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Sensors and materials in wound care

Dear Sir or Madam,

For many medical professionals, wound care is one of the daily tasks. However, it is often difficult to optimally influence the healing process of a wound. New procedures and materials are promising improvements in the future. Read more in our special.

Enjoy our content!

Melanie Prüser
Editorial team COMPAMED-tradefair.com

Content

Special: Materials and sensors in wound care
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Creating 3D objects with sound

News - MANUFACTURING & DEVICES

Scientists from the Micro, Nano and Molecular Systems Lab at the Max Planck Institute for Medical Research and the Institute for Molecular Systems Engineering and Advanced Materials at Heidelberg University have created a new technology to assemble matter in 3D. Their concept uses multiple acoustic holograms to generate pressure fields.
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Intuitive machine control using speech recognition

News - SERVICES & ADVICE

Fraunhofer researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Digital Media Technology IDMT in Oldenburg have developed a speech recognition solution for use in industrial manufacturing. The system works reliably even in noisy environments and can be flexibly adapted to the user’s needs.
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Materials and sensors in wound care

Special

Image: Hand of a person performing wound care and bandaging the patient's hand; Copyright: envato/ARTFULLY79
The care of wounds is one of the daily tasks of many medical professionals. However, it is often difficult to optimally influence the course of the wound. New procedures and materials are expected to achieve improvements in the future. Read more in the Special!
Read more in the special!
Materials and sensors in wound care
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Degradation of plastic waste using newly developed biocatalysts

News - MATERIALS

The plastic materials polyurethane and polyvinyl alcohol can now be degraded under mild conditions with the help of enzymes as biocatalysts. Scientists from the University of Greifswald have developed corresponding methods together with the German company Covestro and teams from Leipzig and Dublin, as recently published in Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., in two separate articles.
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