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Microscopic and Spectroscopic Characterization in Engineered Polymeric Materials NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. The purpose of this research is to develop advanced
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relative to community goals; and interdisciplinary research and modeling, data visualization, and programming (software architecture, web application development). Buildings; Infrastructure systems; Social
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. This research opportunity focuses on developing and improving the state-of-the-art methods for analysis, modeling, and simulation
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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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, providing a direct measurement of an organism’s phenotype. At the Hollings Marine Laboratory (HML) in Charleston, SC, we employ metabolomics (and plan to incorporate lipidomics) as a useful technique to
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. This postdoctoral position focuses on developing high-fidelity Finite Element Method (FEM) simulations to characterize mechanical properties and deformation behavior in advanced packaging applications. It involves
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301 975 4364 Kathryn L. Beers kathryn.beers@nist.gov 202 578 8353 Aaron A Burkey aaron.burkey@nist.gov 301.975.4769 Sara Orski sara.orski@nist.gov 301 975 4671 Description Development of quantitative
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crystallography and spectroscopy are fundamental and imperative in the investigation and development of condensed matter sciences. We will widely use these methods to study the crystal structures of novel materials
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materials, (2) the preferred binding sites of adsorbate species in nanoporous solids and predicted experimental signals (e.g., infrared spectra), and (3) the development of DFT-based force field models
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information. Our group performs research and development to extend the accuracy, wavelength range, power range, robustness, and portability of radiometric standards. We use advanced nanfabrication techniques