Professor Kourosh Kalantar-Zadeh
Kourosh
Kalantar-Zadeh, Ph.D. is
Professor of Chemical Engineering at the University of New South Wales (UNSW),
Australia and also an Honorary Professor of Electronic Engineering at RMIT,
Australia.
He is coauthor of
Nanotechnology-Enabled Sensors.
Kourosh’s research areas include biosensors,
nano-structured thin films and nano-crystal growth, micro-fluidics,
MEMS/NEMS, conductive polymers with embedded nano-particles and
nanofibers, polymeric optical waveguides, ferroelectric materials,
structural characterization of thin films, acoustic waves, and
thermoelectric materials.
His papers include
A Layered SAW Gas Sensor Based on a
Polyaniline/In2O3
Nanofiber Composite,
Hydrogen sensing characteristics of WO3 thin film
conductometric
sensors activated by Pt and Au catalysts,
Characterization of ZnO Nanobelt-Based Gas Sensor
for H2, NO2, and Hydrocarbon Sensing,
Investigation of the oxygen gas sensing performance
of Ga2O3 thin films with different
dopants,
The Fascinating but Deceptive Ferritin: To Measure It or Not to
Measure
It in Chronic Kidney Disease?, and
A novel Love-mode device based on a ZnO/ST-cut quartz
crystal structure for sensing applications.
Kourosh earned his Bachelor of Science in Telecommunications at Sharif
University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 1993. He earned his Master of
Science in Telecommunications) at Tehran University, Tehran, Iran in
1997. He earned his Ph.D. in Micro/Nano-electronics and Bioelectronics)
at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia in 2002.
Read
New Power Source Discovered,
Aussie Nano-Material Breakthrough Could Lead To Faster
Gadgets, and
Breakthrough improves solar panel technology 30 percent.
Read his
Australian Nanotechnology Network profile and his
LinkedIn profile.