New 3D printing method for silicon medical implants
Kurzweil Network - 15-May-2017Stronger, quicker, less expensive, more flexible, and more comfortable than the implants currentl...
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Assistant Professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at University of Florida.
Professor Angelini received his Ph.D. in 2005 from the University of Illinois. His research interests include collective cell motion, mechanical instabilities in tissue cell assemblies, bacterial biofilm physics, soft matter physics, biomolecular self-assembly, and tribology of soft matter interfaces.
Tommy Angelini’s Bio and Soft Matter Lab at UF hopes to discover how system-level properties of large groups of cells—epithelial layers, endothelial networks and bacterial biofilms—emerge from microscopic dynamics.This is the latest focus of a research career that has combined molecular biophysics with cell mechanics, including the study of physical interactions between the cornea, the eyelid, and contact lenses mediated by synthetic and biological macromolecules. Angelini received his PhD in physics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and moved into cell mechanics and the physics of bacterial biofilm growth during postdoctoral research in the Weitzlab at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences before joining the UF faculty in 2010.
Visit website: http://plaza.ufl.edu/t.e.angelini/
See also: University of Florida (UF) - Public land grant university in Gainesville, Florida.
Details last updated 02-Jul-2020
Stronger, quicker, less expensive, more flexible, and more comfortable than the implants currentl...