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Alireza Abbaspourrad

Researcher at Cornell University

Publications -  242
Citations -  6323

Alireza Abbaspourrad is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 200 publications receiving 4206 citations. Previous affiliations of Alireza Abbaspourrad include Royal Dutch Shell & Ithaca College.

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Droplet microfluidics: A tool for biology, chemistry and nanotechnology

TL;DR: This work highlights recent advances in the application of droplet microfluidics in chip-based technologies, such as single-cell analysis tools, small-scale cell cultures, in-droplet chemical synthesis, high-throughput drug screening, and nanodevice fabrication.
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25th Anniversary Article: Double Emulsion Templated Solid Microcapsules: Mechanics And Controlled Release

TL;DR: How droplet microfluidics can be used to fabricate solid-shelled microcapsules having precisely controlled release behavior is described and used to tune the compositions and geometrical characteristics of the microcapsule with exceptional precision.
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A new epirubicin biosensor based on amplifying DNA interactions with polypyrrole and nitrogen-doped reduced graphene: Experimental and docking theoretical investigations

TL;DR: In this paper, a label-free DNA-based biosensor was fabricated for the analysis of epirubicin in biological samples, and the changes in the electrode signal were used for the determination of Epirubicain.
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A novel electrochemical epinine sensor using amplified CuO nanoparticles and a n-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate electrode

TL;DR: In this article, a carbon paste electrode modified with CuO nanoparticles and n-hexyl-3methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate (CPE/CuO-NPs/HMIPF6) was used for the analysis of epinine for the first time.
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Protein Expression, Aggregation, and Triggered Release from Polymersomes as Artificial Cell‐like Structures

TL;DR: Bringing droplets to life: A cytoskeletal protein is expressed in artificial cells composed of biocompatible polymersomes, which encapsulate expression machinery and amino acid building blocks.