Magnetic carriers are unique nano-materials with a wide range of biomedical, environmental, and technological impacts. This international event will bring scientists, engineers, medical professionals, and program managers together to discuss this rapidly growing and highly interdisciplinary field. Magnetic particles are an enabling technology for a wide variety of biomedical, chemical, electronic, and functional materials research because they provide a unique handle to manipulate and sense nanostructures. Because this field benefits especially well from cross-fertilization of ideas from chemistry, biology, physics, and engineering, is our goal to create a technical and social environment in which participants from diverse disciplines can discuss trends in research and form collaborations. Three specific topic areas will be highlighted. (i) Biosensors for therapeutics and imaging, (ii) Magnetic separations, and (iii) biomedical applications of magnetic nanoparticles.
Drs. O. Thompson Mefford (Clemson U.) and Jennifer Andrew (U. Florida)
Registration includes breakfast each day of the conference, a catered lunch on Monday and Wednesday, and a BBQ dinner on Tuesday night.
TSRC is about expanding the frontiers of science, exploring new ideas, and building collaborations. The workshop schedule will allow for substantial unstructured time for participants to talk and think. All participants are expected to stay for the entire duration of the workshop. Scientists are encouraged to consider bringing family or friends. Telluride offers a number of options for children's camps (including Telluride Academy, Aha School for the Arts, and Pinhead Institute). There is more information on childcare, camps, and family activities on TSRC's website. Feel free to contact TSRC's staff to help with any planning and/or coordinating care.
Telluride Intermediate School,
Black Box Theatre
725 West Colorado Ave
Telluride CO 81435
Participant | Organization | ||||
Amirshaghaghi, Ahmad | University of Pennsylvania | ||||
Andrew, Jennifer | University of Florida | ||||
Auchus, Nadia | IMRA America | ||||
Azie, Obiora | University of Florida | ||||
Baki, Abdulkader | Fraunhofer IMM | ||||
Castillo-Torres, Keisha | University of Florida | ||||
Chalmers, Jeffrey | The Ohio State University | ||||
De La Fuente, Silvia | nanoScale Biomagnetics | ||||
Diamond, Solomon | Dartmouth College | ||||
Dutz, Silvio | TU Ilmenau | ||||
Erb, Randy | Northeastern University | ||||
Fauerbach, Jonathan | Miltenyi Biotec GmbH | ||||
FitzGerald, Sara | University of South Carolina | ||||
Ghobrial, Nardine | Clemson University | ||||
Goldfarb, Ron | National Institute of Standards and Technology | ||||
Gomez, Socrates | Quantum Design | ||||
Goodwill, Patrick | Magnetic Insight, Inc. | ||||
Gutierrez, Lucia | Universidad de Zaragonza | ||||
Hafeli, Urs | University of British Columbia | ||||
Hwang, Sangyeul | IMRA America Inc. | ||||
Jasanoff, Alan | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | ||||
Knopke, Christian | Lodestone Biomedical | ||||
Lin, Yu-Shen | Ferrotec USA | ||||
Livesey, Karen | University of Colorado-Colorado Springs | ||||
Mefford, Thompson | Clemson University | ||||
Milbrandt, Nathalie | Case Western Reserve University | ||||
Moore, Lee | Cleveland Clinic | ||||
Moskowitz, Barry | Ferrotec USA Corp. | ||||
Mues, Benedikt | RWTH Aachen University | ||||
Oberdick, Samuel | National Institute of Standards & Technology | ||||
Pasek-Allen, Jacqueline | University of Minnesota | ||||
Rinaldi, Carlos | University of Florida | ||||
Samstag, Anna Margot | Clemson University | ||||
Sandler, Sarah | CLemson University | ||||
Sannidhi, Abhinav | Auburn University | ||||
Yan, Zichun | Clemson University | ||||
Zabow, Gary | National Inst. of Standards and Tech. | ||||
Zahn, Diana | Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Informatics, TU Ilmenau | ||||
Zhao, Shan | Dartmouth University | ||||