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Technology Transfer Summaries
Bees replacing dogs as detectors of volatile organic compounds
Researchers at LANL began working with domestic honeybees in 2006 to detect explosive materials and narcotics. - 8/6/12
Increased durability and lifetime of fuel cell products
A revolutionary method of building a membrane electrode assembly (MEA) for PEM fuel cells allows LANL to offer significant cost reductions and performance enhancements necessary for mainstream applications. - 4/3/12
Digital content tool analyzes "gist" of text-based documents
LANL’s Digital Knowledge Discovery Team has created a suite of digital-content-analysis tools to gather, reduce, annotate, organize, synthesize, and visualize digital content. - 4/3/12
Reinvention of laboratory apparatus cuts costs
New apparatus that is designed to be inexpensive, reconfigurable, and adaptable to both surface and solution electrochemical experiments. - 4/3/12
Solving the energy overusage problem
Energy use and related thermal management issues are serious business concerns, but with EnergyFit LANL can significantly reduce heat output and maintain consistent electrical cost. - 4/3/12
Hazardous odorless gases detected by LANL's IntelliCLAD
This new class of smart coatings are non-odorous but release an odor in the presence of selected gases of concern, reducing contamination and alerting people when danger arises. - 4/3/12
Programers advance with Kip Ray Tracer
Kip is a high-performance ray tracing library that provides rapid rendering and compact code while using very little memory so large numbers of shapes can be used simultaneously. - 4/3/12
KIVA's modeling code increases engine efficiency and fuel economy
Through an advanced computational modeling code that accurately simulates the in-cylinder processes of engines, LANL scientists have addressed many costly issues. - 4/3/12
Deep-space communication improved with electromagnetic radiation antenna
New antenna has potential applications in RADAR, secure communications, ultra-long-range communications, oncology and astrophysics. - 4/3/12
Faster than the speed of sight: High-speed camera provides high sensitivity, frame rate
High-speed cameras becomes less effective at high speeds; MOXIE fixes that problem by simultaneously providing both the highest photographic and physical speeds. - 4/3/12
Environmentally safe refrigerators: 30% more efficient
Better than conventional pulse-tube refrigerator the multi-stage refrigerator maximizes efficiency, capacity, and cooling performance. - 4/3/12
Computer software mimics the brain's vision
LANL is studying how the brain sees, attempting to replicate it and use the technology to utilize widespread fast, accurate, robust computer vision systems. - 4/3/12
Detecting radio frequencies with a cost-effective portable system
LANL has developed the NextRF receiver, a cost-effective portable system for collecting, detecting, analyzing, and locating signals in real time. - 4/3/12
Watch out, influenza! LANL has a new antibody therapy
Flu may be less of a problem thanks to LANL's discovery of a highly specific, tightly binding antibody to the M2 influenza protein. - 4/3/12
Pathogen detection made easy with Biological Identification and Quantification (BIOIQ)
Inexpensive, hand-held detector identifies and quantifies any strain or species of microorganism in real-time. - 4/3/12
Explosives detected by laser-based technology
ODD-Ex will be a highly reliable “stand-off” explosives detector that can detect very small quantities of explosive molecules at considerable distances. - 4/3/12
Drug resistant infections beat by natural compound
Researchers have discovered and isolated a naturally occurring compound that is highly effective at eliminating growth of gram positive and gram negative bacteria in vitro. - 4/3/12
Biological threats stopped through QS molecules
Recent work has led to the identification of a sophisticated, bacterial intercellular communication system that relies on the production and release of the quorum sensing (QS) molecules. - 4/3/12
Quantum Enabled Security (QES): valuable information protected
In today’s world, the information passed through optical networks every second is as valuable as currency; however, the security is often inadequate for the threats against them. - 4/3/12
Rabbit fever research may help in producing effective vaccines
Studying the antimicrobial action of a probiotic bacteria against dangerous infection agent in order to consider it for further probiotic inclusion into treatment and prevention. - 4/3/12
Safer, more effective explosives made by LANL scientists
Traditional explosives are hazardous to use, so LANL scientists have created economical and environmentally friendly explosive as an alternative. - 4/3/12
Vacuum electronics are a thing of the past
Today’s high-power, high-frequency vacuum electronics is hampered and industry also demands better beam quality, a longer lifetime, and less maintenance. - 4/3/12
Better than X-Ray: MagViz probes chemicals faster for less
While x-ray methods sample density and nuclear properties, MagViz can directly probe chemical environments, providing complementary information. - 4/3/12
Optical biosensor detects protein toxins, biological pathogens
Detecting viruses, bacterial infections, protein toxins and tumor specific antigens for the early diagnosis of cancer. - 4/3/12
Monitoring, surveillance enhanced with Integrated Knowledge Engine (IKE)
IKE gives analysts and decision makers better comprehension of acquired evidence and increases quality of rapid-response decisions. - 4/3/12
Structural Health Monitoring (SHM): Wireless sensing network saves money
Expensive wire is one source of economic concern, so LANL engineers have developed a wireless sensing network for SHM. - 4/3/12
Upgraded Phase and Radical Motion in Electron Accelerators
PARMELA is a versatile code that transforms the beam through a user-specified linear accelerator and/or transport system. It is a mature, globally-distributed code. - 4/3/12
Security encryption problems solved
Using the laws of physics instead of math, LANL scientists have created the QKarD to share data that is safeguarded from eavesdroppers. - 4/3/12
Technologies awarded as top advances of the year
Uranium reagents, valveless laser processing, and speedy DNA analysis included in top 100 proven technological advances of the year. - 4/3/12
Breast cancer detection: accurate, safe, inexpensive, more comfortable
Accurate, non-damaging early detection is a key factor to reducing the number of deaths caused by breast cancer. - 4/3/12
Emulating human eyes in computer framework
The goal of RADIUS is to bring analysis capability in line with sensing capability and provide broad area search support. - 4/3/12
Hydraulic fractures traced by monitoring microseismic events
LANL scientists have figured out how to discriminate between microseismic events occurring during fractures, increasing efficiency during repairs. - 4/3/12
Fast, effective snap ring application
Installation and removal of internal snap rings is often a difficult, time-consuming process. In response, LANL mechanical technicians have developed the Ratcheting Interior Snap Ring Tool designed specifically for internal snap ring applications. - 4/3/12
Genetic studies help save valuable species
LANL's proposed work will help research and preserve the cultured animal species. - 4/3/12
Detection breakthrough of fatal neuro-degenerative diseases
A sensitive immunoassay, termed SOFIA, can detect PrPSc from the brains of clinical scrapie-infected sheep. With PMCA, it can detect PrPSc in blood. - 4/3/12
Neutron radiation detector, safe new alternative
Gamma/neutron discrimination discerns between radiation emitted by nuclear materials and naturally occurring gamma radiation emitted by benign cargos. - 4/3/12
Test-systems for Avian Influenza detection on the Republic of Kazakhstan
Greater surveillance and monitoring of avian influenza with worldwide application in identifying virulent strains. - 4/3/12
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More Like This
Other News from LANL
- HIV immunity study could pave way for vaccine development Two scientists are among the team recently funded to explore ways to create the precise immune factors needed for effective vaccines against HIV.July 17, 2012
- New research contract links LANL and robotics firm Miniature robots are about to get an intelligence boost from a new partnership, linking LANL and ReconRobotics, Inc.July 11, 2012
- World record neutron beam at Los Alamos National Laboratory Scientists have created the largest neutron beam ever made by a short-pulse laser, breaking a world record.July 10, 2012
- Artificial molecules that switch "handedness" at light-speed Researchers create the first artificial molecules whose chirality can be rapidly switched from a right-handed to a left-handed orientation with a beam of light.July 10, 2012
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