Bionic Recognition and Biosensors: A Theme Issue in Honor of Professor Hong-Yuan Chen
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ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2024Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783725814732
- 9783725814749
- Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes
- Biochemical engineering
- Biotechnology
- 10-phenanthroline-5
- 6-dione
- AuNPs
- CRISPR-Cas9
- DNA
- DNA nanostructure
- DNA technology
- DNAzyme
- Escherichia coli
- Framework Nucleic Acids (FNAs)
- MIPs
- MOFs
- MnO2
- NADH
- NIR-II fluorophore
- NaBH4
- Raman spectroscopy
- SERS substrate
- Ti3C2-MXenes
- ZnS QDs
- Zr-MOFs
- acute myocardial infarction
- alternating trilinear decomposition
- ambient ionization mass spectrometry
- amperometry
- antibiotics residue
- aptamer
- aptamers
- aptasensor
- artificial transmembrane channel
- bimetallic AuAg nanoclusters
- bioassays
- biochemical analysis
- bioelectronics
- biological objects
- biomarkers
- biomedical
- biomedical application
- biometrics
- biomolecular recognition
- biomolecules
- biomolecules detection
- bionic recognition
- biosensing
- biosensor
- biosensors
- bipolar electrode-electrochemiluminescence
- bromide quantification
- carbon paper
- cardiac troponin I
- cataluminescence
- cell signaling profiling
- chemometrics
- chloride quantification
- clinical mass spectrometry
- coordination
- cyclic enzyme scission
- detection
- detection and imaging
- diabetes mellitus
- diabetic nephropathy
- disease di
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Professor Hong-Yuan Chen is a full-time professor of analytical chemistry at Nanjing University, China. He graduated from Nanjing University in 1961 and became a professor in 1988. He worked as a visiting scholar at Mainz University from 1981 to 1984 and was elected to the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2001. Professor Chen is well known as a pioneer in the field of electrochemistry and biosensors. He has authored numerous papers and reviews on chemical sensors, probes, labels, and bioassays; microchips, single-cell and single-particle imaging; and spectroscopic methods, including fluorescence and electrochemiluminescence imaging. Professor Chen also has experience in live cell analysis using microneedles, and his group first described microelectrodes in 1987. This work has been adopted in IUPAC. Professor Chen has published >1,100 papers with over >55000 citations and an h-index of 114. He received National Natural Science Award (2nd Class) from the Chinese Government (2007), the Scientific and Technological Progress Award from Ho Leung Hdo Lee Foundation (2007) and the Nature's 2015 Lifetime Award for South China, among others. This Special Issue is dedicated to celebrating the career of Professor Hong-Yuan Chen in honor of his contributions to the fields of bionic recognition and biosensors.
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