-
, plasticizers, flame retardants, pigments, and fillers) and sorbed environmental contaminants (persistent organic pollutants, polyaromatic hydrocarbons, metals, and others) to plastic marine debris or in tissues
-
organizations including advanced analytical capabilities at NIST (e.g., LC-HRMS and LC-MS/MS, GC-MS) and a state-of-the art aquaculture research center at IMET. Potential research areas of interest include
-
The goal of metabolomics is to provide a detailed profile of the identity and concentration of metabolites in an organism at a particular point in time. Metabolomics is a relatively new discipline that
-
RAP opportunity at National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST Analytical Mass Spectrometry for Organics and Biomolecules Location Material Measurement Laboratory, Chemical Sciences
-
materials, cells, cell systems, and tissues—without the addition of exogenous labels. Recently, we have developed a broadband coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (BCARS) microscope system with unprecedented
-
to accelerate the discovery and optimization of advanced materials, as part of the Materials Genome Initiative (MGI, https://www.whitehouse.gov/mgi). These new algorithms will form part of a data analysis system
-
, physical chemistry, and mesoscale physics. We employ a set of rigorous top-down methods, ranging from analytical theory calculations to large-scale atomistic and density functional theory simulations. A
-
parameters. Where do these parameters come from and how precisely are they known? Are they connected to units defined by the International System of Units (SI)? At NIST we make sure they are. We combine
-
Activation and Deactivation of Cannabinoid Receptors by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy Screening NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. The endocannabinoid system
-
assess health in the marine environment. In marine non-model organisms, where little biochemical, genomic, or proteomic data exists, metabolomics permits chemical characterization of the biochemical