Transparent, micron-sized conductive fibres can be integrated into wearable devices that measure the amount of moisture that leaks through a face mask
A stretchable and conductive hydrogel could be used to treat serious injuries to peripheral nerves
Chip-based device images structures smaller than living cells
A flexible surgical tool equipped with soft electronics could improve cardiac surgery
Explore the latest technology white papers from physics-based industry in instrumentation and measurement
The finding that compressive stress can trigger drug resistance in solid tumours may open up new strategies for treating cancer
Available to watch now, The Electrochemical Society, in partnership with Biologic, Gamry Instruments, Royal Society of Chemistry and Admiral Instruments, explores bioelectrocatalys...
A mobile robotic platform that takes contact-free measurements of patients’ vital signs could help reduce healthcare workers’ exposure to COVID-19
Read article: Intricate sugar printing helps build blood vessels
Researchers 3D print complex blood vessel networks that help keep engineered tissues alive
Read article: Cosmonaut builds engineered cartilage aboard the International Space Station
For the first time, 3D human tissue has been assembled in the microgravity of space, using a scaffold-free tissue engineering approach
Read article: Tissue engineering moves closer to 3D printing inside the body
A specially formulated bioink combined with a robotic interlocking mechanism pave the way towards 3D printing of living tissue directly in patients
Read article: 3D printed brain model shows potential for drug testing
Bioprinted brain-like tissue constructs that stay viable for more than a month offer a good platform for neurological drug testing
Read article: Bio-bots with spinal cords have natural walking rhythm
Researchers have developed miniature biological robots that move naturally when a spinal cord is added
Read article: Cotton yarn flexes its muscles
Researchers make smart materials from ordinary cotton using a twisting and plying technique
The biomedical engineering collection provides the latest research and books facilitating timely and impactful discussions between scientists, engineers, and clinicians.
Read article: Microswimmers benefit from thermoelectric guidance
New devices could find applications in biomedical sensing and targeted, non-invasive drug delivery
Read article: Growing the biomedical community in China
Jianwu Dai explains how he moved from biophysics to cell biology and how his lab is recovering from the coronavirus pandemic
Read article: Electronic skin displays human-like reactions to pressure, temperature and pain
Combining artificial pressure, temperature and pain sensors into a single, biocompatible film advances our ability to mimic human skin
Read article: Stable recordings enable �?plug-and-play’ control of brain–computer interface
Machine-learning techniques help a paralysed individual learn to control a computer cursor using their brain, without requiring extensive daily retraining
Read article: Self-assembled peptides exhibit surprisingly strong diamagnetism
Peptides containing aromatic rings are especially diamagnetic when they combine to form microfibres, which might help explain magnetic sensitivity in animals
Read article: Adapting electrochemical sensing to Population-Scale monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 infection spread
Available to watch now, The Electrochemical Society in partnership with BioLogic, presents the results of our initial, three-month effort to produce a portable immunoassay
Biofabrication is a world-leading specialist journal, publishing cutting-edge research regarding the use of cells, proteins, biological materials and biomaterials as building blocks to manufacture biological systems and/or therapeutic products.
Read article: Molecular Trojan Horse breaches blood–brain barrier
Drugs hidden inside functionalized lipid nanoparticles can sneak into brain tissue in mice, promising therapies for difficult-to-treat neurological diseases
Read article: Why LHCb is so good at discovering tetraquarks, medical sensors that are drawn on the skin
We also chat about how to prevent the coffee-ring effect
Read article: Electronics drawn directly on the skin creates robust biosensors
“Draw-on-skin” electronics can record physiological signals while addressing the shortcomings of common wearable sensors
Read article: Artificial spider web gets an ionic boost
Self-cleaning synthetic structures work using static electricity
Read article: Sidestepping the side effects of neurostimulation
Identifying the mechanism behind treatment-limiting side effects should improve the effectiveness of vagus nerve stimulation
Experiments shed light on the processes that transport molecules around the intracellular fluid
Read article: Portable sensor detects biomagnetic signals in noisy outdoor environments
A prototype portable sensor can detect tiny magnetic fields generated by the human brain and heart without the need for expensive magnetic shielding
Read article: Acoustic tweezers move objects in the body remotely
A shaped ultrasound beam transmitted through the skin can move objects within a living body, offering a new way to treat kidney stones
Read article: 3D microscopy reveals how human sperm swim
Researchers find that sperm swim in corkscrew motions to compensate for the asymmetry in their tails
Read article: How to time quantum tunnelling using atomic stopwatches, fitness trackers could help with breathing disorders
Huge exoplanets and quantum dots also get a mention in this week’s podcast
Read article: Acoustical tweezers trap microbubbles
Contactless manipulation technique holds promise for biomedical applications
Read article: Low-cost wearable devices quantify breathing activity while you sleep
A wrist-worn reflective sensor could provide unobtrusive sleep monitoring to help diagnose sleep-related breathing disorders