ICMS
The Institute for Complex Molecular Systems (ICMS) is an interdisciplinary initiative at the Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e). It brings excellent researchers from different areas together to promote cross-breeding of ideas across departments and across disciplines. Several research groups in different departments form the basis research platform for building knowledge and infrastructure in systems chemistry and supramolecular chemistry. With this multidisciplinary approach the aim is to create complex, functional objects based on novel engineering tools and state-of-the-art modeling. All in close collaboration with staff members, PhD students and post-docs working in physics, biology, mathematics, chemistry, chemical engineering and mechanical engineering.
Although the animations shown on our channel try to represent the underlying scientific data as accurately as possible, they are (and always will be) artist impressions.
ICMS Industrial Challenge 2022
Introducing the Institute for Complex Molecular Systems
Dust Mitigation Technology: Because space exploration can be a dirty business
Dust Mitigation Technology: Maintaining power production of solar farms in sandy environments
Sensor voor continue biomoleculaire monitoring
Smart well plate for Organ-on-Chips
ICMS Industrial Challenge 2020 – Join now!
Making a moving nanomotor
An Untethered Magnetic- and Light-Responsive Rotary Gripper
A stochastic program to evaluate disruption mitigation investments in the supply chain
Laser sintering of polymer particle pairs: Experimental setup
Colloids and the depletion interaction
ICMS Animation Studio Showreel 2019
Nanoporous polymer particles made by suspension polymerization
Biomarker Monitoring by Particle Mobility Sensing (BPM)
14-3-3/Tau: The Way to an Alzheimer's Cure?
ICMS Animation Studio Showreel 2016
Antifreeze proteins: shaping ice crystal growth
Controlling antibody activity using DNA-based molecular locks
Making artificial cilia
Influence in Complex Networks
Small Worlds and Six Degrees of Separation
Complex Networks
Single-Molecule Detection using Plasmons in Metal Nanoparticles
Self-Assembly of Selective Reaction Centers by Carbon on a Cobalt Fischer-Tropsch Catalyst
Dynamic Surface Topographies
Picosecond Plasmons on a Wire Waveguide
Transient Cr2+ dimers for selective glucose conversion
Cancer Metastasis on a Chip
ICMS Animation Studio Showreel 2014