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David McGloin

Researcher at University of Technology, Sydney

Publications -  165
Citations -  6805

David McGloin is an academic researcher from University of Technology, Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Optical tweezers & Light beam. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 161 publications receiving 5991 citations. Previous affiliations of David McGloin include University of St Andrews & University of Dundee.

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Probing the Evaporation Dynamics of Ethanol/Gasoline Biofuel Blends Using Single Droplet Manipulation Techniques.

TL;DR: Single particle manipulation techniques are used to study the evaporation dynamics of ethanol/gasoline blend microdroplets, and it is found that the methods are sensitive enough to observe the presence of trace amounts of water in the droplets.
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Holographic and single beam optical manipulation of hyphal growth in filamentous fungi

TL;DR: In this paper, the ability of holographic light fields to alter the normal growth patterns of filamentous fungi has been investigated, and the merits of using discrete and continuous light fields produced using a spatial light modulator are discussed.
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Changes in autofluorescence based organoid model of muscle invasive urinary bladder cancer.

TL;DR: A muscle invasive transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) model of the bladder is developed using porcine bladder scaffold and the human bladder cancer cell line 5637 and it is believed this could act as a useful tool for the study of fluorescence dynamics of developing muscle invasive bladder cancer in patients.
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Direct detection of optical phase conjugation in a colloidal medium

TL;DR: Degenerate four-wave mixing is demonstrated using an artificial Kerr medium and is evidenced by directly observing the phase conjugation of a vortex signal beam.
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Microscale characterization of prostate biopsies tissues using optical coherence elastography and second harmonic generation imaging.

TL;DR: A high diagnostic accuracy of OCE and SHG imaging is confirmed in the detection and characterization of prostate cancer for a large set of biopsy tissues obtained from men suspected to have prostate cancer using transrectal ultrasound (TRUS).