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航空与力学名家讲坛9月19日下午报告会预告

发布时间:2014-09-17浏览次数:

报告Wearable Electronics that Dissolve in Your Body

报告人 Huanyu Cheng PhD

报告时间2014919日(周五)下午14:30

报告地点:新主楼C706

报告摘要

Recent advances in electronics enable powerful biomedical devices that have greatly reduced therapeutic risks by monitoring vital physiological signals and providing means of treatment. Better understanding of many unknown diseases could be achieved if implantable devices could be exploited for monitoring. However, an expensive second surgical operation would be needed to remove the devices after an initial implantation. In addition, conventional electronics require components to be formed on planar surfaces of brittle wafer substrates, which is not compatible with the complex topology of body tissues. Therefore, stretchability and resorbability are the two missing links to realize implantable monitors and in-vivo therapeutics. To address these challenges, I propose to design a stretchable medical device that can (a) conform to a complex topology of human organs and (b) function during its lifetime and then completely resorb after use. Implanted devices will provide a much better understanding of how each organ functions and offer more timely treatments for serious diseases such as heart failure.

报告人简介

Biography: Mr. Huanyu Cheng is currently a visiting scholar working with Prof. John A. Rogers in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is also a Ph.D. candidate working with Prof. Yonggang Huang in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Northwestern University. He received his Bachelor degree from Tsinghua University in 2010 and Master degree from Northwestern University in 2011. Mr. Cheng’s research focuses on electronics that dissolve in our body with biologically inspired applications in robotics, biomedicine, and energy. He has authored/co-authored 38 papers in leading archival journals. Mr. Cheng has received many awards like International Institute for Nanotechnology Outstanding Researcher Award (12 recipients in the US), Haythornthwaite Foundation Travel Awards, etc., and a few fellowships at Northwestern University including Presidential Fellowship Finalist, etc. His research on dissolvable electronics was on display at the “The Museum of Science” in Boston Massachusetts (2012) and it has also been featured in over hundreds of international news outlets, including Science, Nature, BBC, Forbes, Discovery and NSF.