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modeling individual microelectronic processes through to modeling complete life cycles of entire products . The "Photonic & Plasmonic Systems" group is an interdisciplinary team of scientists specializing in
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chips for biosensing and biomedical applications . Based on our development of a cross-reactive plasmonic metasurface chip for the chemical profiling of liquid samples, we now seek to explore the use
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on incorporating novel, high-throughput forms of single particle EV detection schemes involving nano-flow cytometry, microfluidics, plasmonic or fluorescence imaging using nanoparticles, droplet digital PCR and/or
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western blotting. Operate and maintain laboratory equipment, e.g., flow cytometer, FPLC, Surface Plasmon Resonance, microscopes, gel imagers, plate readers, thermal cyclers, microfermenters, incubators, and
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, nanophotonics, integrated photonics, optomechanics, optoacoustics, plasmonics, or polaritonics. Some postdoctoral research experience is preferred but not essential. A thorough understanding of the fundamentals
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. We seek an outstanding scientist with strong record of significant research accomplishments in one or more of the following fields: nanophotonics, plasmonics, nano-optics, quantum optics, optomechanics
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models/simulations for prototyping of project-specific devices • Experience in nanoparticle synthesis and characterization (e.g., lipid nanoparticles, polymeric, plasmonic nanomaterials) • Experience with
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molecular magnets, plasmonics, battery technology, medical imaging agents and applications for 3D printing. PhD: 3-4 years full-time; 6-8 years part-time; Thesis of Max 80,000 words MSc (Research): 1-2 years
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(cloning, expression, purification), crystallography (crystallization, optimization, data collection and structure determination), biochemistry (enzyme kinetics) and biophysics (Surface Plasmon Resonance
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-speed microscopy to accelerate assay imaging and plasmonic scattering microscopy to characterize ECM interactions and their impact on assay reproducibility. key words Plasmon; Imaging; Scattering