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MEDIA CONTACT:
Fred Strohl
Office of Communications
(865) 574-4165
ORNL
teams earn four awards of excellence
OAK RIDGE,
Tenn., April 16, 2001 - Four awards for excellence in technology
transfer have been earned by the Department of Energy's (DOE) Oak
Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) from the Federal Laboratory Consortium.
Thirty-five
teams from DOE's national laboratories are being honored with these
awards. Rules stipulate national labs can earn a maximum of four
in one year, which is ORNL's total.
These awards
recognize national laboratory employees who have accomplished outstanding
work in the process of transferring a technology developed by a
federal laboratory to the commercial marketplace.
The awards
were presented in the following categories:
=DF RABiTS
=81 Substrate for Second-Generation Superconducting Wire: Researchers
developed a method for fabricating the wire by employing the process
of rolling-assisted biaxial textured substrates, or RABiTS=81. The
process conditions the substrate upon which superconductors can
be formed and provides the underlying foundation for the wire. RABiTS(TM)
enables the superconducting materials to have a high degree of grain
alignment in all directions along the wire, allowing for more efficient
current flow through the superconductor.
Members
of the RABiTS=81 team are Parens Paranthaman, Donald Kroeger, David
Christen, Amit Goyal, Ron Feenstra, Fred List, Dominic Lee, David
Beach, Eliot Specht, David Norton and Bob Hawsey.
=DF High-Thermal
Conductivity Graphite Foam. This graphite material has the ability
to conduct or remove heat through a heat transfer process. It has
applications for the automotive and electronics industries. Team
members include James Klett, Ashok Choudhury and Timothy Burchell.
=DF Microcantilevers:
Microcantilever sensors represent a paradigm shift in sensing concepts.
The technical work conducted at ORNL is widely regarded as the preeminent
and foundational work in microcantilever sensor technology.
Team members
are Thomas Thundat, Robert Warmack, Charles Britton and Grady Vanderhoofuen.
=DF Polymer
Boot Heater to improve assembly-line ergonomics and production:
This technology allows for more efficient time use by heating joints
on an assembly line with less physical work by individuals.
Team members
are Vinod Sikka, Craig Blue, Barry Whitson and Madu Chatterjee.
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*Fred Strohl Office of Communications
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P.O. Box 2008 Oak Ridge, Tenn. 37831-6266
Telephone: 865-574-4165 FAX: 865-241-6776 Internet: strohlhf@ornl.gov
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