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Description The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is developing next-generation microfabricated magnetic devices and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents and sensors based
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communities impact all aspects of the world in which we live, and our relationships with surrounding microbial populations can have negative and positive impacts on the survival of both. The development
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interact, even strongly, with its environment or exist within densely integrated technologies. This project seeks to develop the metrological and fabrication framework necessary to understand and manipulate
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spin dynamic simulations are available to develop approaches compatible with industrial environments. Applications in topic areas can be broad reaching with examples (but not limited to): energy
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Sorbent materials are candidates for many industrial and sustainable development applications, including carbon capture, hydrogen and methane storage, gas separation and purification, and catalysis. However
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Fundamental questions in astrophysics and remote sensing rely on accurate radiometry. NIST is at the forefront of developing methods
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the applied to the fundamental, covering such areas as understanding the evolution of the microstructure of nitride semiconductors; development of nanotemplates for patterned growth of nanowires; optimization
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Description Research opportunities are available to develop and advance measurement methods required for current and future semiconductor manufacturing processes. Areas of particular interest include
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provides the thermochemical foundation for new noninvasive breath analysis techniques. Law enforcement applications include the development of breath analysis devices for the quantitative measurement of drug
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-optical-frequency combs and room-temperature multi-heterodyne detection are under development to enhance sensitivity across the region from 0.05 to 2 THz. In other research areas, chirped pulse THz