350 algorithm-development-"Prof"-"Washington-University-in-St"-"Prof"-"Prof" positions at NIST
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their processes. Smart machine tools assess and predict their health and the performance of their processes in real time to optimize production quality and yield. Proposals are welcome to develop
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on the development and application of high-resolution measurement methods to study fundamental problems with broad industrial impact in areas such as the service life prediction of polymeric materials. Recent projects
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microfluidic networks.Our goal is to develop systems that enable accurate, high-throughput, and dynamic measurement of materials in flow, which will, for example, improve the ability to specify composition and
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Description Euv lithography has become a primary manufacturing tool for the semiconductor industry, but new challenges in the development and characterization of EUV resists have emerged as the technology
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are currently being developed for a variety of ordered metallic systems. These composition dependent mobility descriptions can then be used in conjunction with multicomponent thermodynamic descriptions
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. In many application areas, materials development increasingly involves manipulating the local atomic order to optimize properties
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. This research will focus on developing advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and biomagnetic sensing techniques. Research topics
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focusing on investigating semiconductors, superconductors, topological materials, solar-cells, alloys, and other classes of functional materials. We are interested in developing large scale databases with
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development of sustainable aquaculture in the US. The research will be accomplished through the complementary capabilities or both organizations including advanced analytical capabilities at NIST (e.g., LC-HRMS
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applications, the sensitivity of cryogenic instrumentation far surpasses that of conventional room temperature electronics. Consequently, NIST has a large program to develop detectors that operate