Paul Dalton

Paul Dalton

University of Oregon

H-index: 64

North America-United States

About Paul Dalton

Paul Dalton, With an exceptional h-index of 64 and a recent h-index of 50 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Oregon, specializes in the field of Biofabrication, 3D Printing, Melt Electrowriting, Tissue Engineering, Biomaterials.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Biofabricated Tissues and Organs

Why bioprinting in regenerative medicine should adopt a rational technology readiness assessment

First Advanced Bilayer Scaffolds for Tailored Skin Tissue Engineering Produced via Electrospinning and Melt Electrowriting

Bioassembly of hemoglobin-loaded photopolymerizable spheroids alleviates hypoxia-induced cell death

Manufacture of Biomimetic Auricular Surgical Implants Using 3D Printed High Density Polyethylene Microfibers

[n] Cycloparaphenylenes as Compatible Fluorophores for Melt Electrowriting

Integration of Melt Electrowritten Microfibers with Magnetoelastic Sensors for Continuous Monitoring of Cell Growth

Cryo-Electrohydrodynamic Jetting of Aqueous Silk Fibroin Solutions

Paul Dalton Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

15903

Citations(since 2020)

8182

Cited By

10867

hIndex(all)

64

hIndex(since 2020)

50

i10Index(all)

112

i10Index(since 2020)

94

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Paul Dalton Skills & Research Interests

Biofabrication

3D Printing

Melt Electrowriting

Tissue Engineering

Biomaterials

Top articles of Paul Dalton

Biofabricated Tissues and Organs

2024/4/19

Why bioprinting in regenerative medicine should adopt a rational technology readiness assessment

2024/4/12

First Advanced Bilayer Scaffolds for Tailored Skin Tissue Engineering Produced via Electrospinning and Melt Electrowriting

Advanced Functional Materials

2024/3/7

Bioassembly of hemoglobin-loaded photopolymerizable spheroids alleviates hypoxia-induced cell death

Biofabrication

2024/4/1

Manufacture of Biomimetic Auricular Surgical Implants Using 3D Printed High Density Polyethylene Microfibers

Advanced Materials Technologies

2024/2

[n] Cycloparaphenylenes as Compatible Fluorophores for Melt Electrowriting

2024/1/29

Integration of Melt Electrowritten Microfibers with Magnetoelastic Sensors for Continuous Monitoring of Cell Growth

Sensors & Diagnostics

2024

Paul Dalton
Paul Dalton

H-Index: 43

Keat Ghee Ong
Keat Ghee Ong

H-Index: 24

Cryo-Electrohydrodynamic Jetting of Aqueous Silk Fibroin Solutions

ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering

2023/11/21

Primary Glial Cell and Glioblastoma Morphology in Cocultures Depends on Scaffold Design and Hydrogel Composition

Advanced Biology

2023/10

Technical improvements in preparing 3D printed anatomical models for comminuted fracture preoperative planning

3D Printing in Medicine

2023/9/11

Effects of Electrode Design on the Melt Electrowriting of Sinusoidal Structures

Advanced Engineering Materials

2023/9

Function Follows Form: Oriented Substrate Nanotopography Overrides Neurite-Repulsive Schwann Cell–Astrocyte Barrier Formation in an In Vitro Model of Glial …

Nano Letters

2023/7/17

A decade of melt electrowriting

2023/7

Magnetically responsive melt electrowritten structures

Advanced Materials Technologies

2023/7

MEWron: An open-source melt electrowriting platform

Additive Manufacturing

2023/6/5

Thermochromic Responses on Melt Electrowritten Poly(ϵ-caprolactone) Microstructures

ACS Applied Polymer Materials

2023/5/18

Semi‐Woven Structures via Dual Nozzle Melt Electrowriting

Macromolecular Materials and Engineering

2023/4

Electrohydrodynamic 3D Printing of Aqueous Solutions

2023/2

Melt Electrowriting of Poly (dioxanone) Filament Using a Multi‐Axis Robot

Macromolecular Materials and Engineering

2022/12

The Impact of Including Carbonyl Iron Particles on the Melt Electrowriting Process

Macromolecular Materials and Engineering

2022/12

See List of Professors in Paul Dalton University(University of Oregon)

Co-Authors

academic-engine