Pentagon Tech Transfer Winners Honored at Federal Lab s 50th Anniversary miragenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from miragenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ROTC Cadet Part of Team Earning Technology Transfer Innovation Award
Operationalizing Science for Transformational Products Serving the U.S. Military
May 25, 2021
This past summer, WPI mechanical engineering student and
ROTC Cadet Spencer Tess ’21 opted for an internship over a traditional summer break. With his scheduled ROTC stint at Fort Knox cancelled due to the pandemic, he decided to pursue an internship with the Department of Defense.
Leveraging
from Higher Education, Government, Private Industry Partnerships
Tess was part of a team co-led by DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory and Soldier Center, commonly referred to as Natick Labs, industry partners Sherpa 6 and Creative Engineering, and WPI’s Army ROTC Bay State Battalion. Together they spent eight weeks developing and demonstrating a process dubbed Very Early Product Realization (VEPR T2), a suite of tools that accelerates the development of products from new discoveries.
PNNL Technology Fortified Grid, earns national awards
News Highlights: PNNL Technology Fortified Grid, earns national awards
Newswise – RICHLAND, Wash. A device that identifies liquids by ‘reading’ their acoustic signatures and an international partnership that brought greater stability to Central America’s power grid are just two of the latest successes in transferring federal technology to private industry. The Federal Laboratory Consortium for Technology Transfer of accredited workforce behind this and an additional innovation last week with awards recognizing exceptional work in commercializing government technology.
Each winning technology meets a unique need. FluID ™, a cost-effective device that reveals the identity of liquids packed in metal containers, delivers in moments details that used to take weeks. A six-year project between US and Central American agencies supported the Central American network, including technical training and valuable software in th
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IMAGE: Ji-Guang (Jason) Zhang, Allan Tuan, and Lindsie Canales, shown left to right, form the Licensing Flywheel Program team. The program helps private companies test drive federally developed technology by using. view more
Credit: (Photo by Andrea Starr | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory)
RICHLAND, Wash. A device that identifies fluids by reading their acoustic signatures and an international partnership that brought greater stability to Central America s power grid mark just two of the latest successes in transferring federal technology to private industry. The Federal Laboratory Consortium for Technology Transfer recognized staff behind these and one additional innovation last week with awards that distinguish exceptional work in commercializing government technology.