Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Tag: microfluidics

IBM's Move in Microfluidics

Its new chip could be used in easy and cheap diagnostic tests.

Tiny Devices Use Light to Grab Cells

Silicon chips and lasers could pick out and count cells on microfluidic devices.

Blood Test Offers More Accurate Picture of Health

A Seattle company is developing rapid tests for thousands of proteins.

Analyzing Cancer Cells to Choose Treatments

Microfluidics chips allow scientists to study circulating cancer cells and determine their vulnerabilities.

Cell on a Chip

The first artificial cell organelle may help researchers find a way to make bioengineered heparin and other synthetic drugs.

Rapid TB Detector

An ultrasensitive test can spot bacteria in a half hour.

Silicon Chip Spots Blood Proteins

A microfluidic chip that integrates a light sensor detects blood proteins.

Crystals Made to Sprout Tiny Tubes

Micrometers-wide tubes that grow spontaneously could be used to make tiny chemical devices.

TR10: Paper Diagnostics

George Whitesides has created a cheap, easy-to-use diagnostic test out of paper.

TR10: Biological Machines

Michel Maharbiz's novel interfaces between machines and living systems could give rise to a new generation of cyborg devices.

Diagnosing Disease with Paper and Tape

By adding tape, researchers can make more-complex tests that are portable and cheap.

Synthetic Tree Hauls Water

A new microfluidic system offers a different way to move water.

Tiny $10 Microscope

A high-resolution, lens-free microscope fits on a dime-size chip.

Microfiltering Sepsis

A microfluidic device may effectively filter out pathogens that trigger septic shock.

Lab-on-a-Chip Made of Paper

Paper-based microfluidic devices could yield cheap, disposable diagnostic tests.

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

The Marcellus Shale Gas Rush
Technology Review November/December 2009

Current Issue

Natural Gas Changes the Energy Map
The United States has vast supplies of this cleaner fossil fuel. But how should we use it?
Advertisement

Follow us on Twitter

  • techreview

    Technology Review

    Solving the Puzzle of Triangular Snowflakes: Snowflakes ought to be hexagonal. So why... http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/24462/  11/27/2009 11:00 AM

  • jason_pontin

    Jason Pontin | Cambridge, MA

    "Control media" is a silly idea, @bronwen, and more  divisive than old and new media: http://bit.ly/362z2t I have no control; never did.  11/26/2009 01:23 PM

  • carbonmind

    carbonmind | Thompsonville

    Google Launches Mobile Movie Search App http://www.google.com/movies  11/25/2009 07:10 PM

Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.