LAURELIN TECHNOLOGIES INC.
The forty-foot ISO container is not a marketing constraint. It is the geometric envelope every subsystem decision is sized against, including the direct-conversion package.

Compact by construction

← all notesApr 08, 2026 · Boruch Epstein · 1 min read · Architecture
Symmetric linear pulsed FRC architecture inside a forty-foot ISO container envelope.
Symmetric linear pulsed FRC inside the forty-foot envelope.

When the envelope is fixed, the architecture has to come to it. Coil families have to be specified at a length and bore that fit. Pulsed-power switching has to live inside the container or in a co-shipped module. Direct-conversion geometry has to recover useful electrical energy without expanding past the wall. The shielding integral has to close against the as-built dose target at the container skin.

An envelope-first architecture is harsher than a campus-scale architecture. There is no room for a balance-of-plant building, no room for a separate substation, no room to fix a problem by adding length. Every subsystem competes for the same volume.

The benefit is that what fits ships. A reactor that ships is a reactor that can be sited next to a load — a datacenter, a mine, a forward base — without civil works that take longer than the reactor itself to permit.

— End of document. Laurelin Technologies Inc. · San Francisco, CA · 2024–