Materials by Design | NIST The team then contributed data to the developing materials-innovation infrastructure, making it easier for anyone to design new coinage materials in the future “One of the big goals for the MGI is to make materials data more accessible and reusable,” says Campbell “I believe ours are the first computationally designed coinage materials ”
Reference Materials | NIST The Materials Measurement Science Division is actively developing new Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) for various materials measurement techniques For reference, we also list SRM products that have been discontinued
Software Security in Supply Chains: Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) Figure 2 - Illustrative Example of Software Life Cycle and Bill of Materials Assembly Line When applicable to a procurement action, federal agencies should require their suppliers of software products and services to provide access to machine-readable SBOMs in conformance with the EO and NTIA’s The Minimum Elements For a Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) by containing: Data fields
Infrared Optical Properties of Materials - National Institute of . . . materials needed for optical science research and industrial applications The interaction of light with matter is different at different wavelengths and the techniques to measure the optical properties differ based on the spectral region of interest This document addresses the techniques
Materials laboratories of the future for alloys, amorphous, and . . . Abstract In alignment with the Materials Genome Initiative and as the product of a workshop sponsored by the US National Science Foundation, we define a vision for materials laboratories of the future in alloys, amorphous materials, and composite materials; chart a roadmap for realizing this vision; identify technical bottlenecks and barriers to access; and propose pathways to equitable and
Materials | NIST Materials Genome Initiative (federal government wide) NIST MGI Standard Reference Materials Plastics, carbon nanotubes, high-strength alloys, artificial bone and joint replacements are just some of the emerging materials for which NIST develops testbeds, defines benchmarks, and develops formability measurements and models
Metrological Traceability: Frequently Asked Questions and NIST Policy That FAQ was deployed on the Web as Supplementary Materials Related to NIST Policy on Metrological Traceability Subsequently, Bob Watters (formerly Director of the Office of Reference Materials) maintained the website and replied to inquiries about it That page was unpublished in 2021
e-Learning Resources and Training Materials | NIST Return to Top NIST HB 44 Self-Study Course This self-study course covers the history, organization, and intended use of the 2009 edition of NIST Handbook 44 It also provides instruction on NIST Handbook 44 terminology, how to locate specific paragraphs, use of the NCWM final reports to understand the application of specific sections, and use of requirements in conjunction with the NIST
Artificial Intelligence for Materials Science (AIMS) 2026 As part of the JARVIS workshop series, the 7th Artificial Intelligence for Materials Science (AIMS) is a workshop aimed at getting together experts from industry, academia, and government to facilitate highly technical dialogue on the intersection of AI and materials science Some of the key research areas for materials AI that will be discussed at the meeting are: developing well-curated and