Joseph Wang
Joseph Wang | |
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Joseph Wang | |
Born | 1948 |
Nationality | American |
Fields | Nanotechnology, electrochemistry |
Institutions | University of California San Diego |
Joseph Wang is Distinguished Professor of Nanoengineering at the University of California, San Diego specializing in biosensors, nanosensors, nanomachines and electrochemistry. Wang's research group has built the fastest nanomotors to date.[1]
Biography
Joseph Wang was born in 1948. He studied chemistry at the Technion and was awarded the BSc degree in 1972 and an MSc degree in 1974. After completing his D.Sc. at the Technion in 1978, he served as a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. In 1980, he joined the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at New Mexico State University, where he became a Regents Professor and holder of the Manasse Chair.
Wang founded the journal Electroanalysis (Wiley-VCH) in 1988 and has been Editor-in-Chief ever since. In 2004-2008, he served as the Director of the Center for Bioelectronics and Biosensors at the newly established Biodesign Institute and as a Professor of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry at Arizona State University (ASU). Since 2008, Wang has served as Distinguished Professor of Nanoengineering at the University of California, San Diego.
Fields of research
Joseph Wang's earlier research focused on electrochemical biosensors and detectors for clinical diagnostics and environmental monitoring, with particular emphasis on blood glucose monitoring for diabetes management. Wang's current research interests include the development of nanomotors and nanomachines, enzyme logic gate and nanomaterials-based sensors, electrochemical biosensors,[2] bioelectronics, microfluidic (“Lab-on-a-Chip”) devices, and remote sensors for environmental and security monitoring. His contributions in these directions have been of major impact in the development of electrochemical sensing techniques and man-made nanomachines. He was ranked the ‘Most Cited Researcher in Engineering’ during 1997 - 2007, as well as the ‘Most Cited Chemist’ in ISI’s list of ‘Most Cited Researchers in Chemistry’ for the same period. Joseph Wang has authored over 900 research papers (H-Index = 102),11 books, 15 patents, and 35 chapters. His books include: "Stripping Analysis" (VCH-1985), "Analytical Electrochemistry" (Wiley 2006) and "Nanomachines" (Wiley-VCH 2013). Over 25 Ph.D. candidates and 150 post-doctoral fellows have collaborated with Wang.
Wang led a team that successfully merged efforts in the fields of biosensors, bioelectronics and nanotechnology to fashion nanocrystals that can act as amplifying tags for DNA or protein biosensors. This creates enormous potential for applications for early disease diagnosis. Wang's work in the field of nanomachines, involving novel motor designs and applications, has led to the world fastest nanomotor, to a novel motion-based DNA biosensing,[3] and nanomachine-enabled isolation of biological targets, e.g.cancer-cell isolation and to advanced motion control in the nanoscale. He has also pioneered the use of body-worn printed flexible electrochemical sensors (including textile and epidermal tattoo lactate biosensors and biofuel cells), 'green' bismuth electrodes for sensing toxic metals and remote submersible devices for continuous environmental monitoring.
Published books
- Analytical Electrochemistry (3rd Ed, 2006)
- Biosensors and Chemical Sensors
- Biosensors for Direct Monitoring of Environmental Pollutants in Field
- Electrochemistry of Nucleic Acids and Proteins
- Electrochemical Techniques in Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
- Stripping Analysis: Principles, Instrumentation, and Applications
- Electrochemical Sensors, Biosensors and their Biomedical Applications
- NanoBiosensing
- Nanomachines: Fundamentals and Applications (Wiley 2013)
Wang is also the Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Electroanalysis.
Awards
- Regents Professorship, New Mexico State University
- Manasse Chair, New Mexico State University
- Heyrovsky Medal, Heyrovsky Institute, Prague, Czech Republic, 1994.
- Honorary Professorship, National University, Cordoba, Argentina
- American Chemical Society National Award for Analytical Instrumentation, 1999
- American Chemical Society National Award for Electrochemistry, 2006
- Doctor honoris causa, Complutense University, Madrid, Spain, 2007
- Honorary Member, National Institute of Chemistry in Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2007
- Fellow, The American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, 2010
- Honorary Professor - University of Science and Technology Beijing, 2011
- Doctor honoris causa, Alcala University, Alcala, Spain, 2011
- B. Breyer Medal of the Royal Australian Chemical Institute, 2012
- Spiers Memorial Award of the UK Royal Society of Chemistry, 2013
- Fellow, Royal Society of Chemistry, 2013
References
External links
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