Microfluidic Applications in Biology: From Technologies to Systems Biology - Hardcover

Rossier, Joel S.; Girault, Hubert H.

 
9783527317615: Microfluidic Applications in Biology: From Technologies to Systems Biology

Inhaltsangabe

Taken from the high-impact journal Electrophoresis, these research articles on microfluidics and its application in a range of biological fields are of high interest and now available to a new readership. Alongside several review articles, this volume represents a current overview of the latest research.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Dr. N. Lion is a member of the Girault-Lab at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Institut des Sciences et Ingenerie Chimiques, Department for Physical and Analytical Electrochemistry.
Niels Lion studied industrial biotechnologies and instrumentation at the Ecole Centrale de Lille and at the Universite Paris XII, followed by a PhD at the Laboratory of Analytical and Physical Electrochemistry of the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL, Switzerland). His work consists in the hyphenation of microfluidic devices with electrospray mass spectrometry, and in a broader sense in miniaturised analytical sciences for proteomics. Dr Lion is the author of 20 papers and is regularly invited as reviewer for international journals. He is also a member of the Swiss Proteomics Society committee.

Dr. Joel S. Rossier is a founder and the chief scientific officer of the DiagnoSwiss SA company, founded in 1999. DiagnoSwiss SA is a biotechological company developing biosensor platforms based on proprietary microfluidic technologies for bioanalyses in submicroliter volume. Specialised in electrochemistry, microchip-based biosensors and protein analysis, DiagnoSwiss has published more than 35 peer-reviewed scientific articles in the recent years.
JoelS. Rossier studied physical chemistry at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETHZ), followed by a Ph.D. thesis at the Laboratory of Analytical and Physical Electrochemistry (LEPA) of the EPFL. His work partly done in collaboration with Kansas University was focused on the development of chips for diagnostics and electrophoresis applications and was rewarded by the BioRad's Young Scientist Electrophoresis Research Award in 1998. Joel S. Rossier is Chief Scientific Officer and co-founder of DiagnoSwiss SA, a microfluidic technology provider company serving world leader companies in in-vitro-diagnostics and life science business. He is author of more than 40 peer review research articles and reviews, 15 patent applications and several book chapters. He is regularly invited as reviewer for international journals and is member of the editorial board of ELECTROPHORESIS and NANOMEDICINE. In order to keep a strong link with academic institutions, he co-founded the Swiss Proteomics Society and he has been appointed in 2005 as external lecturer at the EPFL for bioanalytical teaching.

Dr. H. Girault is Professor for physical chemistry since 1992. At the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Institut des Sciences et Ingenerie Chimiques, he is leading the Department for Physical and Analytical Electrochemistry. His lab is specialized on the application of microfabrication techniques on electroanalysis and electrosyntheses as well as on the physical chemistry of liquid/liquid interphases and the charge transfer at these interphases.
Hubert H. Girault studied electrochemistry at the Ecole Nationale Superieure d'Electrochimie et d'Electrometallurgie de Grenoble (France), followed by a PhD in physical chemistry at the University of Southampton. Pr Girault was then appointed as lecturer in physical chemistry at the University of Edinburgh, where he co-founded "Ecosse Sensors", a company specialized in the fabrication of electrochemical sensors for heavy metal analysis. In 1992, Hubert Girault became Professor of Physical Chemistry at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne. He is the author of two textbooks, more than 230 scientific publications, and more than 10 patents. During his academic career he has supervised more than 25 PhD students. Hubert Girault is currently the director of the Institute for Chemical Sciences and Engineering at the EPFL. He has also served in the editorial board of several international publications, such as ELECTROPHORESIS, as well as in several scientific societies, such as the International Society of Electrochemistry, the Swiss Electrophoresis Society, and the French Society for Bioelectrochemistry. Hubert Gira

Von der hinteren Coverseite

Liquids, for example water, can change the way they behave depending on the environment around them. Equipment and machinery that make use of fluids obviously need to be designed to take into account these changes so that they can operate as efficiently as possible. Microfluidics is the area of science, combining chemistry and physics, that involves trying to understand those changes in liquids that happen when the amount of the liquid is very small.
Because many biological experiments need to be carried out on very small amounts of material, due to the huge cost of producing biological samples, there is currently a great deal of interest in understanding the microfluidics of biological samples.

Taken from the most popular, recent issues of the high-impact journal Electrophoresis, these articles on microfluidics and its application in a range of biological fields are of high interest and now available to a new readership. Alongside several review articles, this volume represents a current overview of the latest research in this rapidly growing field and discusses the potentials of microfluidic applications in different biological domains.

Niels Lion studied industrial biotechnologies and instrumentation at the Ecole Centrale de Lille and at the Universite Paris XII, followed by a PhD at the Laboratory of Analytical and Physical Electrochemistry of the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL, Switzerland). His work consists in the hyphenation of microfluidic devices with electrospray mass spectrometry, and in a broader sense in miniaturised analytical sciences for proteomics. Dr Lion is the author of 20 papers and is regularly invited as reviewer for international journals. He is also a member of the Swiss Proteomics Society committee.

Joel S. Rossier studied physical chemistry at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETHZ), followed by a Ph.D. thesis at the Laboratory of Analytical and Physical Electrochemistry (LEPA) of the EPFL. He is Chief Scientific Officer and co-founder of DiagnoSwiss SA, a microfluidic technology provider company. He co-founded the Swiss Proteomics Society and has been appointed in 2005 as external lecturer at the EPFL for bioanalytical teaching. He is member of the editorial board of ELECTROPHORESIS and NANOMEDICINE, author of more than 40 peer review research articles and reviews, 15 patent applications and several book chapters.

Hubert H. Girault studied electrochemistry at the Ecole Nationale Superieure d'Electrochimie et d'Electrometallurgie de Grenoble (France), followed by a PhD in physical chemistry at the University of Southampton. He was then appointed as lecturer in physical chemistry at the University of Edinburgh. In 1992, Hubert Girault became Professor of Physical Chemistry at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL). He is currently the director of the Institute for Chemical Sciences and Engineering at the EPFL and also a co-founder of DiagnoSwiss SA. He is the author of two textbooks, more than 230 scientific publications, and more than 10 patents.

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