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. To facilitate recycling, there is a critical need to develop and refine advanced separation methodologies for common fiber blends, such as cotton, polyester, and elastane. Developing methodologies to recover and
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quantities for meaningful comparison. We lead the development of innovative standards and novel calibrations to achieve accuracy in localization microscopy [1, 2], with applications ranging from nanoplastic
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reactions related to energy transformation, advanced manufacturing, security, and the environment. Projects focus on the development and application of real-time, in-situ, advanced measurement capabilities
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to develop integrated microfluidic and optofluidic lab-on-a-chip devices that advance the measurement of physical, chemical, or biological phenomena in fluids at the macroscale. Application areas include
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well as updating their own model. Current logical frameworks are not flexible enough to manage the constant schema design changes that arise in healthcare and manufacturing systems. The eventual goal is to develop a
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semiconductors (InAs quantum dots, ErAs nanoparticles) and superconductors (WSi, MoSi, NbTiN) for single-photon detectors, all of which are developed at NIST. In addition to device processing and electrical and
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magnetometer, a high-field (7-T) superconducting quantum interference device magnetometer, a magnetic force microscope, Lorentz microscopy, and a newly developed magneto-optical indicator film apparatus
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spectral filters and superconducting detectors on a single chip will enable dramatic new functionality and scalability. We are developing these systems utilizing silicon photonic devices with superconducting
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prediction. In collaboration with NASA, NOAA, and the USGS, NIST develops technology to advance the calibration and characterization of ground- and space-based infrared, optical, and temperature sensors
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Obrzut jan.obrzut@nist.gov 301.975.6845 Christopher L. Soles christopher.soles@nist.gov 301.975.8087 Description This research is focused on the development and use of cellulose nanocrystals (CNC) in