Nano Picks by Reviewer

Prof. Henry Hess
Henry Hess is currently an Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Columbia University. He received a diploma in physics from the Technical University Berlin in 1996, and obtained his Dr rer. nat. (summa cum laude) in experimental physics from the Free University of Berlin in 1999 under the guidance of Ludger Woeste. His postdoctoral studies were conducted from 2000 to 2002 at the Department of Bioengineering, University of Washington, where he also served as a research assistant professor (2002–2005). He received the Wolfgang Paul Award of the German Society for Mass Spectrometry (2000), the Feodor Lynen postdoctoral fellowship of the Alexander-von-Humboldt foundation (2000), the Distinguished Mentor Award of the UF/HHMI “Science for Life” program (2007), and, together with his postdoctoral mentor Viola Vogel, the Philip Morris Forschungspreis (2005).
 
Nanofluidics: Back to Basics Average Rating: N/A
Reviewed On: 11/4/2008 Comments (0)
Reviewed By: Prof. Henry Hess
Review Of: Transport Phenomena in Nanofluidics
Citation: Rev. Mod. Phys., 2008, 80, pp 839-883...

Noteworthiness:    Of Interest to Students
 
 
Self-assembly – anarchy no more! Average Rating: 9.0
Reviewed On: 4/2/2008 Comments (2)
Reviewed By: Prof. Henry Hess
Review Of: Programming biomolecular self-assembly pathways
Citation: Nature 451 (2008) 318-322...

Noteworthiness:    Significant New Advance
 
 
The “nano” paper of the year 2007? Average Rating: N/A
Reviewed On: 2/18/2008 Comments (0)
Reviewed By: Prof. Henry Hess
Review Of: Synthetic Molecular Motors and Mechanical Machines
Citation: Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2007, 46, 72-191 ...

Noteworthiness:    Of Interest to Students
 
 
Monsters of the DNA world Average Rating: 9.5
Reviewed On: 11/10/2007 Comments (1)
Reviewed By: Prof. Henry Hess
Review Of: An autonomous polymerization motor powered by DNA hybridization
Citation: Nature Nanotechnology 2, 490-494 (2007) ...

Noteworthiness:    Significant New Advance
 
 
Sticky floors and sticky fingers Average Rating: N/A
Reviewed On: 10/17/2007 Comments (0)
Reviewed By: Prof. Henry Hess
Review Of: Cargo pick-up from engineered loading stations by kinesin driven molecular shuttles
Citation: Lab on a Chip, 2007, 7, 1263-1271...

Noteworthiness:    Significant New Advance
 
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