Stanford researchers have invented a fully water-soluble, orange hydrazine sensor that can robustly quantify the toxin hydrazine in liquids such as drinking water, waste water (treated and untreated), and bodily fluids.
Stanford researchers at the Bao Lab have designed and fabricated a highly stretchable, tough, and self-healable material with high fatigue resistance applicable for electronic (e-) skin devices.
Stanford researchers in the Khuri-Yakub Ultrasonics Group have developed a powerful new bio-sensor platform technology for a highly sensitive non-invasive detection of molecules and particles, suitable for various types of point of care diagnostic tests.
Engineers in the Stanford Microfluidics Laboratory have developed a sensitive, high-resolution, label-free detection method for identifying and quantifying analytes on chip-based electrophoretic assays.
Researchers in Prof. Robert Byer's laboratory have developed a new fiber laser technology for generating frequency combs with broadband output (an octave or more).