Patents Assigned to Sandia
  • Patent number: 7003405
    Abstract: An inverse analysis method for characterizing diffusion of vapor from an underground source of volatile contaminant using data taken by an in-situ sensor. The method uses one-dimensional solutions to the diffusion equation in Cartesian, cylindrical, or spherical coordinates for isotropic and homogenous media. If the effective vapor diffusion coefficient is known, then the distance from the source to the in-situ sensor can be estimated by comparing the shape of the predicted time-dependent vapor concentration response curve to the measured response curve. Alternatively, if the source distance is known, then the effective vapor diffusion coefficient can be estimated using the same inverse analysis method. A triangulation technique can be used with multiple sensors to locate the source in two or three dimensions. The in-situ sensor can contain one or more chemiresistor elements housed in a waterproof enclosure with a gas permeable membrane.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 25, 2002
    Date of Patent: February 21, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventor: Clifford K. Ho
  • Patent number: 7001849
    Abstract: A method for treatment of the surface of a CdZnTe (CZT) crystal that provides a native dielectric coating to reduce surface leakage currents and thereby, improve the resolution of instruments incorporating detectors using CZT crystals. A two step process is disclosed, etching the surface of a CZT crystal with a solution of the conventional bromine/methanol etch treatment, and after attachment of electrical contacts, passivating the CZT crystal surface with a solution of 10 w/o NH4F and 10 w/o H2O2 in water.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 19, 2002
    Date of Patent: February 21, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia National Laboratories
    Inventors: Gomez W. Wright, Ralph B. James, Arnold Burger, Douglas A. Chinn
  • Patent number: 6998598
    Abstract: A modular optical detector system. The detector system is designed to detect the presence of molecules or molecular species by inducing fluorescence with exciting radiation and detecting the emitted fluorescence. Because the system is capable of accurately detecting and measuring picomolar concentrations it is ideally suited for use with microchemical analysis systems generally and capillary chromatographic systems in particular. By employing a modular design, the detector system provides both the ability to replace various elements of the detector system without requiring extensive realignment or recalibration of the components as well as minimal user interaction with the system. In addition, the modular concept provides for the use and addition of a wide variety of components, including optical elements (lenses and filters), light sources, and detection means, to fit particular needs.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 4, 2003
    Date of Patent: February 14, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia National Labroatories
    Inventors: Brent A. Horn, Ronald F. Renzi
  • Patent number: 6994826
    Abstract: A method for controlling fluid flow at junctions in microchannel systems. Control of fluid flow is accomplished generally by providing increased resistance to electric-field and pressure-driven flow in the form of regions of reduced effective cross-sectional area within the microchannels and proximate a channel junction. By controlling these flows in the region of a microchannel junction it is possible to eliminate sample dispersion and cross contamination and inject well-defined volumes of fluid from one channel to another.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 26, 2000
    Date of Patent: February 7, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia National Laboratories
    Inventors: Ernest F. Hasselbrink, Jr., Jason E. Rehm, Phillip H. Paul, Don W. Arnold
  • Patent number: 6996292
    Abstract: A staring imaging system inputs a 2D spatial image containing multi-frequency spectral information. This image is encoded in one dimension of the image with a cyclic Hadamarid S-matrix. The resulting image is detecting with a spatial 2D detector; and a computer applies a Hadamard transform to recover the encoded image.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 18, 2002
    Date of Patent: February 7, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: Stephen M. Gentry, Christine M. Wehlburg, Joseph C. Wehlburg, Mark W. Smith, Jody L. Smith
  • Patent number: 6993406
    Abstract: A method for forming a three-dimensional, biocompatible, porous scaffold structure using a solid freeform fabrication technique (referred to herein as robocasting) that can be used as a medical implant into a living organism, such as a human or other mammal. Imaging technology and analysis is first used to determine the three-dimensional design required for the medical implant, such as a bone implant or graft, fashioned as a three-dimensional, biocompatible scaffold structure. The robocasting technique is used to either directly produce the three-dimensional, porous scaffold structure or to produce an over-sized three-dimensional, porous scaffold lattice which can be machined to produce the designed three-dimensional, porous scaffold structure for implantation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 23, 2004
    Date of Patent: January 31, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Cesarano, III, John N. Stuecker, Jennifer G. Dellinger, Russell D. Jamison
  • Patent number: 6993463
    Abstract: A method of designing a primary geometry, such as for a forming die, to be used in a powder pressing application by using a combination of axisymmetric geometric shapes, transition radii, and transition spaces to simulate the geometry where the shapes can be selected from a predetermined list or menu of axisymmetric shapes and then developing a finite element mesh to represent the geometry. This mesh, along with material properties of the component to be designed and powder, is input to a standard deformation finite element code to evaluate the deformation characteristics of the component being designed. The user can develop the geometry interactively with a computer interface in minutes and execute a complete analysis of the deformation characteristics of the simulated component geometry.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 18, 2001
    Date of Patent: January 31, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: Kevin G. Ewsuk, Jose G. Arguello, Jr.
  • Patent number: 6988402
    Abstract: A cast-in-place and lithographically shaped mobile, monolithic polymer element for fluid flow control in microfluidic devices and method of manufacture. Microfluid flow control devices, or microvalves that provide for control of fluid or ionic current flow can be made incorporating a cast-in-place, mobile monolithic polymer element, disposed within a microchannel, and driven by fluid pressure (either liquid or gas) against a retaining or sealing surface. The polymer elements are made by the application of lithographic methods to monomer mixtures formulated in such a way that the polymer will not bond to microchannel walls. The polymer elements can seal against pressures greater than 5000 psi, and have a response time on the order of milliseconds. By the use of energetic radiation it is possible to depolymerize selected regions of the polymer element to form shapes that cannot be produced by conventional lithographic patterning and would be impossible to machine.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 4, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 24, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia National Laboratories
    Inventors: Ernest F. Hasselbrink, Jr., Jason E. Rehm, Timothy J. Shepodd, Brian J. Kirby
  • Patent number: 6985867
    Abstract: An economy whose activity is to be predicted comprises a plurality of decision makers. Decision makers include, for example, households, government, industry, and banks. The decision makers are represented by agents, where an agent can represent one or more decision makers. Each agent has decision rules that determine the agent's actions. Each agent can affect the economy by affecting variable conditions characteristic of the economy or the internal state of other agents. Agents can communicate actions through messages. On a multiprocessor computer, the agents can be assigned to processing elements.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 29, 1997
    Date of Patent: January 10, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: Richard J Pryor, Nipa Basu
  • Patent number: 6982668
    Abstract: Radar systems use time delay measurements between a transmitted signal and its echo to calculate range to a target. Ranges that change with time cause a Doppler offset in phase and frequency of the echo. Consequently, the closing velocity between target and radar can be measured by measuring the Doppler offset of the echo. The closing velocity is also known as radial velocity, or line-of-sight velocity. Doppler frequency is measured in a pulse-Doppler radar as a linear phase shift over a set of radar pulses during some Coherent Processing Interval (CPI). An Interferometric Moving Target Indicator (MTI) radar can be used to measure the tangential velocity component of a moving target. Multiple baselines, along with the conventional radial velocity measurement, allow estimating the true 3-D velocity of a target.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 30, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 3, 2006
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: Armin W. Doerry, Brian P. Mileshosky, Douglas L. Bickel
  • Patent number: 6980354
    Abstract: An optical parametric oscillator apparatus utilizing self-seeding with an external nanosecond-duration pump source to generate a seed pulse resulting in increased conversion efficiency. An optical parametric oscillator with a ring configuration are combined with a pump that injection seeds the optical parametric oscillator with a nanosecond duration, mJ pulse in the reverse direction as the main pulse. A retroreflecting means outside the cavity injects the seed pulse back into the cavity in the direction of the main pulse to seed the main pulse, resulting in higher conversion efficiency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 19, 2003
    Date of Patent: December 27, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: Arlee V. Smith, Darrell J. Armstrong
  • Patent number: 6978657
    Abstract: A portable system for the detection of chemical particles such as explosive residue utilizes a metal fiber substrate that may either be swiped over a subject or placed in a holder in a collection module which can shoot a jet of gas at the subject to dislodge residue, and then draw the air containing the residue into the substrate. The holder is then placed in a detection module, which resistively heats the substrate to evolve the particles, and provides a gas flow to move the particles to a miniature detector in the module.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 27, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 27, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: Mark J. Baumann, Charles A. Brusseau, David W. Hannum, Kevin L. Linker
  • Patent number: 6977777
    Abstract: An active optical zoom system changes the magnification (or effective focal length) of an optical imaging system by utilizing two or more active optics in a conventional optical system. The system can create relatively large changes in system magnification with very small changes in the focal lengths of individual active elements by leveraging the optical power of the conventional optical elements (e.g., passive lenses and mirrors) surrounding the active optics. The active optics serve primarily as variable focal-length lenses or mirrors, although adding other aberrations enables increased utility. The active optics can either be LC SLMs, used in a transmissive optical zoom system, or DMs, used in a reflective optical zoom system. By appropriately designing the optical system, the variable focal-length lenses or mirrors can provide the flexibility necessary to change the overall system focal length (i.e.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 18, 2004
    Date of Patent: December 20, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventor: David V. Wick
  • Patent number: 6975402
    Abstract: The present invention provides a photoacoustic spectrometer that is field portable and capable of speciating complex organic molecules in the gas phase. The spectrometer has a tunable light source that has the ability to resolve the fine structure of these molecules over a large wavelength range. The inventive light source includes an optical parametric oscillator (OPO) having combined fine and coarse tuning. By pumping the OPO with the output from a doped-fiber optical amplifier pumped by a diode seed laser, the inventive spectrometer is able to speciate mixtures having parts per billion of organic compounds, with a light source that has a high efficiency and small size, allowing for portability. In an alternative embodiment, the spectrometer is scanned by controlling the laser wavelength, thus resulting in an even more compact and efficient design.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 19, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 13, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia National Laboratories
    Inventors: Scott E. Bisson, Thomas J. Kulp, Karla M. Armstrong
  • Patent number: 6969576
    Abstract: A photoresist composition that employs onium salt carboxylates as thermally stable dissolution inhibitors. The photoresist composition can be either an onium carboxylate salt with a phenolic photoresist, such as novolac, or an onium cation protected carboxylate-containing resin such as an acrylic/acrylic acid copolymer. The onium carboxylate can be an onium cholate, wherein the onium cholate is an iodonium cholate. Particularly preferred iodonium cholates are alkyloxyphenylphenyl iodonium cholates and most particularly preferred is octyloxyphenyphenyl iodonium cholate. The photoresist composition will not create nitrogen or other gaseous byproducts upon exposure to radiation, does not require water for photoactivation, has acceptable UV radiation transmission characteristics, and is thermally stable at temperatures required for solvent removal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 30, 2001
    Date of Patent: November 29, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia National Laboratories
    Inventors: Paul M. Dentinger, Kelby L. Simison
  • Patent number: 6969874
    Abstract: A flip-chip light emitting diode with enhanced efficiency. The device structure employs a microcavity structure in a flip-chip configuration. The microcavity enhances the light emission in vertical modes, which are readily extracted from the device. Most of the rest of the light is emitted into waveguided lateral modes. Flip-chip configuration is advantageous for light emitting diodes (LEDs) grown on dielectric substrates (e.g., gallium nitride LEDs grown on sapphire substrates) in general due to better thermal dissipation and lower series resistance. Flip-chip configuration is advantageous for microcavity LEDs in particular because (a) one of the reflectors is a high-reflectivity metal ohmic contact that is already part of the flip-chip configuration, and (b) current conduction is only required through a single distributed Bragg reflector. Some of the waveguided lateral modes can also be extracted with angled sidewalls used for the interdigitated contacts in the flip-chip configuration.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 12, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 29, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: James M. Gee, Katherine H. A. Bogart, Arthur J. Fischer
  • Patent number: 6966336
    Abstract: A microvalve for extracting small volume samples into analytical devices, e.g.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 24, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 22, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia National Laboratories
    Inventor: Ronald F. Renzi
  • Patent number: 6967757
    Abstract: A microelectromechanical (MEM) device for redirecting incident light is disclosed. The MEM device utilizes a pair of electrostatic actuators formed one above the other from different stacked and interconnected layers of polysilicon to move or tilt an overlying light-reflective plate (i.e. a mirror) to provide a reflected component of the incident light which can be shifted in phase or propagation angle. The MEM device, which utilizes leveraged bending to provide a relatively-large vertical displacement up to several microns for the light-reflective plate, has applications for forming an electrically-programmable diffraction grating (i.e. a polychromator) or a micromirror array.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 24, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 22, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: James J. Allen, Michael B. Sinclair, Jeffrey L. Dohner
  • Patent number: 6965542
    Abstract: A simulated grenade for MILES-type simulations generates a unique RF signal and a unique audio signal. A detector utilizes the time between receipt of the RF signal and the slower-traveling audio signal to determine the distance between the detector and the simulated grenade.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 14, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 15, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventors: John J. Harrington, James H. Buttz, Alex B. Maish, Ray R. Page, Herbert E. Metcalf
  • Patent number: 6964936
    Abstract: A method of making a catalyst with monolayer or sub-monolayer metal by controlling the wetting characteristics on the support surface and increasing the adhesion between the catalytic metal and an oxide layer. There are two methods that have been demonstrated by experiment and supported by theory. In the first method, which is useful for noble metals as well as others, a negatively-charged species is introduced to the surface of a support in sub-ML coverage. The layer-by-layer growth of metal deposited onto the oxide surface is promoted because the adhesion strength of the metal-oxide interface is increased. This method can also be used to achieve nanoislands of metal upon sub-ML deposition. The negatively-charged species can either be deposited onto the oxide surface or a compound can be deposited that dissociates on, or reacts with, the surface to form the negatively-charged species.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 6, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 15, 2005
    Assignee: Sandia Corporation
    Inventor: Dwight R. Jennison