Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
care vision would involve the merging of technological advancements in several threads computing, imaging, and information technology; health care practice; and health care technology. We are interested
-
-enhanced laser-based methods, optical spectroscopies (infrared, visible, ultraviolet, Raman, light scattering), gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy (GC/MS), high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC
-
, internal dynamics, materials physics and chemistry is of primary importance in determining the processing, performance and viability of advanced ceramic components such as relevant to solid oxide or hydrogen
-
parameter space new high throughput methods are also attractive both for the preparation and characterization of composite libraries, and also for the investigation of their performance properties. key words
-
such as dielectrics, ferroelectrics, multiferroics, electro-acoustics, and high-temperature superconductors. Broadband impedance measurements; Electronic materials; Impedance spectroscopy; Thin-film
-
applications (semiconductor industry, micro- and nano- electromechanical devices, etc.). Such advancement requires seamless integration of high-speed measurements onto basic AFM modes and realistic modeling
-
and calibration, radiation-hardness testing, personnel protection, radiation modification of materials, waste treatment, and high-energy computed tomography. These accelerator facilities afford
-
has an active effort in the development of electron microscopy methods for high spatial resolution materials characterization and has recently upgraded its aberration-corrected STEM with a high-speed
-
. These efforts will facilitate high throughput imaging to attack pressing metrological needs in the biological and medical community. This interdisciplinary research opportunity involves theoretical
-
.). This processing system can also be expanded to assist reviewers in their assessment of scientific manuscripts, which is in extremely high demand now. Thermodynamics Research Center (TRC) at NIST collects, stores