China's Most-Favored-Nation Status: U.S. Wheat Exports (open access)

China's Most-Favored-Nation Status: U.S. Wheat Exports

By June 3, 1994, President Clinton must determine whether or not to recommend to Congress a one-year extension of his Jackson-Vanik waiver authority, in effect extending most-favored-nation (MFN)[1] trading status to China for anothe year. The media are reporting that the President has not yet decided whether he will ask for an extension, and that he may also be deliberating over whether or not to attach conditions to a recommendation for approval.
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Ek, Carl & Epstein, Susan B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 19, Number 38, Pages 3983-4041, May 24, 1994 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 19, Number 38, Pages 3983-4041, May 24, 1994

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Determination of operating limits for radionuclides for a proposed landfill at Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant (open access)

Determination of operating limits for radionuclides for a proposed landfill at Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant

The operating limits for radionuclides in sanitary and industrial wastes were determined for a proposed landfill at the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant (PGDP), Kentucky. These limits, which may be very small but nonzero, are not mandated by law or regulation but are needed for rational operation. The approach was based on analyses of the potential contamination of groundwater at the plant boundary and the potential exposure to radioactivity of an intruder at the landfill after closure. The groundwater analysis includes (1) a source model describing the disposal of waste and the release of radionuclides from waste to the groundwater, (2) site-specific groundwater flow and contaminant transport calculations, and (3) calculations of operating limits from the dose limit and conversion factors. The intruder analysis includes pathways through ingestion of contaminated vegetables and soil, external exposure to contaminated soil, and inhalation of suspended activity from contaminated soil particles. In both analyses, a limit on annual effective dose equivalent of 4 mrem (0.04 mSv) was adopted. The intended application of the results is to refine the radiological monitoring standards employed by the PGDP Health Physics personnel to determine what constitutes radioactive wastes, with concurrence of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Wang, J. C.; Lee, D. W.; Ketelle, R. H.; Lee, R. R. & Kocher, D. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low temperature magnetism in YbPtBi by {sup 170}Yb Moessbauer spectroscopy (open access)

Low temperature magnetism in YbPtBi by {sup 170}Yb Moessbauer spectroscopy

The authors report on {sup 170}Yb Moessbauer spectroscopy data in the cubic fcc alloy YbPtBi, in the temperature range 0.06--30 K. The zero field spectra show a two component structure above 1.5 K, which can be analyzed as due to 85% of Yb{sup 3+} ions at a site with cubic symmetry and 15% at a site with non-cubic symmetry. Below 0.3 K, the spectra are resolved and can also be interpreted in terms of two sites, but with a dominant non-cubic site ({approximately} 60%) with Yb ions bearing small magnetic moments. The spectra with a large applied magnetic field give information on the Yb{sup 3+} C.E.F. level scheme and on the exchange interaction. The relation of the Moessbauer data with the results of {micro}SR measurements is discussed.
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Le Bras, G.; Bonville, P.; Hodges, J.A.; Imbert, P. & Canfield, P.C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heating and current drive systems for TPX (open access)

Heating and current drive systems for TPX

The heating and current drive (H and CD) system proposed for the TPX tokamak will consist of ion cyclotron, neutral beam, and lower hybrid systems. It will have 17.5 MW of installed H and CD power initially, and can be upgraded to 45 MW. It will be used to explore advanced confinement and fully current-driven plasma regimes with pulse lengths of up to 1,000 s.
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Swain, D.; Goranson, P.; Halle, A. von; Bernabei, S. & Greenough, N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Innovative coke oven gas cleaning system for retrofit applications. Volume 1, Public design report (open access)

Innovative coke oven gas cleaning system for retrofit applications. Volume 1, Public design report

This Public Design Report provides, in a single document, available nonproprietary design -information for the ``Innovative Coke Oven Gas Cleaning System for Retrofit Applications`` Demonstration Project at Bethlehem Steel Corporation`s Sparrows Point, Maryland coke oven by-product facilities. This project demonstrates, for the first time in the United States, the feasibility of integrating four commercially available technologies (processes) for cleaning coke oven gas. The four technologies are: Secondary Gas Cooling, Hydrogen Sulfide and Ammonia Removal, Hydrogen Sulfide and Ammonia Recovery, and Ammonia Destruction and Sulfur Recovery. In addition to the design aspects, the history of the project and the role of the US Department of,Energy are briefly discussed. Actual plant capital and projected operating costs are also presented. An overview of the integration (retrofit) of the processes into the existing plant is presented and is followed by detailed non-proprietary descriptions of the four technologies and their overall effect on reducing the emissions of ammonia, sulfur, and other pollutants from coke oven gas. Narrative process descriptions, simplified process flow diagrams, input/output stream data, operating conditions, catalyst and chemical requirements, and utility requirements are given for each unit. Plant startup provisions, environmental considerations and control monitoring, and safety considerations are also addressed for …
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molecular Design Concept for Multi-Kilovolt X-Ray Amplification (open access)

Molecular Design Concept for Multi-Kilovolt X-Ray Amplification

The goal of this program is the construction of an X-ray laser in the multi-kilovolt regime which can serve as a vital enabling technology in the broad and fundamental field of materials science. Experimental findings indicate that an entirely new technique for amplification at X-ray wavelengths is feasible. This method involves the combination of (a) a recently discovered mode of multiphoton coupling to molecules which efficiently yields core excited ions, (b) a new channeled mode of propagation for spatial organization, and (c) an ultrahigh brightness subpicosecond laser technology. The concept of molecular X-ray laser design, which involves matching the conditions of excitation to the molecular structure, enables the inner-shell excitation to be selectively achieved. Basically, the molecular approach enables the copious generation of a highly excited species to occur rapidly in an environment characteristic of dense cold matter, a situation exceptionally conducive to X-ray amplification. High energy efficiency and wavelength tunability also appear as intrinsic features of this method. Experimental data concerning the study of five cases [Xe(N), Xe(M), Xe(L), Kr(M), and Kr(L)], spanning-spectrally from {approximately} 80 eV to {approximately} 5 keV, have (1) established the important role of cluster formation, (2) verified the scaling of this phenomenon into the …
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Rhodes, Charles K.; McPherson, Armon & Boyer, Keith
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
TMACS Test Procedure TP011: Panalarm Interface (open access)

TMACS Test Procedure TP011: Panalarm Interface

The TMACS Software Test Procedures translate the project`s acceptance criteria into test steps. The TMACS Test Plan (WHC-SD-WM-TP-148) is fulfilled when all Test Cases are approved. This Test Procedure tests the TMACS Panalarm Interface functions.
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Seghers, R. & Washburn, S. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
TMACS Test Procedure TP007: System administration (open access)

TMACS Test Procedure TP007: System administration

The TMACS Software Project Test Procedures translate the project`s acceptance criteria into test steps. Software releases are certified when the affected Test Procedures are successfully performed and the customers authorize installation of these changes. This Test Procedure tests the TMACS System Administration functions.
Date: May 24, 1994
Creator: Scanlan, P.; Washburn, S. & Seghers, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library