Här hittar du en översikt över samtliga bekräftade talare vid Materials for Tomorrow 2025, inklusive föreläsningstitlar och abstract. Innehållet uppdateras löpande.


Michael Mayer – University of Fribourg
Title: Power Sources Inspired by Electric Fish

Eleni Stavrinidou – Linköping University
Title: Biohybrid photosynthetic living materials and devices

Emile Greenhalgh – Imperial College London
Title: Looking to bio-inspired solutions to realise electric composites

Giulia Fredi – University of Trento
Title: Carbon Nanotube Forests as a Shape-Stabilizing Framework for Phase Change Materials for Heat Storage and Management

Dan Zenkert – KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Title: Multifunctional carbon fibre composites using electrochemistry

Henrik Birkedal – Aarhus University
Title: A tale with a twist: the spiral structure of Narwhal tusk is integrated across length scales

Anna Rising – SLU and Karolinska Institutet
Title: Biomimetic spider silk spinning

Fotograf: Chalmers/Mikael Terfors
Andreas Dahlin – Chalmers University of Technology
Title: Artificial nuclear pore complexes

Chiara Micheletti – Chalmers University of Technology
Title: Structure-Function Relationships in Bone at the Sub-Microscale: Challenges and Opportunities for Bioinspired Design

Richard Trask – University of Bristol
Title: Multifunctional 4D Composite Materials – The Engineering World is Changing, Remember to Adapt

Hortense Le Ferrand – Nanyang Technological University
Title: Magnetically assisted 3D printing of bioinspired microstructured materials

Paige Hall – University of Portland
Title: Extreme Anisotropicity: Directional Growth in Nature and Nanoscience

Sarah Heilshorn – Stanford University
Title: Bespoke materials for biofabrication of human tissue mimics

Edwin Jager – Linköping University
Titel: Biohybrid polymers for soft microrobotics

Furqan Ali Shah – University of Gothenburg
Title: Towards biologically-relevant design of bone-repair biomaterials

David Kisailus – University of California
Title: Convergent Evolution to Engineering: Blueprints for Multifunctional Advanced Materials