Turning industry visions into reality: Office of Industrial Technologies (OIT) Technology Partnerships brochure (open access)

Turning industry visions into reality: Office of Industrial Technologies (OIT) Technology Partnerships brochure

The Office of Industrial Technologies (OIT) is helping industry identify and pursue technology needs through public-private sector partnerships. Through its Industries of the Future strategy, OIT encourages energy-intensive industries to work together to create broad, industry-wide goals for the future, identify specific needs and priorities through industry-led roadmaps and form cooperative alliances to help attain those goals through technology partnerships. This brochure and six inserts serve as an introduction to potential partners as well as an update on the program opportunities for current partners.
Date: February 9, 1999
Creator: National Renewable Energy Laboratory (U.S.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemicals--Industry of the Future; Industrial Partnerships: Advancing Energy and Environmental Goals (open access)

Chemicals--Industry of the Future; Industrial Partnerships: Advancing Energy and Environmental Goals

This tri-fold brochure describe the partnering activities of the Office of Industrial Technologies' (OIT) Industries of the Future (IOF) for Chemicals. Information on what works for the Chemicals industry, examples of successful partnerships, and benefits of partnering with OIT are included.
Date: February 9, 2001
Creator: DOE Office of Industrial Technologies
System: The UNT Digital Library
Forest--Industry of the Future; Industrial Partnerships: Advancing Energy and Environmental Goals (open access)

Forest--Industry of the Future; Industrial Partnerships: Advancing Energy and Environmental Goals

This tri-fold brochure describe the partnering activities of the Office of Industrial Technologies' (OIT) Industries of the Future (IOF) for Forest Products. Information on what works for the Forest Products industry, examples of successful partnerships, and benefits of partnering with OIT are included.
Date: February 9, 2001
Creator: DOE Office of Industrial Technologies
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of Genomic Signatures of Pathogen Identification & Characterization (open access)

Design of Genomic Signatures of Pathogen Identification & Characterization

This chapter will address some of the many issues associated with the identification of signatures based on genomic DNA/RNA, which can be used to identify and characterize pathogens for biodefense and microbial forensic goals. For the purposes of this chapter, we define a signature as one or more strings of contiguous genomic DNA or RNA bases that are sufficient to identify a pathogenic target of interest at the desired resolution and which could be instantiated with particular detection chemistry on a particular platform. The target may be a whole organism, an individual functional mechanism (e.g., a toxin gene), or simply a nucleic acid indicative of the organism. The desired resolution will vary with each program's goals but could easily range from family to genus to species to strain to isolate. The resolution may not be taxonomically based but rather pan-mechanistic in nature: detecting virulence or antibiotic-resistance genes shared by multiple microbes. Entire industries exist around different detection chemistries and instrument platforms for identification of pathogens, and we will only briefly mention a few of the techniques that we have used at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) to support our biosecurity-related work since 2000. Most nucleic acid based detection chemistries involve …
Date: February 9, 2010
Creator: Slezak, T.; Gardner, S.; Allen, J.; Vitalis, E. & Jaing, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS PROTOCOLS (open access)

SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS PROTOCOLS

Radiological sampling and analyses are performed to collect data for a variety of specific reasons covering a wide range of projects. These activities include: Effluent monitoring; Environmental surveillance; Emergency response; Routine ambient monitoring; Background assessments; Nuclear license termination; Remediation; Deactivation and decommissioning (D&D); and Waste management. In this chapter, effluent monitoring and environmental surveillance programs at nuclear operating facilities and radiological sampling and analysis plans for remediation and D&D activities will be discussed.
Date: February 9, 2007
Creator: Jannik, T & P Fledderman, P
System: The UNT Digital Library