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Step into the world of Advances in Nano-Biosensor Technologies. In these exhilarating pages, learn how diagnostics and accuracy have improved systems. This multi-authored book collection invites worldwide experts to highlight recent innovations in biosensor technology for infectious disease diagnosis. Biosensor technology has advanced to identify diseases and meet conventional standards regarding price, accuracy, and turnaround time. Learn how new creative approaches have been applied to analytical chemistry since the COVID-19 pandemic. This book comprises 15 chapters focusing on the design…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Step into the world of Advances in Nano-Biosensor Technologies. In these exhilarating pages, learn how diagnostics and accuracy have improved systems. This multi-authored book collection invites worldwide experts to highlight recent innovations in biosensor technology for infectious disease diagnosis. Biosensor technology has advanced to identify diseases and meet conventional standards regarding price, accuracy, and turnaround time. Learn how new creative approaches have been applied to analytical chemistry since the COVID-19 pandemic. This book comprises 15 chapters focusing on the design and synthesis of novel, selective, and sustainable nanomaterials for developing nanobiosensor devices for infectious disease diagnosis. More information includes versatile tools and recent advancements in biosensor and nanosensor technology. Read up on trends in the development of immunosensors for the diagnosis of infectious diseases. In addition, this book also imparts information on the regulatory policies on the use of nanotechnology in the development of nanodiagnostic devices for infectious diseases, along with their commercialization.
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Autorenporträt
Suvardhan Kanchi, Ph.D., is an associate professor of the Department of Chemistry, Sambhram Institute of Technology, Bengaluru, India. He is also a senior researcher in novel method development and validation. He has a Ph.D. in analytical chemistry. His expertise is in field-flow fractionation techniques. He has conducted studies in the scientific literature, gathered and analyzed data, and improved decision-making processes. In his research, Kanchi has developed new nanomaterials and devices that detect temperature. Ayyappa Bathinapatla, M.D, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry, CMR Institute of Technology, Bengaluru, India. He obtained a Ph.D. from Durban University of Technology, South Africa, in 2012. Bathinapatia is fond of researching the determination of organic and inorganic compounds using capillary electrophoresis. In addition, he also researches applications of nanomaterials in the field of energy production. He has 13 research publications in various international journals and filed patents. Anitha Varghese, Ph.D., is a professor and head of the Department of Chemistry, CHRIST (Deemed to be University), Bengaluru, India. She received a Ph.D. in chemistry from Mangalore University, Karnataka, India in 2007. She has published 96 academic papers and earned six patents. Varghese has won several awards, such as the Woman of the Year award in 2020 from CHRIST (Deemed to be University), Bangalore, India. Phumlane Mdluli, Ph.D., is the head of the health platform in the advanced material division at the Nanotechnology Innovation Centre, Mintek, Randburg, South Africa. He obtained a Ph.D. from the University of Zululand, South Africa, in 2009. He has published 73 academic papers. Mdluli was awarded the Mintek Apex Award for developing rapid diagnostic lateral flow assays and won the Best Researcher Award in the Faculty and Department of Chemistry at the Durban University of Technology.