Glassy Materials Based Microdevices

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Giancarlo C. Righini, Nicoletta Righini
MDPI, Feb 28, 2019 - Technology & Engineering - 284 pages

Microtechnology has changed our world since the last century, when silicon microelectronics revolutionized sensor, control and communication areas, with applications extending from domotics to automotive, and from security to biomedicine. The present century, however, is also seeing an accelerating pace of innovation in glassy materials; as an example, glass-ceramics, which successfully combine the properties of an amorphous matrix with those of micro- or nano-crystals, offer a very high flexibility of design to chemists, physicists and engineers, who can conceive and implement advanced microdevices. In a very similar way, the synthesis of glassy polymers in a very wide range of chemical structures offers unprecedented potential of applications. The contemporary availability of microfabrication technologies, such as direct laser writing or 3D printing, which add to the most common processes (deposition, lithography and etching), facilitates the development of novel or advanced microdevices based on glassy materials. Biochemical and biomedical sensors, especially with the lab-on-a-chip target, are one of the most evident proofs of the success of this material platform. Other applications have also emerged in environment, food, and chemical industries.

The present Special Issue of Micromachines aims at reviewing the current state-of-the-art and presenting perspectives of further development. Contributions related to the technologies, glassy materials, design and fabrication processes, characterization, and, eventually, applications are welcome. 

 

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About the author (2019)

 Giancarlo C. Righini, Physicist, studied at the University of Florence, Italy, and made his scientific career at National Research Council of Italy (CNR) and Enrico Fermi Center (Rome, Italy), becoming director of research in both the institutions. After retiring, he keeps holding a position of associate scientist in both of them. He always did experimental research, mostly on fiber and integrated optics, with focus on glass materials. His recent interests deal with photoluminescent materials and optical microresonators. He published more than 500 papers and is co-editor of a few books. He was co-founder and then President of the Italian Society of Optics and Photonics (SIOF) and Vice-President of ICO (International Commission for Optics). Currently he is chair of Technical Committee TC-20 (Glasses for Optoelectronics) of the International Commission on Glass. G. C. Righini is Fellow of EOS, OSA, SIOF and SPIE, and Meritorious Member of SIF. Nicoletta Righini, ecologist, is a postdoctoral fellow at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. She obtained her degrees at the University of Florence (Natural Sciences, BSc), Instituto de Ecolog´ıa A.C. (Ecology, MSc), and University of Illinois (Anthropology, PhD). Her research is interdisciplinary and spans the areas of integrative biology, environmental science, animal eco-physiology, nutrition and health. She is member of the Mexican National System of Researchers (SNI).

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