1st Edition
21st Century Nanoscience – A Handbook Bioinspired Systems and Methods (Volume Seven)
1. Plant-Mediated Biosynthesis of Nanoparticles - Darroudi 2. Self-Assembled Peptide Nanostuctures and their Applications - Das 3. Bacterial Detection with Magnetic Nanoparticles - Pawar 4. Nanoparticles Carrying Biological Molecules - Lenggoro 5. Silicon-Based Nanoscale Probes for Biological Cells - Tian 6. Ptychographic Imaging of Biological Samples with Soft X-Ray Radiation - Vartaniants 7. Bioapplication of Inorganic Nanomaterials - Nozaki 8. Engineered Living Materials: Designing Biological Cells as Nanomaterials Factories - Nguyen 9. Nanoparticles for Bone Tissue Engineering - Oliveira 10. DNA-Functionalized Gold Nanoparticles - Liu 11. Undoped Tetrahedral Amorphous Carbon (ta-C) Thin Films for Biosensing - Laurila 12. Charge and Spin Dynamics in DNA Nanomolecules: Modelling and Applications - Behnia 13. A Nanomaterials Genome - Qian 14. Nanoscience of Large Immunproteins -Vorup-Jensen 15. Nanozymes and their Applications in Biomedicine - Fan 16. Self-Assembling Protein Nanoparticles - Design, Production, and Characterization - He 17. Nanoengineering Neural Cells for Regenerative Medicine - Adams 18. Plasmonic Nanoparticles for Cancer Bioimaging, Diagnostics, and Therapy - Vo-Dinh 19. Nanotechnology in Cell Delivery Systems - Golchin 20. Bio-Nanoparticles: Nanoscale Probes for Nanoscale Pathogens - Draz
Biography
Klaus D. Sattler pursued his undergraduate and master’s courses at the University of Karlsruhe in Germany. He received his PhD under the guidance of Professors G. Busch and H.C. Siegmann at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich. He was at the University of California, Berkeley, for three years as a Heisenberg fellow, where he initiated the first studies of atomic clusters on surfaces with a scanning tunneling microscope. Dr. Sattler accepted a position as professor of physics at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, in 1988. In 1994, his group produced the first carbon nanocones. His current work focuses on novel nanomaterials and solar photocatalysis with nanoparticles for the purification of water. He is the editor of the sister references, Carbon Nanomaterials Sourcebook (2016) and Silicon Nanomaterials Sourcebook (2017), as well as Fundamentals of Picoscience (2014). Among his many other accomplishments, Dr. Sattler was awarded the prestigious Walter Schottky Prize from the German Physical Society in 1983. At the University of Hawaii, he teaches courses in general physics, solid state physics, and quantum mechanics.






