The three months flew by as I worked with so many bright minds - including Professor Andrew DeMello and Dr. Daniel Richards at the Institute for Chemical and Bioengineering, Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, ETH Zürich. Their encouragement, support and supervision throughout the attachment has been invaluable. I also had the pleasure of working with Andres Javier Bello Hernandez and Thomas Moragues - to synthesise silver nanoplates. With Andres Rocha Tapia, I had insightful discussions and am grateful for his practical assistance with my experiments. Leonard Bezinge and I had interesting brainstorming sessions about potential device designs and for making those designs a reality with 3D printing(my first hands-on experience with this tech). Dr. Emmanuel Delamarche’s lectures on micro/nanotechnology and microfluidics for biomedical applications, meanwhile, kept me fascinated.
As I was based in Zurich, I was able to attend two symposiums on point-of-care technologies (the 5th Swiss Symposium on Point-of-Care Diagnostics and Münchner Point-of-care Testing Symposium) where I gained insights into technologies that have already been commercialised as well as the future of point-of-care testing.
The engagements with people from the pharmaceutical industry also gave me a different perspective on research, which inspires me to explore and expand my horizons for future work.
When I was there, I was given access to an electronic lab book platform called Benchling. I was always used to having a physical lab book. However, I came to enjoy using Benchling because it facilitated knowledge sharing with my peers and it made cross-referencing and linking of experiments done at different times so seamless! Not to mention, it’s also helped me organise my lab entries.