Simiao Niu (@simiaoniu) 's Twitter Profile
Simiao Niu

@simiaoniu

Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Rutgers University @BMERutgers

ID: 718707654

calendar_today26-07-2012 20:30:52

26 Tweet

338 Followers

188 Following

Simiao Niu (@simiaoniu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My work recently published at Nature Electronics that provides a new solution to integrate soft sensors with rigid silicon read out circuits using revised RFID. For more about this work, please read the news report from Stanford University. news.stanford.edu/2019/08/16/wir…

Simiao Niu (@simiaoniu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The 2nd collaboration with @naoji_keio on the stretchable RFID topic at BAO group Zhenan Bao . In this work, through material and device optimization, we boost the intrinsically stretchable semiconductor device operating frequency by 5 orders. nature.com/articles/s4158…

nature (@nature) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A paper in Nature describes the development of intrinsically stretchable polymer diodes that can operate at wireless communication frequencies, for use in skin-like wearable electronics nature.com/articles/s4158…

Naoji Matsuhisa @RCAST, UTokyo / 松久 直司 @東大先端研 (@naoji_tokyo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our work, "High-frequency and intrinsically stretchable polymer diodes", is now introduced on youtube. I appreciate the team who made this very nice video! youtu.be/Km1-LbqoHGI

Nature Portfolio (@natureportfolio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A team of researchers have developed a new polymer diode that is stretchable and operates at high enough frequency to unlock wireless operation and power. Read the nature paper: go.nature.com/3J8Vryf

Simiao Niu (@simiaoniu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Glad that our technology published in 2022 was highlighted by the Wall Street Journal. Yuanwen and I are currently developing the 2nd generation of this technology and we hope that this technology can benefit patients with chronic wounds.

Simiao Niu (@simiaoniu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My team at RutgersBME is thrilled to contribute the development of this Active Biointegrated Living Electronics technology with Prof. Bozhi Tian's team at the University of Chicago. I believe this groundbreaking platform heralds a new era for next-generation bioelectronics.

Simiao Niu (@simiaoniu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our team is grateful to be featured by Rutgers Today Rutgers University RutgersBME, highlighting our recent living bioelectronics research published in Science Magazine. Hope to bring this technology to clinical settings soon! rutgers.edu/news/heal-skin…