LLNL researchers have developed a technology suite that includes several methods for detecting trace levels of illicit drugs even in mixtures. These methods can be used as a rapid screening test for incoming samples; for the samples that were determined to contain detectable amounts, they would undergo final verification using conventional laboratory analytical techniques.
Keywords
- (-) Show all (228)
- Additive Manufacturing (51)
- Instrumentation (40)
- Synthesis and Processing (19)
- Sensors (14)
- Diagnostics (12)
- Imaging Systems (9)
- Photoconductive Semiconductor Switches (PCSS) (9)
- 3D Printing (7)
- Electric Grid (7)
- Materials for Energy Products (7)
- Substrate Engraved Meta-Surface (SEMS) (7)
- Therapeutics (7)
- Carbon Utilization (6)
- Semiconductors (6)
- Compact Space Telescopes (5)
- Data Science (5)
- Optical Switches (5)
- Diode Lasers (4)
- Laser Materials Processing (4)
- Precision Optical Finishing (4)
Technology Portfolios
Image

LLNL’s novel approach utilizes a number of techniques to improve reconstruction accuracy:
- Better coding scheme-based techniques
- Hardware-assisted techniques
- Adaptive fringe projection techniques
- Multi-exposure based techniques
The method requires specific calibration procedures and control of the hardware, which is achieved through a digital twin…
Image

Versatile Cold Spray (VCS) enables deposition of brittle materials, such as thermoelectrics, magnets, and insulators, while retaining their functional properties. Materials can be deposited on substrates or arbitrary shapes with no requirement to match compositions. The VCS system is low cost, easily portable, and easy to use.
VCS has been developed in a collaboration between Lawrence Livermore…