332 computational-physics "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "University of Kent" positions at NIST
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process control measurements, and utilizing appropriate statistical analyses to understand the assay results and their uncertainties. This process should lead to improvements in the comparability and
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Description Research focuses on the chemical and physical mechanisms of and in situ diagnostic development for thermal chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and atomic layer deposition (ALD), with applications in
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Poppendieck dustin.poppendieck@nist.gov 301.975.8423 Description This program is designed to provide the measurement science to support the development of industry-consensus standards and guides related
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301.975.6050 Jan Obrzut jan.obrzut@nist.gov 301.975.6845 Description As part of a collaborative NIST-wide program involving structural characterization, modeling, and high-throughput microwave measurement, we
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843.460.9894 Description The Analytical Chemistry Division has an ongoing program to improve the quality of analytical chemical measurements made in marine environmental research through analytical methods
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jessica.reiner@nist.gov 843.460.9894 Description The Analytical Chemistry Division has an ongoing program to improve the quality of analytical chemical measurements made in marine environmental research through
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, Riethmann T, Feistel R, Harvey AH: New Equations for the Sublimation Pressure and Melting Pressure of H2 O Ice. The Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data 40: 043103, 2011 Outcalt SL, Laesecke AR
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are essential for broad adoption of these methods, this postdoc would collaborate with a unique array of technology and informatics developers in the Genome in a Bottle Consortium to develop authoritative de novo
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include the development of novel polymeric mechanical testing devices, novel adhesion blister testing devices, development of high-throughput screening devices, informatics, and data base development. key
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measure structural changes as the agents go from their biologically active to their biologically inactive forms. As analytical methods become available, studies of the physical and chemical processes