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christina.hacker@nist.gov 301.975.2233 Description Incorporation of novel materials, such as molecular layers or 2D layers, into electronic paradigms enables transformative potential in applications ranging from
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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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, health care, and nuclear security applications. No instrument today directly measures all decays in a sample with sufficient energy resolution to uniquely identify each radionuclide. NIST is developing a 4
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kris.bertness@nist.gov 303.497.5069 Matt Brubaker matthew.brubaker@nist.gov 303 497 4167 Alexana Roshko roshko@nist.gov 303.497.5420 Description Semiconductor nanostructures offer new applications in areas
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position focuses on developing measurement methodologies to characterize mechanical properties and deformation behavior in advanced packaging applications. It involves: Design, application, and evaluation
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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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informatics developers in the public-private-academic Genome in a Bottle Consortium to develop methods to integrate short-, linked-, and long-read sequencing technologies to form benchmarks for somatic variant
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applications, the sensitivity of cryogenic instrumentation far surpasses that of conventional room temperature electronics. Consequently, NIST has a large program to develop detectors that operate
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using NMR to study gas separations and vapor-liquid equilibria for commercially important gas-phase mixtures. Proposals are welcome to consider a variety of nuclei (such as 1 H, 19 F, 13 C, and 31 P
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within an extended range (~ 10 kHz to 10 MHz). We have implemented several new approaches to solving key measurement issues. Both laser interferometry and PFM-based procedures for quantifying the “shape