Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing
Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing | |
Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung | |
Abbreviation | BAM |
---|---|
Formation | 1871 |
Type | Standards organization |
Legal status | Government agency |
Purpose | Chemical and materials safety |
Headquarters | Unter den Eichen 87, Steglitz |
Location |
|
Region served | Germany |
Official language | de, en |
Parent organization | Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action |
Staff | 1700 |
Website | BAM |
The Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing (German: Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung), or BAM, is a German research institute in the field of materials science.
History
[edit]Its historical origins start in 1871, a year in which Germany was unified, as the Mechanisch-Technische Versuchsanstalt. From 1904–19 there was the Königliches Materialprüfungsamt. From 1920–45 there was the Staatliches Materialprüfungsamt (MPA) and from 1919–45 there was the Chemisch-Technische Reichsanstalt (CTR).
In 1954 the Bundesanstalt für mechanische und chemische Materialprüfung was formed, becoming the Bundesanstalt für Materialprüfung in 1956. In 1969 it became a government agency (Bundesoberbehörde). In 1986 the name changed to Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung.
Function
[edit]Within the interconnected fields of materials, chemistry, environment, and safety, the main areas are:
- Statutory functions relating to technical safety in the public domain, especially as regards dangerous materials and substances
- Collaboration in developing statutory regulations, for example on safety standards and threshold values
- Advising the Federal Government and industry on safety aspects of materials and chemical technology
- The development and supply of reference materials and methods, in particular for chemical analysis and materials testing
- Assisting in the development of standards and technical regulations for the evaluation of substances, materials, structures, and processes with reference to damage prediction and preservation of national economic values.
Structure
[edit]It is owned by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action. Its competences are to improve safety in technology and chemistry through research and development, testing, analysis, approvals, advice, and information.
The headquarters in Berlin are near the Berlin Botanischer Garten station.
Departments
[edit]The Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing is subdivided into departments and divisions. The staff sums up to about 1700 members.
- Department 1: Analytical chemistry, Reference materials
- Department 2: Chemical safety engineering
- Department 3: Containment systems for dangerous goods; Energy storage
- Department 4: Materials and the environment
- Department 5: Materials engineering
- Department 6: Materials chemistry
- Department 7: Safety of structures
- Department 8: Non-destructive testing
- Department 9: Component safety
- Department S: Quality infrastructure
- Department Z: Central services
See also
[edit]- Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements
- VAMAS (Versailles Project on Advanced Materials and Standards)
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Official website Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing
- Chemical safety
- Chemistry organizations
- Explosive detection
- German federal agencies
- Government agencies established in 1954
- Materials testing institutes
- Nondestructive testing
- Organisations based in Berlin
- Research institutes established in 1954
- Research institutes in Berlin
- Scientific organizations established in 1954
- Standards organisations in Germany
- 1871 in Germany
- 1954 establishments in West Germany
- Weapon technology organizations