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ORNL wins nine R&D 100 Awards        

Posted at 1:58 pm December 21, 2017
By Oak Ridge National Laboratory Leave a Comment

A close-up look at the Open Port Sampling Interfaces for Mass Spectrometry, one of Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s seven 2016 R&D 100 Award winners. (Photo courtesy ORNL)

A close-up look at the Open Port Sampling Interfaces for Mass Spectrometry, one of Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s seven 2016 R&D 100 Award winners. (Photo courtesy ORNL)

 

Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have received nine R&D 100 Awards in recognition of their significant advancements in science and technology, a press release said. The honorees were recognized in November at the 55th annual R&D 100 Conference, sponsored by R&D Magazine.

The awards, known as the “Oscars of Invention,” honor innovative breakthroughs in materials science, biomedicine, consumer products, and more from academia, industry, and government-sponsored research agencies. This year’s nine honors bring ORNL’s total of R&D 100 awards to 210 since their inception in 1963, the press release said.

ORNL researchers were recognized for the following innovations:

ACMZ Cast Aluminum Alloys were developed by a team of researchers from ORNL with Fiat Chrysler Automobile U.S. and Nemak U.S.A.

ACMZ aluminum alloys are a new class of affordable, lightweight superalloys capable of withstanding temperatures of almost 100-degree Celsius more than current commercial alloys while providing exceptional thermomechanical performance and hot tear resistance.

Common commercial alloys soften rapidly at high temperatures, limiting their use in next-generation vehicles, while other alloys that can withstand elevated temperatures are cost prohibitive and difficult to cast. ACMZ alloys were developed using a suite of atomic-level characterization and computation tools, resulting in a strong, stable, and versatile material capable of withstanding the stressful conditions of next-generation high-efficiency combustion engines, the press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: 3D printing, ACE: The Ageless Aluminum Revolution, ACMZ aluminum alloys, ACMZ Cast Aluminum Alloys, additive manufacturing, Additively Printed High Performance Magnets, Adrian Sabau, Advanced Manufacturing Office, Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy, Ahmed Hassen, Alex Roschli, aluminum alloys, Ames Laboratory, Ames Laboratory Critical Materials Institute, Amit Shyam, Amy Elliot, BASF, Beth Armstrong, Big Area Additive Manufacturing, Bill Peter, Brian Milligan, Brian Post, Brian Sales, Bruce Moyer, Chad Duty, Charles Hawkins, Coating Solutions for Large-Format Additive Manufacturing, Craig Blue, Dana McClurg, David Nuttall, Development and Engineering Center, dfnWorks, Dfnworks: A Computational Suite for Flow and Transport in Subsurface Fracture Networks, DOE, Dongwon Shin, dropletProbe Surface Sampling System for Mass Spectrometry, Eck Industries, Edgar Lara-Curzio, EERE Advanced Manufacturing Office, EERE Office of Vehicle Technologie EERE Office of Fuel Cell Technologies, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Office, Eric Stromme, Fiat Chrysler Automobile U.S., Filler Materials for Welding and 3D Printing, Gabriel Veit, Gary Van Berkel, Hsin Wang, Hunter Henderson, J. Allen Haynes, James Morris, John Lindahl, Large-scale 3Dprinting, Lawrence Allard, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, lightweight superalloys, Ling Li, Lonnie Love, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Magnet Applications Incorporated, mass spectrometry, Michael Kesler, Michael McGuire, Momentum Technologies, Nadya Ally, Nancy Dudney, Nemak U.S.A., Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Office of Science, Office of Vehicle Technologies, Open Port Sampling Interfaces for Mass Spectrometry, Orlando Rios, ORNL, Oscars of Invention, Parans Paranthaman, Patrick Shower, Philip Maziasz, plastic carbon fiber compounds, plug-in electric vehicle batteries, Polynt Composites, R&D 100 Awards, R&D 100 Conference, R&D Magazine, rare earth bonded magnets, Safe Impact Resistant Electrolyte, SAFIRE), Scott Painter, SepQuant, Sergiy Kalnaus, Shibayan Roy, software suite, Stan David, TEAMM, Techmer engineered additive manufacturing materials, Techmer PM, Thomas Watkins, Tru-Design, U.S. Army Tank Automotive Research, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Rochester, Vilmos Kertesz, Vlastimil Kunc, Wallace Porter, welding, Xinghua Yu, Yanli Wang, Yukinori Yamamoto, Zach Simms, Zhili Feng

ORNL wins four federal lab awards for tech transfer

Posted at 12:02 pm February 9, 2017
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Open Port Sampling Interfaces for Mass Spectrometry, invented by Gary Van Berkel (left) and Vilmos Kertesz, features simplicity and elegance. (Photo by ORNL)

Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Open Port Sampling Interfaces for Mass Spectrometry, invented by Gary Van Berkel (left) and Vilmos Kertesz, features simplicity and elegance. (Photo by ORNL)

 

Four technologies developed at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have earned Federal Laboratory Consortium awards for excellence in technology transfer, a press release said.

The FLC is a network of more than 300 federal laboratories, facilities, and research centers dedicated to promoting and strengthening the commercialization of federal laboratory-developed technologies and expertise, the press release said.

The honors place ORNL in elite company, according to Donna Bialozor, FLC Awards committee chair, who wrote: “This year, your laboratory is one of a select number of recipients, an indication that your nominations were truly of the highest caliber.”

Mike Paulus, ORNL’s director of technology transfer, noted that it is especially significant that ORNL won four of the 19 FLC awards for excellence in technology transfer.

“With these latest awards, ORNL has now won 55 since 1986, reaffirming the importance and relevance of our research and development,” Paulus said.

ORNL earned recognition for the following technologies: [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: 908 Devices, Barry Goss, Christopher Brown, David Sims, Debasis Bera, DOE, Donna Bialozor, Edna Gergel, Eugene Cochran, Federal Laboratory Consortium, FLC, Gary Van Berkel, James Treadwell, Jennifer Caldwell, John Simpson, Jud Hightower, Kevin Knopp, Kevin Smith, Marc Filigenzi, Marc Filligenzi, mass spectrometry, Michael Ramsey, Mike Paulus, Miniature Ion Trap Mass Analyzer, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Office of Science, Open Port Sampling Interfaces for Mass Spectrometry, ORNL, Piranha Text Mining Tool, R&D 100 Award, Robert Patton, Samsung, SCIEX, Superhydrophobic Transparent Glass Thin Film Innovation, tech transfer, technology transfer, thin film coating, Thomas Potok, Tolga Aytug, Tom Covey, U.S. Department of Energy, UT-Battelle, Vilmos Kertesz, Vortex Analytics, William Whitten, Yoon Goo Lee

ORNL: New tool on horizon for surgeons treating cancer patients

Posted at 8:27 pm June 18, 2015
By Oak Ridge National Laboratory Leave a Comment

Droplet-based Surface Sampling Probe

Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s new droplet-based surface sampling probe speeds the process of analyzing a liver biopsy sample. (Photo courtesy ORNL)

 

Surgeons could know while their patients are still on the operating table if a tissue is cancerous, according to researchers from Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School.

In the journal Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, a team led by ORNL’s Vilmos Kertesz describes an automated droplet-based surface sampling probe that accomplishes in about 10 minutes what now routinely takes 20 to 30 minutes. Kertesz expects that time to be cut to four to five minutes soon. For this proof-of-concept demonstration, researchers rapidly profiled two hormones from human pituitary tissue.

“Instead of having to cut and mount tissue and wait for a trained pathologist to review the sample under a microscope, a technician might soon perform an equally conclusive test in the operating environment,” Kertesz said.

The new mass spectrometry-based technology provides an attractive alternative to the traditional method called immunohistochemistry, or IHC, which looks for specific protein biomarkers to make a diagnosis. Although the IHC approach provides a high degree of spatial recognition, it is time-consuming and limited by the quality and specificity of the antibody used to detect the protein. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Aaron Sharp, AB Sciex, Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, anitbody, biomarker, Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School, cancer, cancer patients, Daniel E. Ponton Fund of the Neurosciences, DFCI Pediatric Low-Grade Astrocytoma Program, DOE, droplet-based method, Gary Van Berkel, IHC, immunohistochemistry, Nathalie Y.R. Agar, National Institutes of Health, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Organic and Biological Mass Spectrometry Group, ORNL, pituitary tissue, protein biomarker, sampling probe, surgeon, tumors, U.S. Department of Energy, Vilmos Kertesz

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