Draper, Rockford K.
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Rockford Draper serves as a professor of both molecular and cell biology and chemistry. He is also an affiliated faculty member at the Alan G. MacDiarmid NanoTech Institute. His research interests are "the molecular mechanisms of membrane trafficking in eukaryotic cells and applications of molecular and cell biology to the emerging field of bionanotechnology." Follow the links here to learn more about Dr. Draper.
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Acute and Chronic Toxicity to Daphnia Magna of Colloidal Silica Nanoparticles in a Chemical Mechanical Planarization Slurry after Polishing a Gallium Arsenide Wafer
(Elsevier Science BV, 2018-12-29)Semiconductor chip manufacturers use slurries of metal oxide nanoparticles (NPs) as abrasives in chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) processes on wafers containing films of III/V semiconducting materials. Assessing the ... -
Acute and Chronic Toxicity of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles in Chemical Mechanical Planarization Slurries with Daphnia Magna
The semiconductor manufacturing industry uses metal oxide nanoparticles (NPs), including colloidal silica (c-SiO₂), fumed silica (f-SiO₂), ceria (CeO₂), and alumina (Al₂O₃), as abrasives in chemical mechanical planarization ... -
A Carbon Nanotube-based Raman-imaging Immunoassay For Evaluating Tumor Targeting Ligands
(Royal Society of Chemistry, 2014-04-16)Herein, we describe a versatile immunoassay that uses biotinylated single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) as a Raman label, avidin-biotin chemistry to link targeting ligands to the label, and confocal Raman microscopy to ...