Instruments and resources information
Controlled Combustion System
The Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory's controlled combustion system mimics real-life combustion conditions around aerosols produced and improves understanding of aerosol formation, properties, and the effects on ecosystem.
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Size and Time-Resolved Aerosol Collector
The Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory’s multifunctional size and time-resolved aerosol collector (STAC) is used to investigate how aerosol physicochemical properties evolve.
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Graph Identification of Proteins in Tomograms (GRIP-Tomo)
The Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory (EMSL) is developing a capability that will allow scientists to mine data for patterns using the algorithm of graph identification of proteins in tomograms (GRIP-Tomo), which will improve protein identification and faster structure determination.
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TerraForms
TerraForms is a group of platforms of custom-designed synthetic environments, microfluidics technologies, and in-house instrumentation to simulate soil properties and visualize soil microbial and plant community dynamics.
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TerraForms: Pore-Scale Micromodels
Pore-scale micromodels simulate soil porosity and aggregate size distribution on a microfluidic platform.
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TerraForms: RhizoChip
RhizoChip provides a microscale soil environment that retains the physical structure of natural soils and can be used to map the molecular environment of roots.
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TerraForms: SubTap Microbial and RhizoTap Rhizosphere Platforms
The SubTap and RhizoTap platforms are for rapid analysis of metabolites resulting from plant–microbe and microbe–microbe interactions.
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TerraForms: 3D Bioprinted Synthetic Soil Aggregates
EMSL's three-dimensional bioprinted habitat mimics natural soil and provides a chemically defined, translucent alternative for studying microorganisms.
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Separation and Characterization of Colloidal Mineral-Associated Organic Matter
The Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory (EMSL) developed a workflow to rapidly separate and characterize MAOM colloids that are <0.45 µm in size and prevalent in soil-water systems, which is is available to the research community through EMSL’s open calls for proposals.
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