Stanford researchers have built a sound powered, wireless medical implant. The implant contains a piezoelectric energy receiver, an integrated circuit chip, and a loop antenna.
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.
Stanford researchers have designed a powerful plasmonic coaxial aperture as a low-power optical trap for nanosized specimens, a regime that is inaccessible with the other designs.
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.