151 structures-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"LGEF" positions at NIST in United States
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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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work is anticipated in the areas of microresonator design, engineering biology/biomanufacturing, dioxygen imaging in 3D cell culture, and structural biology methods development. Knowledge of microwave
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constituent elements, such as H, C, and N (for a general overview see Hoogerheide, D. P., Forsyth, V. T. & Brown, K. A. 2020. Neutron scattering for structural biology. Phys Today73, 36–42). In combination with
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are seeking researchers to contribute to the development and application of advanced measurement and automation techniques for exploring processing-structure-property-performance (PSPP) relationships in
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the fundamental structure-property and processing-property relations that will enable these materials to provide the necessary performance in the wide spectrum of applications envisioned. For example, quantitative
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allow reconstruction of challenging structural changes and complex regions like the MHC that are implicated in inherited diseases and are common in cancer genomes. Human genome benchmark assemblies
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to identify and explore deformation mechanisms and establish structure-property relationships for materials subjected to dynamic mechanical and thermal loading. key words Digital image correlation; Electrical
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examples include using finite element and classical atomistic modeling to study nanoindentation, and using density functional theory and semiempirical tight binding to study the deformation, band structure
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soft materials are sought especially for the following programmatic areas of interest: (1) Structural properties, dynamics and transport in thermoplastic, thermoset, and functional polymers; (2
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are a key for predicting reaction mechanisms and designing improved electrocatalysts, reactants, and electrolytes. The properties of electrochemical interfaces depend both on the surface structure and the