|
|
|
AIChE Honors Professor Mikos with the Alpha
Chi Sigma Award
Prof. Antonios G. Mikos received the 2007 Alpha Chi Sigma Award from the
American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) for his outstanding career
accomplishments in fundamental and applied chemical engineering research.
The coveted award is one of the highest honors bestowed by the
organization.
AIChE, the worlds leading organization for chemical engineering professionals,
will formally present Mikos with the award on November 4, 2007 during the
Institute’s Annual Meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Mikos, the J.W. Cox Professor of Bioengineering, professor of Chemical
and Biomolecular Engineering, and director of Rice's Center for Excellence
in Tissue Engineering, specializes in a broad range of research topics,
including the synthesis, processing, and evaluation of new biomaterials
for use as scaffolds for tissue engineering, carriers for controlled
drug delivery, and non-viral vectors for gene therapy. His work has
led to the development of novel orthopedic, dental, cardiovascular,
neurologic, and ophthalmologic biomaterials.
Mikos joined Rice as the T.N. Law Assistant Professor of Bioengineering
and Chemical Engineering in 1992. He was promoted to associate professor
in 1996, and helped establish the Department of Bioengineering
in 1997. Professor Mikos founded Rice’s Center
for Excellence in Tissue Engineering in
1998. A year later, he was named the J.W. Cox Professor of Bioengineering.
While
at Rice, Mikos has supervised 35 Ph.D. and 6 M.S. graduate students,
as well as 24 postdoctoral fellows. He holds 23 patents, has authored more
than 330 publications, and is a founding editor of the journal Tissue
Engineering. He serves on the editorial boards of the journals Advanced
Drug Delivery Reviews, Cell Transplantation, Journal of
Biomaterials Science Polymer Edition, Journal of Biomedical
Materials Research (Part A and B), and Journal of Controlled
Release. Mikos is a founding member of the Tissue Engineering
and Regenerative Medicine International Society, a fellow of
the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, and president
elect of the North American Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
International Society. He is also active in AIChE, the Biomedical
Engineering Society, Controlled Release Society, and Society for Biomaterials.
In recent years, his research and service to the science community has
earned numerous professional honors, including the Society for Biomaterials’ Clemson
Award for Contributions to the Literature (2001), Orthopaedic Research Society's
Marshall R. Urist Award for Excellence in Tissue Regeneration Research (2005),
Biomedical Engineering Society’s Distinguished Lecturer Award (2007),
and the Edith and Peter O'Donnell Award in Engineering from The Academy
of Medicine, Engineering and Science of Texas (2007).
Mikos is known across academia and the biomedical industry for
the short course Advances in Tissue Engineering as he has organized
the event since 1993 (click here to visit the web site of the shrort
course). Mikos
received a Chemical Engineering degree from the Aristotle University
of Thessaloniki, Greece in 1983, and a doctorate in Chemical Engineering
from Purdue University in 1988. From 1990-1991, he was a postdoctoral
fellow at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology and Harvard Medical School.
|
|