Energy
NIST develops the testing, measurements, and reference materials needed to ensure the quality of energy-related products and services and ensure fairness in the marketplace.
Standards for the Smart Grid, energy efficient lighting, photovoltaics, net-zero-energy buildings, software for "smart" building, these a few of the many NIST research areas related to energy use and conservation.
TAKING MEASURE BLOG: In Pursuit of Plasma Power: Hot Stuff, Snowstorms, and Starry Skies
Do we really need hot stuff? I’m not talking about Donna Summer’s disco hit of 1979 or global warming. I’m not talking about anything so lukewarm as the surface of our sun—a mere 6,000 kelvins. I don’t even mean something as hot as 1,000,000 kelvins. No, the kind of hot stuff I’m talking about is closer to an unimaginable 200,000,000 kelvins! What possible use could we have for something so hot?
It should be of no surprise to anyone that we have an insatiable appetite for energy, and that appetite is only going to grow. But how are we going to feed this need for energy? Continue reading Yuri Ralchenko's blog post.
News
Events
Publications
Preliminary Models for Viscosity, Thermal Conductivity, and Surface Tension of Pure Fluid Constituents of Selected Diesel Surrogate Fuels
Marcia L. Huber
Transactive Energy Application Landscape Scenarios
David G. Holmberg, David Hardin, Ronald Melton, Ron Cunningham, Steve Widergren
Crystal Chemistry and X-ray Diffraction Patterns for Co(NixZn1-x)Nb4O12 (x=0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8)
Winnie K. Wong-Ng, Guangyao Liu, James A. Kaduk
Thermoelectric properties of the LaCoO3-LaCrO3 system using a high-throughput combinatorial approach
Winnie K. Wong-Ng, Kevin R. Talley, Nam T. Nguyen, Joshua B. Martin, Yanliang Zhang, Sara C. Barron, Xueyan Song