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Released: 27-Jan-1999 12:00 AM EST
Making Buildings more Resistant to Insult
Sandia National Laboratories

When disaster strikes, people evacuate, because structures that normally protect us -- buildings, bridges, dams, and tunnels -- are often the most dangerous places to be during catastrophes.Sandia Labs wants people to feel compelled to run into buildings rather than out of them during emergencies.

Released: 2-Feb-1999 12:00 AM EST
Sandia News Tips for Feb 1999
Sandia National Laboratories

1- Nano-patterns to foster future structures; 2- architectural surety program aimed at terrorism and catastrophes; 3- micro-guardians safeguard nuclear weapons.

Released: 4-Feb-1999 12:00 AM EST
Robocasting: New Way to Fabricate Ceramics
Sandia National Laboratories

An engineer at Sandia has developed a way to fabricate ceramics that requires no molds or machining. Called robocasting, it relies on robotics for computer-controlled deposition of ceramic slurries -- mixtures of ceramic powder, water, and chemical modifers

Released: 25-Feb-1999 12:00 AM EST
Mechanism of Protein Misfolding Captured in Computer Simulation
Sandia National Laboratories

Protein misfolding is a cause of Alzheimer's,"mad cow" disease, and could figure in biowarfare. Now the first successful computer model of one protein interfering with the folding of another has been created at Sandia. The model provides insights into the mechanisms by which incomplete folds occur.

Released: 3-Mar-1999 12:00 AM EST
Decontamination Foam May Be Best First Response in a Chem-Bio Attack
Sandia National Laboratories

Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories have created a foam that begins neutralizing both chemical and biological agents in minutes. Because it is not harmful to people, it could be dispensed on the disaster scene immediately, even before casualties are evacuated.

Released: 4-Mar-1999 12:00 AM EST
Device To Safely Examine Insides of Package Bombs
Sandia National Laboratories

So that police will not have to routinely evacuate an area and blow up stray packages, Sandia has developed a technique to determine if they contain bombs. A remotely controlled, motorized cart will roll an X-ray device to the scene.

Released: 19-Mar-1999 12:00 AM EST
Self-Assembled Nanospheres
Sandia National Laboratories

Self-assembling nanospheres that fit inside each other like Russian dolls are one form of a broad range of nanospheres created in the past 12 months at Sandia National Laboratories. The unprecedented control, which has medical, industrial and military potential, is presented in this week's issue of the journal Nature.

Released: 30-Mar-1999 12:00 AM EST
Sandia's tiny acoustic wave sensors will detect minute traces of dangerous chemicals
Sandia National Laboratories

Minute acoustic wave chemical sensors being developed at the U.S. Department of Energy's Sandia National Laboratories will in the next two years be part of a hand-held chemical detection system, commonly called "chem lab on a chip," and other integrated microsensor systems.

Released: 7-Apr-1999 12:00 AM EDT
"Demystifying" Ceramics Manufacturing
Sandia National Laboratories

Sandia National Laboratories, five commercial ceramic manufacturers and Los Alamos National Laboratory are making ceramic history by taking the "art" out of ceramics production and replacing it with science, resulting in better products and lower production costs.

Released: 27-Apr-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Discovery of Protein Shape and Function Link
Sandia National Laboratories

A discovery linking the shape of a unit called the heme in a protein to protein function may prove useful in a range of scientific advances, including finding cures for diseases and cleaning up pollutants, says the discoverer, a physicist at Sandia National Laboratories.


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