Hiroyuki Fujita

Also published under:H. Fujita

Affiliation

Tokyo City University, Tokyo, JAPAN
Canon Medical Systems Corporation, Tochigi, JAPAN

Topic

Energy Harvesting,Resonance Frequency,Bias Voltage,Electret,Electrode,Electrostatic Forces,Fabrication Process,Cancer Cells,Conventional Lithography,Electrochemical Reaction,Electrostatic Mechanism,Energy Harvesting Devices,High-resolution,Linewidth,Mechanical Properties Of Cells,Microfabrication,Microfluidic Device,Nanoelectrodes,Nanoimprint Lithography,Output Current,Pattern Transfer,Power Generation,Sample Stage,Si Substrate,Surface Tension,Thin-film Electrodes,Uniform Transfer,Vibration Environment,Accelerometer,Actuator,Atomic Force Microscopy,Bilayer System,Biological Applications,Biophysical Properties,Bonds In Structure,Branched-chain,Breast Cancer Cell Lines,Cancer Cell Lines,Cancer Stem Cells,Cancer Stem Cells In Tumors,Cell Biology,Cell Classification,Cell Size,Cell Stiffness,Changes In Frequency,Channel Resistance,Charged Electret,Charging Voltage,Chemical Vapor Deposition,Circulating Tumor Cells,

Biography

Hiroyuki Fujita (S'76–M'80) received the B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Tokyo, Japan, in 1975, 1977, and 1980, respectively.
In 1980, he joined the Institute of Industrial Science at the University of Tokyo as an Associate Professor, where he investigated acoustic emission phenomena from fatigue cracking of metals and electrical discharges in solid insulators. From July 1983 to June 1985, he was with the Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, as a Visiting Scientist, where his research activities were acoustic emission monitoring of superconducting magnets and cryomechanics and the study of the mechanical properties of materials at cryogenic temperature. He is currently Professor at the Institute of Industrial Science of Tokyo and the Director of the Center for International Research on MicroMechatronics (CIRMM). His current research interests include micromaching technology, microactuators and microsystems applied to optics and bio/nanotechnology.
Dr. Fujita is a President of the Sensors and micromachines Sub-Society of the Institute of Electrical Engineering of Japan. He is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems.