Chemistry
From the food we eat and the pharmaceuticals doctors prescribe to the paints and fuel additives we use, the NIST develops the technology, measurement methods and standards to address the needs of the chemical industry.
NIST and the Nobel: Dan Shechtman
Dan Shechtman received the 2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovering crystal structures previously unknown to science: quasicrystals.
Quasicrystals have transformed scientists’ understanding of how matter can arrange itself and opened scientists’ minds to a whole new class of materials that can exist. At NIST, Shechtman worked on identifying new materials that could be useful to industry, as part of NIST’s mission under the U.S. Department of Commerce. His study, sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, was designed to develop aluminum-transition metal alloys for aerospace applications. In the process, he made a discovery that revolutionized scientific thinking.
News and Updates
Publications
A status of temporal trends of persistent organic pollutants in Arctic biota
Frank Riget, Anders Bignert, Birgit Braune, Maria Dam, Rune Dietz, Marlene Evans, Norman Green, Helga Gunnlaugsdottir, Katrin S. Hoydal, John R. Kucklick, Robert Letcher, Derek Muir, Stacy S. Schuur, Christian Sonne, Stern Gary, Gregg Tomy, Katrin Vorkamp, Simon Wilson
Nanoscale chemical imaging of individual chemotherapeutic cytarabine-loaded liposomal nanocarriers
Wieland Karin, Georg Ramer, Victor U. Weiss, Guenter Allmaier, Bernhard Lendl, Andrea Centrone
Fully quantum calculation of the second and third virial coefficients of water and its isotopologues from ab initio potentials
Giovanni Garberoglio, Piotr Jankowski, Krzysztof Szalewicz, Allan H. Harvey
CCQM-K131 Low-Polarity Analytes in a Multicomponent Organic Solution: Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) in Acetonitrile
David L. Duewer, Lane C. Sander, Stephen A. Wise