessive hot electrons and that the effect can be controlled by the proper selection of laser frequency and target material. The control of these effects has led to achievement of higher inertial fusion target compressions and to production of the first laboratory x-ray laser.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Storm, E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flow characteristics of the Cascade granular blanket (open access)

Flow characteristics of the Cascade granular blanket

Analysis of a single granule on a rotating cone shows that for the 35/sup 0/ half-angle, double-cone-shaped Cascade chamber, blanket granules will stay against the chamber wall if the rotational speed is 50 rpm or greater. The granules move axially down the wall with a slight (5-mm or less) sinusoidal oscillation in the circumferential direction. Granule chute-flow experiments confirm that two-layered flow can be obtained when the chute is inclined slightly above the granular material angle of repose. The top surface layer is thin and fast moving (supercritical flow). A thick bottom layer moves more slowly (subcritical flow controlled at the exit) with a velocity that increases with distance from the bottom of the chute. This is a desirable velocity profile because in the Cascade chamber about one-third of the fusion energy is deposited in the form of x rays and fusion-fuel-pellet debris in the top surface (inner-radius) layer.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Pitts, J.H. & Walton, O.R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of the cascade inertial-confinement-fusion reactor (open access)

Development of the cascade inertial-confinement-fusion reactor

Cascade, originally conceived as a football-shaped, steel-walled reactor containing a Li/sub 2/O granule blanket, is now envisaged as a double-cone-shaped reactor containing a two-layered (three-zone) flowing blanket of BeO and LiAlO/sub 2/ granules. Average blanket exit temperature is 1670/sup 0/K and gross plant efficiency (net thermal conversion efficiency) using a Brayton cycle is 55%. The reactor has a low-activation SiC-tiled wall. It rotates at 50 rpm, and the granules are transported to the top of the heat exchanger using their peripheral speed; no conveyors or lifts are required. The granules return to the reactor by gravity. After considerable analysis and experimentation, we continue to regard Cascade as a promising reactor concept with the advantages of safety, efficiency, and low activation.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Pitts, J.H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pulse Star inertial confinement fusion reactor (open access)

Pulse Star inertial confinement fusion reactor

Pulse Star is a pool-type ICF reactor that emphasizes low cost and high safety levels. The reactor consists of a vacuum chamber (belljar) submerged in a compact liquid metal (Li/sub 17/Pb/sub 83/ or lithium) pool which also contains the heat exchangers and liquid metal pumps. The shielding efficiency of the liquid metal pool is high enough to allow hands-on maintenance of (removed) pumps and heat exchangers. Liquid metal is allowed to spray through the 5.5 m radius belljar at a controlled rate, but is prohibited from the target region by a 4 m radius mesh first wall. The wetted first wall absorbs the fusion x-rays and debris while the spray region absorbs the fusion neutrons. The mesh allows vaporized liquid metal to blow through to the spray region where it can quickly cool and condense. Preliminary calculations show that a 2 m thick first wall could handle the mechanical (support, buckling, and x-ray-induced hoop) loads. Wetting and gas flow issues are in an initial investigation stage.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: Blink, J. A. & Hogan, W. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Performance evaluation of fabric bag filters on a bench-scale coal gasifier]. Quarterly technical progress report, January 1, 1985--December 31, 1985 (open access)

[Performance evaluation of fabric bag filters on a bench-scale coal gasifier]. Quarterly technical progress report, January 1, 1985--December 31, 1985

The objective of this proposed work is to demonstrate the operational and economic feasibility of using high-temperature ceramic filters for particulate control in a variety of coal gasification power generating systems.
Date: April 15, 1985
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library