Designing long-duration toxin sensors
Ultra-low-power sensors could protect the public and warfighters by detecting toxins in the air.
B61-12 system production ends, sustainment begins
Sandia and the nuclear security enterprise completed the last production unit of the B61-12 nuclear gravity bomb, a significant milestone for the nation’s nuclear deterrence program.
Sandia’s economic impact soars to $5.2 billion in 2024
Sandia made its biggest financial impact ever in 2024, contributing billions to the economy in salaries, contracts with small businesses and more.
Sandia cofounds microelectronics research center
The Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies teaming up with other DOE centers to make computer chips more energy efficient.
Hey! Where’s my qubit?
Vanishing atoms can ruin quantum calculations. Scientists have a new plan to locate leaks.
Immersing in Sandia’s mission
Sandia hosts Air Force Capt. Joshua Widick for Education with Industry fellowship.
Bridging the gap between Sandia and HBCUs
In 2020, when Rahni Kellum noticed a gap within Sandia’s Academic Alliance Program, she did a lot more than speak up.
New Sandia R&D agreements reach levels not seen in three decades
Not since the early 1990s, when the World Wide Web was introduced, has Sandia seen as many new Cooperative Research and Development Agreements as it did in fiscal year 2024.
New centrifuge spins lasting partnership
The Weapons Evaluation Test Laboratory celebrates completion of a new centrifuge. The addition will enable the lab to perform more nonnuclear testing of weapons systems in the U.S. nuclear arsenal in a shorter timeframe.
Study asks: Can cellphone signals help land a plane?
Experimental navigation technology, developed in partnership between Sandia and Ohio State, could keep an airplane on course when GPS is unreliable.