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The 2024 Autumn Term Cardiac Function Seminar series talks will be back Thursday 14th November, when we will be welcoming Dr Burak Temelkuran, Imperial College London 

Talk Title: Advanced Fibres for Therapeutics, Diagnostics and Robotics

Talk Time: 12:30 – 13:30 UK time

Location: Hybrid Meeting (Hybrid – online Via Teams and Meeting room 427/428 4th Floor ICTEM, Hammersmith Campus, Du Cane Road W12 0NN

Please note the seminar organizers and the Head of Section would like to request that attendees will in the majority of cases be physically present in the seminar room and a participation via Teams shall be the exception.

Short Bio 

Dr Temelkuran received his MS (1996) and PhD (2000) degrees from the Department of Physics at Bilkent University, Turkey. As a postdoctoral researcher at MIT (2000-2002), Dr Temelkuran has contributed to the discovery of the 1D omnidirectional reflecting fibre. His research led to a number of foundational publications that pioneered the field of multi-material fibres. He led the technology transfer process of this fibre to a start-up company, and he was actively present at every step of the translation of his invention from the laboratory to operating theatres. His invention has been used in over 500,000 laser surgeries to date, mostly helping cancer patients.

Dr Temelkuran joined the Hamlyn Centre in 2016 and has been a lecturer in the Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction since 2021. Dr Temelkuran’s team focuses on the medical application of multi-material fibres: Functional fibres for minimally invasive interventions, fibre robots, fibre sensors, laser delivery mechanisms, laser-tissue interactions of surgical lasers, and their therapeutic and diagnostic applications. His research targets unmet needs in medicine, with his expertise in the field of multi-material fibres and his 15 years of experience in the medical industry bridging engineering and medical sciences.

Talk Summary

At the beginning of the new millennium, a polymer sheet coated with a chalcogenide glass, rolled around a sacrificial mandrel and drawn into a fibre, presented a number of novelties: A new way of guiding light, a waveguide not limited by its materials’ optical properties and hence having the ability to transmit light at any chosen wavelength, nanometre scale control of features and geometries at kilometre length scales, and last but not least, first steps of the field of multimaterial fibres that changed the way we think about fibres. The resulting fibre found its immediate application in the medical field and served about half a million patients up to date in various surgical specialities as a precise optical scalpel, enabling high-precision removal of cancer.

If you are joining online and you have not yet signed up to join the Cardiac Function Seminar Team group in order to participate in the seminar online please register via the linked tab or here which will provide access to the Team.

Please do this ahead of time of the talk.

The Cardiac Function Seminar Team
(Prof. Thomas Brand, Natasha Richmond)

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