Human bones grown from patient's own stem cells using sound waves
New Atlas - 21-Feb-2022Painless bone regeneration with a faster, easier and effective approach
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Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering at RMIT University.
Leslie Yeo is a Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering at RMIT University. Leslie’s current research interests are centered around the development of acoustomicrofluidic technologies for diverse applications. These applications span nanomedicine and drug delivery, biosensing and point-of-care diagnostics, biomaterials and tissue engineering, and the synthesis and electronic manipulation of novel nanomaterials.
He is co-author of the book Electrokinetically Driven Microfluidics and Nanofluidics published by Cambridge University Press and currently serves as the Editor of the American Institute of Physics journal Biomicrofluidics as well as on the editorial boards of Interfacial Phenomena & Heat Transfer and Biosensors.
Leslie completed his MEng and PhD degrees in Chemical Engineering at Imperial College London.
Visit website: https://www.leslieyeo.net/
See also: RMIT University - Australian Institute of technology.
Details last updated 06-Mar-2022
Painless bone regeneration with a faster, easier and effective approach