Life Science Automation Fundamentals and ApplicationsArtech House, 2007 - 507 Seiten Automation is facilitating incredible breakthroughs in everything from healthcare, pharmacology, and biotechnology to nanotechnology and genomics. Automation developers, scientists, and technicians need an increasingly sophisticated understanding of both the biological sciences and the engineering involved, and this comprehensive resource is the first interdisciplinary work that truly delivers. After a solid grounding in life science and automation engineering essentials, this indispensable resource describes state-of-the-art techniques for the design and development of sensors and actuators, lab-on-a-chip and bio-MEMs platforms, DNA and protein microarray fabrication automation, and drug delivery automation. It then demonstrates how these tools can be successfully integrated in larger-scale scale automation systems in areas like bio-instrumentation, cell and tissue manipulation, and laboratory automation. |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acid actuators algorithms analysis analyzed antibody applications assays bifurcation biological capillary cell culture clinical decision complex computer vision detection developed devices diagnostic DNA microarrays driving torque drug delivery dynamics elastic tail electrode environment enzyme feedback fluorescence force function Genomic glucose haptic health care system health system high throughput High-Content Screening human operator human-machine IEEE IEEE Transactions increasing injection inkjet insulin integrated interaction laboratory linear liquid machine vision magnetic manipulation mass Mass Spectrometry measure mechanical membrane methods micro Microfluidic micromanipulation microrobot microscopy Model Predictive Control molecular molecules nanomanipulation nanorobotic nonlinear optical optimal parameters particles patient performance photolithography PID controllers piezoelectric plates polymer protein protein microarray reaction reagent real-time robot robotic system Robotics and Automation sample science automation screening sensor sequence shown in Figure solution specific spectroscopy structure substrate surface task tion tracking velocity

