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Applied Chemicals and Materials Division

Our division, based in Boulder, CO, characterizes the properties and structures of industrially important fluids and materials. Our work provides a diverse stakeholder community with innovative measurements and models and dissemination of critically evaluated data, leading to improved processes and better products, as well as new and improved standards.

Welcome to the Applied Chemicals and Materials Division (ACMD)

The Applied Chemicals and Materials Division, located at the NIST Campus in Boulder, Colorado, focuses on metrology and standards needs in the fields of science and engineering for materials and fluids. Our materials efforts include development of fundamental techniques, measurements, and models for the analysis of materials structure and the reliability of materials.  Our fluids work in organic and inorganic systems emphasizes the characterization of complex mixtures and the thermophysical properties of important fluids.  We develop state-of-the-art tools to capture and interpret property data and evaluate data uncertainty using our deep understanding of experimental and modeling methods. Our work serves a broad stakeholder community of industrial, governmental, and academic partners.

Through world class publications and new measurement methods, we serve our customers in fields ranging from fatigue and fracture to electron and atomic force microscopy, to fluid analysis, density, and viscosity.  We manufacture important NIST Standard Reference Materials and maintain heavily-used NIST Standard Reference Databases—with significance ranging from the assessment of the strength of steel girders to the design and operation of chemical plants.  STEM education opportunities are made available for students at high school levels and above, as well as research opportunities for post-graduate scientists and guest researchers from around the world.  Our expertise in materials and fluid characterization is used to provide measurements and consultation to other government agencies, supporting their efforts to investigate accidents, maintain and repair our infrastructure, and provide reliable forensic data to the judicial system.

News and Updates

Projects and Programs

Additive Manufacturing Fatigue and Fracture

Ongoing
Metal additive manufacturing (AM) is not used in fatigue and fracture critical applications despite industrial need. The goal of this project is to enable confident use of metal AM in critical applications through: Advancing metrological practice for AM-specific performance metrics encompassing the

Scanning Probe Microscopy for Advanced Materials and Processes

Ongoing
With a nanometer-sharp probe capable of delicate interaction with a limitless array of materials, SPM methods such as Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) can aid in characterizing a wide range of materials in diverse environments from vacuum to biological serums. The atomic force microscope is operated in

Renewable Energy and Fuels

Ongoing
Fuel volatility and chemical characterization. We specialize in the Advanced Distillation Curve (ADC) method , developed at NIST, which is a powerful tool for the measurement of distillation curves to characterize complex fluids. We have applied this to simple hydrocarbons, gasolines, diesel fuels

X-Ray Computed Microtomography

Ongoing
Impact XCT gives information that cannot be obtained any other way from opaque materials and objects. It gives us an “eye inside” so that features, of a certain size range, can be seen. The Division’s XCT instruments can reconstruct 3D images with a voxel size down to about 0.5 micrometers, at

Awards

Press Coverage

Contacts

DIVISION CHIEF

DIVISION OFFICE MANAGER