Shiming Zhang

406 posts

Shiming Zhang banner
Shiming Zhang

Shiming Zhang

@jluoled

Dad, PhD, Asst Prof @ University of Hong Kong, interested in hydrogel bioelectronics, soft bioelectronics, and OECT-based biowearables.

Hong Kong เข้าร่วม Mart 2011
350 กำลังติดตาม553 ผู้ติดตาม
Shiming Zhang
Shiming Zhang@jluoled·
5 years celebration of #WISE at Yangshuo, Guilin.
Shiming Zhang tweet mediaShiming Zhang tweet mediaShiming Zhang tweet mediaShiming Zhang tweet media
Filipino
0
0
7
246
Shiming Zhang รีทวีตแล้ว
SciTech Era
SciTech Era@SciTechera·
This is HUGE: A soft brain chip could fix Neuralink's biggest implant problem. Scientists have developed a new kind of ultra 3D soft semiconductor that could finally solve the biggest problem with brain implants: The body attacking them. Right now, most brain chips are made from rigid materials like silicon. Your brain hates that. It responds by building scar tissue around the implant, slowly killing signal quality and sometimes forcing the device to be removed. This new chip changes the rules. Instead of hard electronics, researchers created a soft, hydrogel based semiconductor that bends, stretches, and moves like real brain tissue. Because it physically matches the brain, the immune system is far less likely to treat it as an invader. The result? > Cleaner signals. > Longer lasting implants. > And a much lower risk of rejection. This is huge for brain computer interfaces (BCIs), the same class of technology Neuralink is working on. BCIs translate brain activity into commands, allowing people to control computers, prosthetics, or even regain movement and speech. The real breakthrough is compatibility. Instead of forcing the brain to tolerate electronics, this chip behaves like biology.
SciTech Era tweet media
English
4
14
46
7.1K
Science Magazine
Science Magazine@ScienceMagazine·
This image shows three-dimensional, millimeter-thick, and cell-embeddable semiconducting hydrogel fibers. These fibers can be used to construct interwoven living transistors that mimic real neuronal connections in the brain, redefining the boundary between technology and life. Learn more this week in Science: scim.ag/4o5bf8w
Science Magazine tweet media
English
42
131
529
215.2K
Shiming Zhang
Shiming Zhang@jluoled·
@khademh Thank you Ali for bringing me to the field of hydrogels!
English
0
0
0
113
Kathy Sharpe
Kathy Sharpe@sharpekat48·
@jluoled @ScienceMagazine I would like to see you list “MEDICINE” as #1 on your list, so that patients with terminal neurological diseases such as MS will be the first to be helped by this brilliant technology.
English
1
0
1
57
Shiming Zhang
Shiming Zhang@jluoled·
Thanks @HKUniversity for the post! Hope our #3Dsemiconductor technology can find potential applications in energy efficient computing, neuroscience research and medicine!
The University of Hong Kong@HKUniversity

Congratulations to University of Hong Kong Professor Shiming Zhang (@jluoled), whose groundbreaking research on 3D semiconductors just landed on the cover of @ScienceMagazine! A century after Julius Edgar Lilienfeld’s invention of the transistor in 1925, the building blocks of electronics are now measured in nanometres. But with further breakthroughs running into physical and theoretical limits, Professor Zhang had a different idea: what if it was possible to design transistors in three dimensions, which could work like neurons in the human brain? That was easier said than done, however. Finding the answer took over five years of research and thousands of attempts. The key? Solving a hard problem with soft materials. While silicon-based transistors are rigid and two-dimensional, Professor Zhang and his team, which included researchers from HKU and Cambridge, leveraged their experience in biosensors and wearables to develop a world first: 3D hydrogel-based transistors. The potential of these new “chips” is near limitless, says Professor Zhang. Not only could they pave the way for a new generation of semiconductor architecture, but also because they are hydrogel based, they can potentially integrate with biological cells in ways rigid silicon chips never could. Professor Zhang is already looking at potential applications of the technology, including exciting new developments like neuromorphic computing. Current AI chips are resource-intensive, but in theory, biological options could run primarily on glucose. But Professor Zhang also urges caution: pointing to CRISPR as an example, he notes the importance of thinking through the ethics of the development and ensuring that it is used for good. “We need an ethical and regulatory framework,” he says. #HKU #香港大學 #UniversityofHongKong

English
1
0
13
763
Shiming Zhang
Shiming Zhang@jluoled·
Thanks @HKUniversity for the post! Hope our #3Dsemiconductor technology can find potential applications in energy efficient computing, neuroscience research and medicine.
The University of Hong Kong@HKUniversity

Congratulations to University of Hong Kong Professor Shiming Zhang (@jluoled), whose groundbreaking research on 3D semiconductors just landed on the cover of @ScienceMagazine! A century after Julius Edgar Lilienfeld’s invention of the transistor in 1925, the building blocks of electronics are now measured in nanometres. But with further breakthroughs running into physical and theoretical limits, Professor Zhang had a different idea: what if it was possible to design transistors in three dimensions, which could work like neurons in the human brain? That was easier said than done, however. Finding the answer took over five years of research and thousands of attempts. The key? Solving a hard problem with soft materials. While silicon-based transistors are rigid and two-dimensional, Professor Zhang and his team, which included researchers from HKU and Cambridge, leveraged their experience in biosensors and wearables to develop a world first: 3D hydrogel-based transistors. The potential of these new “chips” is near limitless, says Professor Zhang. Not only could they pave the way for a new generation of semiconductor architecture, but also because they are hydrogel based, they can potentially integrate with biological cells in ways rigid silicon chips never could. Professor Zhang is already looking at potential applications of the technology, including exciting new developments like neuromorphic computing. Current AI chips are resource-intensive, but in theory, biological options could run primarily on glucose. But Professor Zhang also urges caution: pointing to CRISPR as an example, he notes the importance of thinking through the ethics of the development and ensuring that it is used for good. “We need an ethical and regulatory framework,” he says. #HKU #香港大學 #UniversityofHongKong

English
2
5
21
2.8K
The University of Hong Kong
The University of Hong Kong@HKUniversity·
Congratulations to University of Hong Kong Professor Shiming Zhang (@jluoled), whose groundbreaking research on 3D semiconductors just landed on the cover of @ScienceMagazine! A century after Julius Edgar Lilienfeld’s invention of the transistor in 1925, the building blocks of electronics are now measured in nanometres. But with further breakthroughs running into physical and theoretical limits, Professor Zhang had a different idea: what if it was possible to design transistors in three dimensions, which could work like neurons in the human brain? That was easier said than done, however. Finding the answer took over five years of research and thousands of attempts. The key? Solving a hard problem with soft materials. While silicon-based transistors are rigid and two-dimensional, Professor Zhang and his team, which included researchers from HKU and Cambridge, leveraged their experience in biosensors and wearables to develop a world first: 3D hydrogel-based transistors. The potential of these new “chips” is near limitless, says Professor Zhang. Not only could they pave the way for a new generation of semiconductor architecture, but also because they are hydrogel based, they can potentially integrate with biological cells in ways rigid silicon chips never could. Professor Zhang is already looking at potential applications of the technology, including exciting new developments like neuromorphic computing. Current AI chips are resource-intensive, but in theory, biological options could run primarily on glucose. But Professor Zhang also urges caution: pointing to CRISPR as an example, he notes the importance of thinking through the ethics of the development and ensuring that it is used for good. “We need an ethical and regulatory framework,” he says. #HKU #香港大學 #UniversityofHongKong
The University of Hong Kong tweet mediaThe University of Hong Kong tweet mediaThe University of Hong Kong tweet mediaThe University of Hong Kong tweet media
English
1
4
21
5.2K
Shiming Zhang
Shiming Zhang@jluoled·
Our pleasure to host Prof. Simone Fabiano for an inspiring lecture on organic electrochemical neurons. A short stay but a long hiking! 😂
Shiming Zhang tweet mediaShiming Zhang tweet mediaShiming Zhang tweet media
English
1
0
13
694
Shiming Zhang
Shiming Zhang@jluoled·
Truly a focused symposium visioning the future of BME in different views. During our plenary talk, we share our views on wearable bioelectronics: materials, devices, and AI-embedded hardware-software co-design.
Shiming Zhang tweet media
English
0
0
3
250
Shiming Zhang รีทวีตแล้ว
Xiaomin Xu
Xiaomin Xu@xiaominxiaomin·
Amazing talks by Prof. Wei Gao, Prof. Sahika Inal, and Prof. Shiming Zhang at the iCanX HK Summit! It was an honor to host the session. Looking ahead to the next event! #Bioelectronics, #iCanX
Xiaomin Xu tweet mediaXiaomin Xu tweet mediaXiaomin Xu tweet mediaXiaomin Xu tweet media
English
1
1
25
2.5K