Fred Schramm, an industrial engineer at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center
in Huntsville, Ala., has won national recognition for adapting a parts
identification marking system to NASA’s standards and introducing the
technology into the private sector.

The marking system — first known as compressed symbology and now by its
commercial name Data Matrix — works much like linear bar coding but the
matrix symbols, resembling small checkerboards, are more efficient and
reliable. Capable of storing up to 100 times more information in the same
amount of space than traditional bar codes, the matrix codes are more
permanent and smaller than the older, more familiar product marking code.
They are also stackable, can be made invisible and won’t fall off as sticky
bar codes sometimes do. They can be read through six layers of paint or
paper and are now being integrated with security technologies to prevent
counterfeiting of commercial products.

In 1987, with Schramm as principal investigator, Marshall performed a study
to determine if marking the two-dimensional symbol directly on part surfaces
would be an effective way to track the millions of parts used in the Space
Shuttle program. The Marshall Center has since led the way in direct part
marking and worked with industry partners to enhance Data Matrix technology
as part of NASA’s effort to improve life on Earth through technology
developed for the space program.

“This award is a prestigious honor in the technology transfer community,”
said Victor Chavez, Federal Laboratory Consortium Award committee chairman.
Nominees must be employed by one of 700 consortium member federal
laboratories and must have demonstrated not only a technology development
but evidence that the technology was transferred into the private sector.

Schramm, a resident of Winchester, Tenn., will receive the award May 7 at
the consortium’s annual meeting in Tucson, Ariz. He is one of 22 winners
chosen on the basis of innovation and potential for overwhelming positive
impact on society. A panel of experts from industry, state and local
government, academia and other Federal Laboratory Consortium members judged
nominations for the coveted award. The organization promotes cooperation
between government and private labs to exchange ideas and enhance the
nation’s economic growth.

” We’re extremely proud that Fred is being recognized for his
accomplishments,” said Vernotto McMillan, manager of Marshall’s Technology
Transfer Department. “He is very deserving of this honor,” McMillan said.
The number of technologies selected for this honor are few. In recent
years, the number and types of cutting-edge technologies developed and
commercialized at Marshall have increased dramatically, he said.

A Marshall employee since 1981, Schramm has been a member of the Technology
Transfer Department, formerly known as Technology Utilization Office, since
1993 and serves as program manager for development of the family of products
and applications that has evolved from compressed symbology technology. He
has submitted 15 invention disclosures and filed 13 patents — four of which
have issued with five pending.

His previous Marshall work includes assignments in the Heavy Lift Launch
Vehicle Project, Shuttle-C Project, Space Shuttle Main Engine Project and
External Tank Project.

Schramm has written numerous articles for technical publications and
presented NASA technical briefings at several conferences. He currently
serves as chairman of the board of the Winchester, Tenn., Utility System.

Schramm is a 1974 graduate of Tennessee Technological University in
Cookeville, Tenn., with a bachelor’s in industrial engineering. He earned a
master’s in engineering management from the University of Tennessee in
Knoxville in 1991.