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Seibersdorf, 26 Professor Dr. Wolfgang Knoll Professional Career 1973 Diploma - Physics, Technical University of Karlsruhe 1976 Ph.D. - Biophysics, University of Konstanz 1976-1977 Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Konstanz 1977-1980 Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Ulm 1980-1981 Postdoctoral Fellow, IBM Res Laboratory, San José, CA 1981 Visiting Scientist, Institute Laue-Langevin, Grenoble, FR 1981-1986 Assistant Professor, Technical University of Munich 1985 Visiting Scientist, IBM Res. Laboratory, San José, CA 1986 Habilitation in Experimental Physics, Technical University of Munich 1986-1991 Young Investigator/Associate Professor, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Mainz 1988 Visiting Scientist, Optical Sciences Center, Tucson, AZ 1990 Visiting Scientist, Dept. of Chem. & Nuc. Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 1990-1991 Visiting Professor, University of Erlangen 1991-1999 Head of Laboratory for Exotic Nano-Materials, Frontier Research Program, RIKEN-Institute, Japan 1998-2012 Consulting Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 1993-2008 Director, Max-Planck-Institut für Polymerforschung, Mainz since 1998 Professor (by Courtesy) Chemistry Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL since 1999 Adjunct Professor, Hanyang University, Korea 1999-2003 Temasek Professor, National University of Singapore 2004-2013 Visiting Principal Scientist, Institute of Materials Research and Engineering, Singapore since 2008 Scientific Managing Director, AIT Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH, Wien since 2009 Honorary Professor, University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Wien since 2009 Visiting Professor, Nanyang Technological University, Honours: Singapore Heisenberg Fellow of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, 1986 Merck Centennial Lecturer, University of Iowa, Ames, 1988 Heinrich-Welker-Award, Siemens/Universität Erlangen, 1990 Eugen-und-Ilse-Seibold Award of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, 2003 Exner Medal, Österreichischer Gewerbeverein, 2008 Regular Member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, 2010 Honorary Doctorat, University of Twente, The Netherlands, 2011 Robert F. Rushmer Lecturer, University of Washington, Seattle, 2017 Academic Qualifications: I got my PhD degree in Biophysics from the Biology Department of the University of Konstanz with a Thesis on “Ion Translocation across Artificial Lipid Bilayer Membranes”. The Habilitation in Experimental Physics was awarded from the Technical University of Munich, based on a thesis on “Phase Behavior of Mixed Lipid Bilayer Membranes”. During this time in Munich, I spend a post-doc year at IBM in San Jose, working on Surface- Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy. This started a scientific field that became my major area of expertise: Surface-Plasmon Optics in various formats, however, mostly for biosensing applications. This field defines the core competence of my research group. In addition to the Biophotonics activities I started in Japan a program on Bioelectronics. At that time (in the 1990ies) and then also later in Mainz we focused on the coupling of neurons (primary hippocampal cells, transfected P19 cells, and brain tissue slices) and other excitatory cells like cardiac myocytes to field-effect transistors (fabricated mostly in CMOS technology). Later we started a program on Electronic Biosensing, based on organic FETs. And then in Singapore we began to work mostly with graphene-based FETs and their application for sensing with antibodies, aptamers, for food toxin detection and, as a particular effort, recently for smell sensing which is growing into a major effort in my group. After a few years in Mainz at the Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research (MPI-P) as an Associate Professor with a joint appointment at the University of Mainz, I followed in 1991 a call to become the Head of the Laboratory for Exotic Nanomaterials at RIKEN in Tokyo, Japan; a program that I was directing until 1999. In 1993, I was then furthermore appointed Director at the MPI-P with a mandate to establish the Materials Science Department. From 1999 to 2003 I was appointed Temasek Professor at the National University of Singapore with a mandate for setting up and running a laboratory on polymer science, followed by two terms as a Visiting Scientist at the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering, an A-Star operation in Singapore, before founding and running with my colleague Prof. Bo Liedberg from Sweden the Center for Biomimetic Sensor Science at the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. From 2008 until today, I’m co-managing as the scientific director the AIT Austrian Institute of Technology in Vienna, Austria’s largest non-university research institute with more than 1260 members. The institute with its Centers on Energy, Mobility Systems, Digital Safety and Security, Health and Bioresources, Low-Emission Transport, Vision, Automation, and Control, Technology Experience, and Innovation Systems & Policy, covers a broad range of activities; however, I kept running a small research group of PhD students and postdocs working with me on optical biosensing with surface-plasmons and guided optical waves, as well as, on bioelectronic sensing based on field-effect transistor devices. Academic Teaching Experience: During my time in Mainz (1987-2008) I was regularly teaching at the University of Mainz a 3 semester course on “Membrane Biophysics” which was attended by physics, chemistry and biology students and was part of a Master in Biophysics program. Furthermore, I taught courses on “Polymers and Light”, “Electrochemistry and Nanosciences”, and “Thin Functional Films”. From 2003 – 2008 once a year in Venice, I was teaching a course on “Processing of Thin Films” within a Master Program on Nanotechnology. And finally over the years, I was teaching courses at Stanford University, California, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea, the National University of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University of Singapore, Twente University, the Netherlands, and at the University of Erlangen, Germany. Publications and Research Activity Impact: So far, I published more than 850 original papers that were cited more than 41.000 times and earned me an h-factor of 105 (Google Scholar). A list of papers that were published during the past 3 years, and the 20 most cited papers are attached below. Lectures at Intl. Conferences, Institutes, and Companies (past five years, all invited) 2013 Nanostructured Polymeric/Hybrid Materials for Advanced Biosensing M3, Singapore, January 15 Functionalized OFETs for Biosensing SY-Lab, Purkersdorf, January 31 DNA Diagnostics: Optical or by Electronics? COST TD 1003 - Thematic Workshop Bratislava, April 10 Future Innovation – Future Education ISTA, Gugging, May 7 Biosensing with Nano-Objects: Optical or by Electronics? Academy of Sciences, Bucharest, June 18 Electrochemical Surface Technology CEST, Wiener Neustadt, June 25 The Future of Biosensors: Optical or by Electronics? IVC, Paris, September 11 Biosensing with Nano-Objects: Optical or by Electronics? NTU, Singapore, November 8 Biosensing: Optical or by Electronics? Forschungszentrum Jülich, November 20 CEITEC, Brno, December 4 2014 Die Zukunft der Forschung: Die biomimetische Nase – oder: Auf dem Weg zum empfindlichen Geruchssensor 4. Tullner Zukunftsforum, January 24 Smell Sensors – Optical or by Electronics? IMRE, Singapore, February 24 Bio-Electronic Signal Transduction Technical University of Vienna, April 4 Biosensing with evanescent waves and integrated optics Biosensors, Melbourne, May 28 Tethered Bimolecular Lipid Membranes - a Novel Model Membrane Platform Vienna, University of Vienna, August 19 Biosensing: Optical or by Electronics? Singapore, October 21 Membrane-Embedded Engines at Work NTU, Singapore, December 5 Electrochemical/electronic DNA/Aptamer Sensor Based on Graphene FET CEST, Wiener Neustadt, December 9 2015 Smell Sensors – Optical or by Electronics? NITHM, Singapore, February 5 Nanostructured Polymeric/Hybrid Systems BioMaGune, San Sebastian, March 12 Biomolecular Diagnostics – Optical or by Electronics? Nano and Photonics, Mauterndorf, March 20 The Austrian R&D System … Tokyo, Japan, March 23 Smell Sensors – Optical or by Electronics? University of Vienna, April 2 University of Rochester, April 9 University of Bayreuth, June 1 Leeds University, June 3 Smell Sensing University of Catania, September 17 Bio Sensing– Optical or by Electronics? ST Microelectronics, Catania, September 18 Bio-/ Medical Sensing Based on 2D Electronic Devices Center of Advances 2D Materials, NUS, November 12 Smell Sensors Biomed Engineering, NUS, November 13 2016 Tethered Bimolecular Lipid Membranes - a Novel Model Membrane Platform FZ Jülich, January 18 Sensing Smells TU Wien, January 22 Tethered Bimolecular Lipid Membranes - a Novel Model Membrane Platform NUS, February 5 Smart Wound Dressing HYMADE, Paris, March 17 Bio-/ Medical Sensing Based on 2D Electronic Devices BOSCH, Singapore, April15 AIT Austrian Institute of Technology Jülich, May 10 Smell Sensors – Optical or by Electronics? CIMTEC, Perugia, June 5 Nanostructured Polymeric/Hybrid Materials for Advanced Separation and Sensing Workshop on Advanced Separation and Sensing, Wachenburg, June 17 Sensing Smells OrBItaly, Santa Cesarea, October 28 BIGHEART, NUS, November 29 Biological Interfaces – Interfacing with Biology, Leeds, December 8 Bio-/ Medical Sensing Based on 2D Electronic Devices IFA Tulln, December 6 2017 Sensing Smell University of Cagliari, March 13 AIT Austrian Institute of
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