Texas Register, Volume 20, Number 55, Pages 5445-5538, July 25, 1995 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 20, Number 55, Pages 5445-5538, July 25, 1995

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 Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents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: July 25, 1995
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO95-046 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO95-046

Letter opinion 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, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Whether article III, section 3, of the Texas Constitution requires state senators to redraw lots to determine lengths of their terms after a federal court order changing district boundaries is entered (ID-34680)
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Third quarterly report for TRP Flip Chip Attach (open access)

Third quarterly report for TRP Flip Chip Attach

This report contains two separate reports for the Flip Chip Attach project. The first report is Yorktown`s report as per their deliverable 1.6 on the rheological properties of the material. Since the paste dispensing process is preformed at shear rates above 100/s and in the low Reynolds`s number, i.e., creeping flow regime, the authors have designed viscometry measurements to simulate the response under these conditions. The study determines simple parameters and criteria to obtain paste properties that may achieve high resolution dispensing. They compare and contrast their material with ``the best in the business``. They set forth a criteria for optimum screenability and demonstrate the high resolution dispensability of Yorktown pastes. Three Yorktown and two of the best commercial pastes are reported in this study. The second report documents a designed screening experiment to identify significant bonding variables. The bonding experiments were performed with the electrically conductive adhesive paste developed by Ravi, Saraf, and Sambucetti of the IBM Research Center at Yorktown Heights, NY. Eight bonding variables were incorporated in a two level factorial design with 16 trials. Palladium-nickel alloy plated copper coupons were used to simulate chips and substrates for this investigation. The shear tested chips were examined for …
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Short-term energy outlook, Annual supplement 1995 (open access)

Short-term energy outlook, Annual supplement 1995

This supplement is published once a year as a complement to the Short- Term Energy Outlook, Quarterly Projections. The purpose of the Supplement is to review the accuracy of the forecasts published in the Outlook, make comparisons with other independent energy forecasts, and examine current energy topics that affect the forecasts. Chap. 2 analyzes the response of the US petroleum industry to the recent four Federal environmental rules on motor gasoline. Chap. 3 compares the EIA base or mid case energy projections for 1995 and 1996 (as published in the first quarter 1995 Outlook) with recent projections made by four other major forecasting groups. Chap. 4 evaluates the overall accuracy. Chap. 5 presents the methology used in the Short- Term Integrated Forecasting Model for oxygenate supply/demand balances. Chap. 6 reports theoretical and empirical results from a study of non-transportation energy demand by sector. The empirical analysis involves the short-run energy demand in the residential, commercial, industrial, and electrical utility sectors in US.
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiological monitoring plan for the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant: Surface water (open access)

Radiological monitoring plan for the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant: Surface water

National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Permit TN0002968, issued April 28, 1995, requires that the Y-12 Plant Radiological Monitoring Plan for surface water be modified (Part 111-H). These modifications shall consist of expanding the plan to include storm water monitoring and an assessment of alpha, beta, and gamma emitters. In addition, a meeting was held with personnel from the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC) on May 4, 1995. In this meeting, TDEC personnel provided guidance to Y-12 Plant personnel in regard to the contents of the modified plan. This report contains a revised plan incorporating the permit requirements and guidance provided by TDEC personnel. In addition, modifications were made to address future requirements of the new regulation for radiation protection of the public and the environment in regards to surface water monitoring.
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Whisker reinforced glass ceramic. Quarterly progress report No. 3, March 28, 1995--June 27, 1995 (open access)

Whisker reinforced glass ceramic. Quarterly progress report No. 3, March 28, 1995--June 27, 1995

Goal is to to investigate physical properties of an in-situ whisker- reinforced glass ceramic material and to produce prototype heat exchanger tubes for testing in a coal combustion environment. Problems in casting and cooling the glass were encountered and dealt with. The slow cooled glass melt powder will be used to prepare the bar samples for mechanical tests.
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: Pickrell, G.R. & Brown, J.J. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Turbulent equipartitions in two dimensional drift convection (open access)

Turbulent equipartitions in two dimensional drift convection

Unlike the thermodynamic equipartition of energy in conservative systems, turbulent equipartitions (TEP) describe strongly non-equilibrium systems such as turbulent plasmas. In turbulent systems, energy is no longer a good invariant, but one can utilize the conservation of other quantities, such as adiabatic invariants, frozen-in magnetic flux, entropy, or combination thereof, in order to derive new, turbulent quasi-equilibria. These TEP equilibria assume various forms, but in general they sustain spatially inhomogeneous distributions of the usual thermodynamic quantities such as density or temperature. This mechanism explains the effects of particle and energy pinch in tokamaks. The analysis of the relaxed states caused by turbulent mixing is based on the existence of Lagrangian invariants (quantities constant along fluid-particle or other orbits). A turbulent equipartition corresponds to the spatially uniform distribution of relevant Lagrangian invariants. The existence of such turbulent equilibria is demonstrated in the simple model of two dimensional electrostatically turbulent plasma in an inhomogeneous magnetic field. The turbulence is prescribed, and the turbulent transport is assumed to be much stronger than the classical collisional transport. The simplicity of the model makes it possible to derive the equations describing the relaxation to the TEP state in several limits.
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: Isichenko, M. B. & Yankov, V. V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a video-based slurry sensor for on-line ash analysis. Technical progress report, third quarter, April 1, 1995--June 30, 1995 (open access)

Development of a video-based slurry sensor for on-line ash analysis. Technical progress report, third quarter, April 1, 1995--June 30, 1995

Automatic control of fine coal cleaning circuits has traditionally been limited by the lack of sensors for on-line ash analysis. Although several nuclear-based analyzers are available, none have seen widespread acceptance. This is largely due to the fact that nuclear sensors are expensive and tend to be influenced by changes in seam type and pyrite content Recently, researchers at VPI&SU have developed an optical sensor for phosphate analysis. The sensor uses image processing technology to analyze video images of phosphate ore. It is currently being used by Texas gulf for off-line analysis of dry flotation concentrates. The primary advantages of optical sensors over nuclear sensors are that they are significantly cheaper, are not subject to measurement variations due to changes in high atomic number minerals, are inherently safer and require no special radiation permitting. The purpose of this work is to apply the knowledge gained in the development of an optical phosphate analyzer to the development of an on-line ash analyzer for fine coal slurries. During the past quarter, a new prototype sample presentation system for the optical analyzer has been developed. This new approach appears to solve the problems encountered with previous prototypes. A qualitative comparison of the images …
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: Adel, G. T. & Luttrell, G. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Local positioning system (open access)

Local positioning system

Navigation systems have been vital to transportation ever since man took to the air and sea. Early navigation systems utilized the sextant to navigate by starlight as well as the magnetic needle compass. As electronics and communication technologies improved, inertial navigation systems were developed for use in ships and missile delivery. These systems consisted of electronic compasses, gyro-compasses, accelerometers, and various other sensors. Recently, systems such as LORAN and the Global Positioning System (GPS) have utilized the properties of radio wave propagation to triangulate position. The Local Positioning System (LPS), described in this paper, is an implementation of a limited inertial navigation system designed to be used on a bicycle. LPS displays a cyclist`s current position relative to a starting location. This information is displayed in Cartesian-like coordinates. To accomplish this, LPS relies upon two sensors, an electronic compass sensor and a distance sensor. The compass sensor provides directional information while the distance sensor provides the distance traveled. This information yields a distance vector for each point in time which when summed produces the cyclist`s current position. LPS is microprocessor controlled and is designed for a range of less than 90 miles.
Date: July 25, 1995
Creator: Kyker, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library