-
only invasive and resource-intensive but also lack the temporal resolution required for prompt clinical intervention, leading to preventable deaths in TLS patients. While wearable biosensors show great
-
PhD Studentship in Chemical Engineering - Electrochemical biosensors for point-of-care monitoring of life-threatening cell breakdown in blood cancers Award Summary 100% fees covered, and a minimum
-
Project details Objective: This project aims to develop a wireless, nanoengineered graphene-based biosensor for real-time dopamine (DA) detection. The wireless design of the sensor aims to enable
-
power sources for electronics, supporting the Green Transition. Biosensing involves detection of biological targets, often for diagnosing or monitoring disease. Cheap and effective biosensors can save
-
biosensor, transforming an existing prototype technology into a deployable environmental monitoring solution. Building on recent innovation at Exeter, this PhD will translate a novel discrete gape-sensor unit