Nanotechnology

Recent Advances in Nanotechnology
Editor: Changhong Ke

Recent Advances in Nanotechnology

Available now.
Pub Date: December 2011
Hardback Price: see ordering info
Hard ISBN: 9781926692739
Paperback ISBN: 9781774631911
E-Book ISBN: 9781466558465
Pages: 306pp
Binding Type: hardbound / ebook / paperback

Now Available in Paperback


This title includes a number of Open Access chapters.



Nanotechnology, sometimes called the next industrial revolution, is an exciting field with new advances being reported regularly. It is a very diverse and highly interdisciplinary field, involving the science and engineering fields. Nanotechnolgy deals with the smallest building blocks of matter and involves atomic and molecular level imaging, manipulating, and controlling of matters, which lead to the creation of new materials, new manufacturing processes, and new applications. This book, Recent Advances in Nanotechnology, covers many emerging and important issues in nanotechnology as it applies to cancer research and treatment, materials properties analysis, new materials, and much more.

CONTENTS:
• Real Time In Vitro Studies of Doxorubicin Release from PHEMA Nanoparticles
• Monocyte Subset Dynamics in Human Atherosclerosis Can Be Profiled with Magnetic Nano-Sensors
• Singlet-Fission Sensitizers for Ultra-High Efficiency Excitonic Solar Cells
• Creating Bulk Nanocrystalline Metal
• Recent Advances in Nanotechnology Applied to Biosensors
• Thermochemotherapy Effect of Nanosized As2O3/Fe3O4 Complex on Experimental Mouse Tumors and Its Influence on the Expression of CD44v6, VEGF-C and MMP-9
• Formulation of Novel Lipid-Coated Magnetic Nanoparticles as the Probe for In Vivo Imaging
• Nanotechnology: Looking As We Leap
• Cancer Nanotechnology
• Anti-HER2 IgY Antibody-Functionalized Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes for Detection and Selective Destruction of Breast Cancer Cells
• Nanotechnology: A Tool for Improved Performance on Electrochemical Screen-Printed (Bio)Sensors
• The Origin of Nanoscopic Grooving on Vesicle Walls in Submarine Basaltic Glass: Implications for Nanotechnology
• Index


About the Authors / Editors:
Editor: Changhong Ke
Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Binghamton University, State University of New York, USA

Dr. Changhong Ke is a professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the State University of New York at Binghamton. Dr. Ke received his BS (1997) and MS (2000) from the Beijing Institute of Technology in China, and his PhD (2006) in mechanical engineering from Northwestern University. His PhD dissertation focuses on the development of a carbon nanotube-based bistable nanoswitch for applications of memory elements and sensors. After finishing his PhD, Dr. Ke worked as a postdoctoral fellow at Duke University (2006–2007) where he conducted research on the topics of nanomechanics of single DNA/RNA molecules and radiation-induced DNA damage. His current research focuses on the nanomechanics of novel 1D and 2D nanostructures, nanoscale adhesion and interfaces, bio-inspired complex and hybrid systems, and nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS). Dr. Ke is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the Society for Experimental Mechanics, and the Biophysical Society.




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