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This contributed volume provides an overview of the recent advances in solid-state nanopore technology, featuring contributions by leading experts in the field. It discusses several aspects of solid-state nanopores, covering their fabrication as well as multiple biosensing applications. It successfully bridges the gap between various scientific and engineering disciplines and highlights the progress made in this area. This title is a useful tool for acquiring basic knowledge of this field and following recent progress. It is a valuable contribution to the area of nanopore biosensing and is of interest to graduate students, postdocs, or senior researchers working in the fields of physical chemistry, biochemistry, bio- and electrical engineering, and biophysics.
Overviews latest advances in nanopore technology Presents state-of-the-art experimental and theoretical approaches Features contributions from leading experts in the field
Auteur
Jean-Pierre Leburton is Gregory Stillman Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Adjunct Professor at the University of Illinois in Chicago. He joined the University of Illinois in 1981 from Germany, where he worked as Research Scientist with the Siemens A.G. Research Laboratory in Munich. In 1992, he held Hitachi LTD Chair on Quantum Materials at the University of Tokyo and was Visiting Professor in the Federal Polytechnic Institute in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 2000. He is involved with research in nanostructures modeling and in quantum device simulation. His present research interest encompasses nonlinear transport in quantum wires and carbon nanotubes, spintronics, and molecular and bio-nanoelectronics.
Professor Leburton is Author and Co-author of more than 300 technical papers in international journals and books as well as of several patents in device electronics, and served as Chairman, Advisory and Program Committees in numerous international conferences. In 1993, he was awarded the title of "Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Palmes Académiques" by the French Government. He is Life Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) and Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), the Optical Society of America (OSA), the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the Electrochemical Society (ECS), and the Institute of Physics (IOP). He is also Member of the New York Academy of Science. From 2011 to 2015, he was Distinguished Lecturer for the IEEE Nanotechnology Council. In 2004, he was Recipient of the ISCS Quantum Device Award, and of the Gold medal for scientific achievement by the Alumnus Association of the University of Liége, Belgium. In 2019, he received the CCMR Serendipity Award, Seoul Korea, and in 2021, he was Laureate of the IEEE-NTC Pioneer Award in nanotechnology. Since 201, he is Associate Member of the Royal Academyof Sciences of Belgium.
Contenu
Fabricating Solid-State Nanopores for Single-Molecule Sensing.- Emerging Abnormal Phenomena in Confined Nanofluidics.- Detecting DNA-binding Sites of Regulation Proteins with Ion Beam Sculpted Silicon Nitride Nanopores.- Solid-State Nanopore Sensing Enhanced by Designed DNA Nanostructures.- Protein Profiling by a Confined Nanopore.- Self-Consistent Brownian Dynamics Simulations of the Ionic Current Blockade in Solid State Nanopores.- Modeling Ionic and Electronic Biosensing with Semiconductor Nanopores.
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