Biophysics, medical physics and biomaterials applications

SheerAlignment

Shear alignment study of actin biopolymer network (with filamin cross-linking)

Biophysics and medical physics, in their most conventional definitions, are not my extensive core areas of research. Yet, I have a number of research projects that relate closely to topics in biophysics, medical physics or biomaterials applications. Often my research into softmatter systems is aimed at learning something about the corresponding or related biological systems, or conducted with an awareness of and a view to potential applications in biological organisms, pharmaceutical applications, systems biology or biomedical applications. Further, a fair bit of our work on structure metrics and structure analysis of disordered materials is well suited for the analysis of biological data, in particular structural such as from micrographs, confocal microscopy and tomography.

In fact, two of my best cited articles are motivated by a biophysical question (structure of collagen networks in extracellular matrix as host for cell migration) and to a bone scaffold design question (biomimetic bicontinuous designs for additively manufactured bone scaffolds):

The following represent publications co-authored by me that relate to the broader fields of medical physics, biophysics or biomaterials research.

Mesh characteristics and mechanics of collagen and actin biopolymeric networks

Tools and concepts for bone structure analysis metrics, based on MIL tensors

Biomaterials designs for bone scaffold geometries

Structure formation in butterfly wing-scale cells