- Advanced Power Source Engineering Facility
- Combustion Research Facility (CRF)
- Design, Evaluation, and Test Technology Facility
- Distributed Energy Technology Laboratory (DETL)
- Engineering Sciences Experimental Facilities (ESEF)
- Explosive Components Facility (ECF)
Engineering Sciences Experimental Facilities
The Engineering Sciences Experimental Facilities (ESEF) complex contains several independent laboratories for experiments and advanced diagnostics in the fields of thermodynamics, heat transfer, fluid mechanics, multiphase flows, adhesion, surface rheology, material characterization, X-Ray CT, and material decomposition. Our experimental research activities are focused on both advanced diagnostics and fundamental experiments. We seek to improve our understanding of phenomena in areas of fluid flow, heat transfer, and aerodynamics. We develop state-of-the-art diagnostic techniques for application to benchmark experiments aimed at understanding the fundamental nature of complex systems. This understanding is used to develop and validate the theoretical and computer models necessary for system design and analysis.
Find out more about the Engineering Sciences Experimental Facilities (ESEF).
User liaison
Jeffery Payne
Sandia National Laboratories
PO Box 5800, MS 0825
Albuquerque, NM 87185
jlpayne@sandia.gov
(505) 844-4524
Advanced Power Source Engineering Facility
The Power Sources Technology Group (PSTG) provides comprehensive capabilities in power source research, design, engineering, characterization, evaluation, and testing. Supporting PSTG is a staff of more than 80 scientists, engineers, and technicians with backgrounds in chemistry, electrochemistry, metallurgy, chemical engineering, materials science, engineering, and physics.
State-of-the-art capabilities are available to perform research, design, development, and production for a variety of primary, reserve or rechargeable technologies. Facilities (over 60,000 sq. ft.) include:
- Wet chemistry laboratories
- Analytical and diagnostic laboratories
- Extensive dry room capabilities: >10,000 sq. ft. that is agile/reconfigurable to meet dynamic customer needs
- Environmental battery test facility
- Production/prototyping facilities for lithium-ion, lithium primary, and thermal batteries
- Battery Abuse Testing Laboratory (BATLab)
- Energy Storage Analysis Laboratory (ESAL)
- World-class non-destructive analysis tools
- Additive manufacturing and 3D printing battery hardware
- Access to comprehensive environmental testing, modeling & simulation, materials synthesis, analysis, and diagnostic equipment across the laboratory
Core business areas for PSTG include:
- Thermal battery research, design, development, and prototyping
- Production and stockpile support for power sources
- Lithium primary battery research, design, development, and prototyping
- Transportation energy storage
- Grid scale energy storage solutions
- Power sources testing and evaluation
- Battery safety research and development
- Advanced power source concepts
- Advanced diagnostic tool development
Availability
This facility is available to support applications that can benefit from its unique capabilities. To make arrangements, contact the user liaison.
User liaison
Christopher Orendorff
Sandia National Laboratories
PO Box 5800, MS-0613
Albuquerque, NM 87185
corendo@sandia.gov
Center for Security Systems
The Center for Security Systems is a fully integrated research-to-development-to-application center that provides systems and technologies that understand, identify, and solve the nation’s security problems. The Center includes extensive development and testing facilities for all aspects of physical security and robotics, including the following:
- Sensor
- Video
- Image Processing
- Alarm communications and display
- Entry control
- Contraband detection
- Insider protection technologies
- Barriers and activated delay
- Modeling and simulation
- Robotics
Find out more about the Center for Security Systems.
Availability
This facility is available to support any application that can benefit from its unique capabilities. However, because of the sensitivity of government security applications, some facilities and information may not be available to non-U.S. citizens. To make arrangements to use the Center for Security Systems, contact the user liaison.
User liaison
Chelsea Chavez
Sandia National Laboratories
PO Box 5800, MS 1002
Albuquerque, NM 87185
cmchav@sandia.gov
Phone: (505) 284-5007
Mobile: (505) 328-0918
Combustion Research Facility
For more than 35 years The Combustion Research Facility (CRF) has served as a national and international leader in combustion science and technology. The need for a thorough and basic understating of combustion and combustion-related processes lies at the heart of the CRF research, which ranges from studying chemical reactions in a flame to developing an instrument for the remote detection of gas leaks. Users and partners have access to state-of-the-art facilities and an expert staff that brings with them enhanced knowledge and new approaches to combustion and combustion related research.
Find out more about the Combustion Research Facility.
Availability
These facilities are available to support applications that can benefit from their unique capabilities. To find out more about opportunities to engage this facility in your work, contact the user liaison listed below.
User liaison
Sarah Allendorf
Sandia National Laboratories
PO Box 969, MS 9054
Livermore, CA 94551-0969
swallen@sandia.gov
(925) 294-3379
Design, Evaluation, and Test Technology Facility
The mission of this facility, composed of numerous specialized facilities, is to simulate a wide range of environments for component and system testing. The environments can range from normal in-use environments to extreme accident conditions. In addition, a wide array of diagnostic equipment, such as nondestructive testing, photometric and optics, and electronic data acquisition, is maintained and developed to support testing and research activities. Tests as diverse as characterization of printed circuit board solder connection strength to full-scale impact testing of transport vehicles have been accommodated.
User liaison
Charles D. Croessmann
Sandia National Laboratories
PO Box 5800, MS 0557
Albuquerque, NM 87185
cdcroes@sandia.gov
(505) 845-9517
Distributed Energy Technology Laboratory
The Distributed Energy Technologies Laboratory (DETL) is a power electronics testing facility capable of evaluating distributed energy resources (DER) connected the utility grid. The DETL has evaluation stations for residential and commercial DER devices that can be configured as 240V single phase and 480V, 3-phase systems. The DETL includes a motor control center microgrid with state-of-the-art synchronous generation controls coupled with enhanced utility support power electronic devices and controllable loads for microgrid assessments. These advanced support systems include photovoltaic inverters, microturbines, fuel cells, reciprocating engine-generators, and energy storage systems. New capabilities include interoperability and cyber security vulnerability assessments as well as interactions among various technologies.
DETL provides expertise and test support to perform the following functions to existing and emerging utility interconnection standards (IEEE P1547/P1547.1) and evaluations include:- Grid-connected performance evaluations (e.g., efficiency, power quality, voltage and frequency ride-through, voltage and frequency regulation function, and DER response to abnormal grid conditions)
- Off-grid (stand-alone or microgrid) performance evaluations (e.g., transient response, compatibility with various load types, voltage and frequency regulations)
- Specialized tests (cyber security, unintentional islanding, interoperability and interactions of multiple sources on a common grid and microgrid, surge tolerance and mitigation strategies)
User liaison
Sigifredo Gonzales
Sandia National Laboratories
PO Box 5800, MS 1033
Albuquerque, NM 87185
sgonza@sandia.gov
(505) 845-8942
Explosive Components Facility
The 98,000-square-foot Explosive Components Facility (ECF) is a state-of-the-art facility that provides a full-range of chemical, material, and performance analysis capabilities for energetic materials and explosive components:
- advanced design of energetic devices and subsystems
- optical ordnance
- energetic materials
- testing of explosives and explosive components and subsystems
- advanced explosives diagnostics
- reliability analyses
- failure modes evaluation
- safety evaluation
User liaison
Leanna Minier
lminier@sandia.gov
Sandia National Laboratories
P.O. Box 5800, MS-1455
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185-1455
phone: (505) 844-2352
FAX: (505) 844-5924
Microsystems Engineering, Science and Applications (MESA)
Sandia's primary mission is ensuring the U.S. nuclear arsenal is safe, secure, reliable, and can fully support the nation's deterrence policy. Employing only the most advanced and failsafe technologies to fulfill our responsibilities as stewards of the nuclear stockpile, Sandia is responsible for the development, design and maintenance of approximately 90 percent of the several thousand parts found in any given weapon system, including radiation-hardened microelectronics.
In support of this mission, Sandia has a significant role in advancing the state-of-the-art in microsystems research and development and in introducing microsystems into the nuclear stockpile. Microsystems incorporate radiation-hardened microelectronics, and other advanced components such as micromachines, optoelectronics, and photonic systems. The MESA Complex is designed to integrate the numerous scientific disciplines necessary to produce functional, robust, integrated microsystems and represents the center of Sandia's investment in microsystems research, development, and prototyping activities. This suite of facilities encompasses approximately 400,000 square feet and includes cleanroom facilities, laboratories, and offices.
Find out more about the MESA Complex.
Availability
These facilities are available to support applications that can benefit from their unique capabilities. To find out more about opportunities to engage this facility in your work, contact the user liaison listed below.
User liaison
Dede Valerio
Sandia National Laboratories
P.O. Box 5800, MS 1083
Albuquerque, NM 87185-1074
Phone: (505) 844-8571
dlvaler@sandia.gov
Explosive Technology Group
The Explosive Technology Group (ETG) provides diverse technical expertise and an agile, integrated approach to solve complex challenges for all classes of energetic materials (EM) and explosive components. The Explosive Technology Group has a plethora of unique technical capabilities that enable an engineering science approach to component design and development, and probe the science underlying EM performance, safety, and reliability in normal and abnormal environments.
Our customer and partner base includes the National Nuclear Security Administration,, other Department of Energy partners, and numerous Work-for-Other customers including Department of Defense , academia, and industry.
Available Resources:
- Four specialized buildings housing laboratories and facilities with state-of-the-art equipment, diagnostics, and multiple indoor/outdoor testing sites that support a broad spectrum of engineering and science operations utilizing milligrams to 5,000 pounds of EM.
- Integrated multi-disciplinary teams of more than 100 experienced engineers, chemists, physicists, and modelers.
- Complete suite of chemical/thermal/physical/mechanical characterization tools; ultrafast and advanced diagnostics; optics and cameras for performance measurements; inert and EM machining; rapid prototype lab for specialized hardware and explosive component device manufacture; and specialized tools/diagnostics to meet validation and testing needs.
Resources enable multiple key technologies:
- Extensive expertise in research, development, and application of energetic materials
- Conventional and advanced explosive component design, development, evaluation, and modeling
- Unique combinations of physical/chemical characterization and testing of EM for advancing energetic material science and technologies
- Model development for design engineers and understanding the physics of EM in static and dynamic conditions
- Miniaturization of explosive components
- Aging and failure modes analysis
- Safety and reliability assessments
- Development of advanced EM detection technologies
- Quantitative analysis of EM performance in abnormal environments
- Ballistic testing and analysis
- Ability to integrate multiple technologies to address new areas of interest