Corporate Banner
Satellite Banner
Technology Networks Header
Monday, May 20, 2013
Technology Networks
 
Register | Sign in
Home Page>Products>Product Directory
  Product Directory
Return to the previous page
Flowcells

<<>>
Showing Results 1 - 0 of 0
Scientific News
Symposium to Focus on Advancements in Organ-on-a-Chip Research
Research teams from Purdue University's Discovery Park and the Korean Institute of Science and Technology will meet May 16.
Electron Beam Fabrication of a Microfluidic Device for Studying Submicron-Scale Bacteria
This study presents an EBL and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) [28] soft-lithography [29] protocol for the fabrication of a micro?uidic device for microbial studies.
Device Finds Stray Cancer Cells in Patients’ Blood
A microfluidic device that captures circulating tumor cells could give doctors a noninvasive way to diagnose and track cancers.
Watching Fluid Flow at Nanometer Scales
Researchers find that tiny nanowires can lift liquids as effectively as tubes.
Unanticipated Consequences of DNA Hypomethylation; Loss and Gain of Polycomb Mediated Transcription Repression in Somatic Cells
By genome-wide mapping of the Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2)-signature histone mark, H3K27me3, in DNA methylation-deficient mouse somatic cells, the Meehan lab shows that loss of DNA methylation is coincident with widespread H3K27me3 redistribution.
Wyss Institute Awarded DARPA Contract to Further Advance Sepsis Therapeutic Device
DARPA gives award to further advance a blood-cleansing technology and help accelerate its translation to humans as a new type of sepsis therapy.
Designing Interlocking Building Blocks to Create Complex Tissues
New technique enables more precise design of tissue architecture.
Harvard Wyss Institute's Lung-on-a-Chip Wins Prize for Potentially Reducing need for Animal Testing
UK award recognition validates US teams' approach to revolutionize drug development.
Lab-on-a-Chip Speeds up HIV Testing
Fast, low-cost device uses the cloud to speed up testing for HIV and more.
Putting the Squeeze on Cells
By deforming cells, researchers can deliver RNA, proteins and nanoparticles for many applications.
Scroll Up
Scroll Down
Skyscraper Banner
Skyscraper Banner
Follow TechNetcom1 on Twitter
Technology Networks Ltd. on LinkedIn
Get The App
Go to LabTube.tv
Go to ePosters.net
Go to Lab-on-a-Chip RSS Feed