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attracted considerable attention for potential application in nanoscale devices, including beyond-CMOS electronics, quantum computers, chemical sensors, photodetectors, etc. Prospective advantages over
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RAP opportunity at National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST Channel Sounding and Radio Frequency Propagation Location Communications Technology Laboratory, Radio Frequency Technology Division opportunity location 50.67.22.C1019 Boulder, CO NIST only participates in the February...
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, radiation, corrosives, and high stress, as well as low and high temperatures. We support some of society’s most critical and vulnerable reliability problems, including condition assessment of our nation’s
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driven flows; Combustion; Computational fluid dynamics; Fire modeling; Heat transfer; Large eddy simulation; Numerical combustion; Thermal radiation; Turbulent flows; Eligibility Citizenship: Open to U.S
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@nist.gov 303.497.7948 Description We are currently performing high-resolution optical spectroscopy on self-assembled semiconductor quantum dots. Our technique employs narrow linewidth tunable lasers and
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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
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, Office of Data and Informatics opportunity location 50.64.10.B8248 Gaithersburg, MD 20899 NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Advisers name email phone June W Lau june.lau@nist.gov
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procedures must be developed. The new hybrid AM processing methods will be instrumented and characterized using a variety of experimental techniques and computational models. key words additive manufacturing
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ferroelectrics, thermoelectrics, and nanomaterials. Computational modeling approaches include high-throughput computation (see jarvis.nist.gov), predictive tight-binding analysis (see github.com/usnistgov
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solids (and associated kinetics and thermodynamics) and relevant heat/mass transport properties. To address this need, the NIST Fire Research Division has been developing experimental and analytical tools