Microfluidic Reactors For Polymer Particles
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From the Back Cover
The manipulation of fluids in channels with dimensions in the range from tens to hundreds of micrometers - microfluidics - has recently emerged as a new field of science and technology. Microfluidics has applications spanning analytical chemistry, organic and inorganic synthesis, cell biology, optics and information technology. One particularly promising application is the microfluidic synthesis of polymer particles with precisely controlled dimensions, and a variety of shapes, morphologies and compositions.
Written as a comprehensive introduction for scientists and engineers working in microfabrication and microfluidics, Microfluidic Reactors for Polymer Particles covers topics such as:
This book is intended for a broad audience, including students, researchers and engineers in industry, with interests in physics, chemistry, materials science, engineering or biotechnology.
Professor Eugenia Kumacheva is based in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Toronto (Canada). She received her MSc degree from the Institute of Chemical Technology (now Technical University) in Saint Petersburg (Russia) and completed her PhD research in the physical chemistry of polymers at the Institute of Physical Chemistry (Russian Academy of Science). In 2002, she spent a sabbatical at Harvard University with Professor George Whitesides. Professor Kumacheva has published over 70 papers, has filed twelve patent applications and received a number of awards including the Macromolecular Science and Engineering CIC Award in 2005.
Piotr Garsteckiis an assistant professor in the Institute of Physical Chemistry at the Polish Academy of Sciences, where he was obtained his PhD in Chemistry. From 2002 to 2005, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University (USA). In 2005, Piotr Garsteckireturned to the Polish Academy of Sciences, where his main research interestsare microfluidics and dynamic self-organization in complex fluids.