Single-Molecule Sensors and NanoSystems International Conference

Acronym: 

S3IC 2020

Dates: 

Wednesday, April 1, 2020 to Friday, April 3, 2020

Registration deadline: 

Friday, February 14, 2020

Submission deadline: 

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Tags: 

Location: 

Pompeu Fabra Universit
132 Carrer de Balmes
Barcelona
Spain
ES

Sensor systems have emerged that exhibit extraordinary sensitivity for detecting physical, chemical, and biological entities at the micro/nanoscale. Particularly exciting is the detection and analysis of molecules on miniature devices that have many possible applications in health, environment, analysis, and security. A new class of label-free micro and nanosensors are starting to emerge that allow us to observe dynamic processes at the single molecule level directly, with unprecedented spatial- and temporal resolution and without significantly affecting the natural and functional movements of the molecules. Micro- and nanosensors by virtue of their small interaction length probe molecules over a dynamic range often inaccessible by other techniques. Their small size enables an exceedingly high sensitivity, and the application of quantum optical measurement techniques can allow us to approach or surpass classical limits of detection. Advances in optical and electrical measurement methodology, laser interferometry, quantum optics, micro/nanofluidics, control of molecules and reactions at the nanoscale, DNA origami/synthetic molecular machines, in-vivo and wearable sensing materials, they all contribute to the rapid progress of the field of Single Molecule Sensors and nanoSystems. It is this convergence of previously often disparate fields that is accelerating the advancements in micro and nano-sensing.

This conference will bring together researchers in the rapidly advancing field of Single Molecule Sensors and nanoSystems. The conference focuses on the most recent advances in micro and nano-sensing techniques that have either demonstrated single-molecule detection or that claim single-molecule detection capability on sensor chips in the longer term.

Topics
Single-Molecule Devices and Sensor Technologies
Single-Molecule Spectroscopy
Quantum Limits in Biodetection
Quantum Sensors
Biophotons and Biophotonics Sensors
Molecular Machines, Synthetic Biology and DNA Origami
Integrated Sensor Chips and multiplexed Sensing
Micro/Nanofluidics and chemical control at the Nanoscale
Commercial Single-molecule Sensors and Sequencers
Quantum BioSensing
Single-molecule forces and force spectroscopies
Molecular Electronics
Computational approaches
Single-molecule Fluorescence and Imaging

Chairman
Prof. Frank Vollmer, University of Exeter, UK

Co-Chairman
Prof. Niek Van Hulst, ICFO, Spain

Confirmed speakers
Prof. Cees Dekker, TU Delft, The Netherlands
Prof.Hermann Gaub, LMU Munich, Germany
Prof. David Leigh, The University of Manchester, UK
Prof. Martin Plenio, Ulm University, Germany
Prof. Xiaoliang Sunney Xie, Peking University, China
Prof. Jörg Wrachtrup, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Prof. Viola Vogel, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Prof. Claudia Veigel, LMU Munich, Germany
Prof. William E. Moerner, Stanford University, United States
Prof. Luke Lee, Berkeley University, United States
Prof. Harald Giessen, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Prof. Carlos Bustamante, Berkeley University, United States