M.K. Ghantasala, K.J. Suthar, and D.C. Mancini
[1] Z. Ding & B. Ziaie, A pH-tunable hydrogel microlens array with temperature-actuated light-switching capability, Applied Physics Letters, 94, 2009, 081111.403[16] A.D. MacGillivray, Nernst-Planck equations and the electroneutrality and donnan equilibrium assumptions, The Journal of Chemical Physics, 48(7), 1968, 2903–2907. [17] N.R. Aluru & G. Li, Finite cloud method: a true meshless technique based on a fixed reproducing kernel approximation, International Journal for Nnumerical Methods in Engineering, 50(10), 2001, 2373–2410. [18] A.N. Chatterjee, S.K. De, & N.R. Aluru, Electrically triggered hydrogels: mathematical models and simulations. in 2003 Nanotechnology Conference and Trade Show – Nanotech 2003, Feb 23–27 2003, 2003, 130–133. [19] R.R. Ohs, K. De Sudipto, & N.R. Aluru, Modeling of ionic hydrogel kinetics in buffered solutions, 2001 International Conference on Modeling and Simulation of Microsystems – MSM 2001, March 19–21, 2001, 7–10. [20] H. Li, Z. Yuan, K.Y. Lam, H.P. Lee, J. Chen, J. Hanes, & J. Fu, Model development and numerical simulation of electric–stimulus–responsive hydrogels subject to an externally applied electric field, Biosensors and Bioelectronics, 19(9), 2004, 1097–1107. [21] K.J. Suthar, M.K. Ghantasala, & D.C. Mancini, Simulation of hydrogel micro-actuation, Microelectronics: Design, Technology, and Packaging III, 2007, 67980P-9-67980P-9. [22] J.R. Saunders, S. Abu-Salih, & W. Moussa, Parametric chemoelectro-mechanical modeling of smart hydrogels, Journal of Computational and Theoretical Nanoscience, 5(10), 2008, 1961–1975. [23] M.A. Biot, Theory of deformation of a porous viscoelastic anisotropic solid, Journal of Applied Physics, 27(5), 1956, 459–467. [24] COMSOL, www.comsol.com, COMSOL Multiphysics, 2009. [25] R. Luo, H. Li, & K.Y. Lam, Modeling and simulation of chemoelectro-mechanical behavior of pH-electric-sensitive hydrogel, Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 389(3), 2007, 863–873. [26] K.Y. Lam, H. Li, T.Y. Ng, & R. Luo, Modeling and simulation of the deformation of multi-state hydrogels subjected to electrical stimuli, Engineering Analysis with Boundary Elements, 30(11), 2006, 1011–1017. [27] T. Wallmersperger, F.K. Wittel, & B. Kroplin, Multiscale modeling of polyelectrolyte gels, Smart Structures and Materials 2006: Electroactive Polymer Actuators and Devices (EAPAD), February 27 – March 2, 2006, 61681. [28] H. Li, Y.K. Yew, & T.Y. Ng, Computational analysis of the influence of initial fixed charge density on pH sensitive hydrogels, Modelling Simulation in Materials Science and Engineering, 16, 2008, 1–19 [29] S. Sun & A. Mak, The dynamical response of a hydrogel fiber to electrochemical stimulation, Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, 39(2), 2001, 236–246.and microfluidic bio-analysis systems. He has been a member of organization committees of many national and international conferences. Kamlesh J. Suthar has obtained B.E. degree in Mechanical and M.E. degree in Cryogenics from the Gujarat University in 1997 and 2001, respectively. He then went to Western Michigan University where he obtained M.S. in thermal engineering and Ph.D. in Mechanical engineering in December 2009. His Ph.D. research work was in collaboration with Argonne National Laboratory and he was recipient of several prestigious doctoral fellowships and grants from WMU and outside societies. He is currently working as a research associate at Center for Nanoscale Materials, Argonne National Laboratory. His specialization and interests are in multiphysics simulation, synthesis and nano-scale characterization of nano-composite soft polymer material. At Argonne National Laboratory, he is currently working at simulation of multifunction materials, nano characterization, optical and e-beam lithography, and high-energy X-ray beam analysis for material characterization. Derrick C. Mancini is the Interim Director of the Center for Nanoscale Materials of Argonne National Laboratory. Previously, he was the Project Manager for the design and construction of the CNM and prior to that was a staff physicist at the Advanced Photon Source of Argonne National Laboratory. He has over 30 years experience working with synchrotron radiation x-rays and advanced nanofabrication, with 140 publications in these fields. Before APS, he has worked at various other synchrotron radiation facilities, including CHESS (Cornell University, Ithaca), Aladdin (University Wisconsin, Madison), and MAXLab (Lund University, Sweden). He obtained his B.S. in engineering physics and B.A. in history from Cornell University, M.S. in physics and M.S. in materials science from University of Wisconsin, Madison, and Ph.D. in physics from Uppsala University, Sweden. His research interests include the application of synchrotron radiation to technological problems and the development of new nanoscale materials and nanofabrication techniques.
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