Magnetic nanoparticles leap from lab bench to breast cancer clinical trials
Dale Huber has been working on the challenge of making iron-based nanoparticles the exact same size for 15 years. Now, the Sandia materials chemist and his long-term collaborators at Imagion Biosystems will use these magnetic nanoparticles for their first breast cancer clinical trial later this year.
Can you take the heat?
Nothing quite compares to the diverse environments in which Sandia’s nuclear weapons systems and components must survive. Testing these components and ensuring their reliability in the harshest environments is the job of the people and tools at the non-destructive environmental testing lab.
The power of community boosts acequia resilience
The power of community boosts acequia resilience
Biologically inspired membrane purges most greenhouse gases from coal-fired smoke
Biologically inspired membrane purges most greenhouse gases from coal-fired smoke
Black engineering awards conference honors 5 Sandians
Black engineering awards conference honors 5 Sandians
The guns of shock physics
The guns of shock physics at Sandia have been used to explore everything from the properties of new materials to the 2003 Columbia shuttle disaster.
Road, rail, boat
Sandia transport triathlon puts spent nuclear fuel to the test
Seeing stars
Sandia team designs a new way for additive manufacturing
AISES honors Sandians
AISES honors Sandians
Sandia women honored
Three Sandia engineers recognized by Society of Women Engineers for contributions to advancing women in STEM