Dr. Renat R. Letfullin
Professor/Physics & Optical Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
SPIE Involvement:
Author | Instructor
Publications (23)

Proceedings Article | 22 April 2016 Presentation + Paper
Proceedings Volume 9723, 97230S (2016) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2206002
KEYWORDS: Nanoparticles, X-rays, Absorption, Tissues, Visible radiation, X-ray imaging, Photons, Cancer, Mie scattering, Plasmons, Scattering, Gold, Optical spheres, Light scattering

Proceedings Article | 12 March 2015 Paper
Proceedings Volume 9338, 93381G (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2075542
KEYWORDS: Nanoparticles, Gold, Carbon, Cancer, Particles, Temperature metrology, Absorption, Tumors, Computer simulations, Metals

Proceedings Article | 18 February 2011 Paper
Proceedings Volume 7883, 78834L (2011) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.873195
KEYWORDS: Nanoparticles, Absorption, Bone, Tissues, Gold, Particles, Cancer, Receptors, Optical spheres, Transparency

Proceedings Article | 3 March 2010 Paper
Renat Letfullin, Colin E. Rice, Thomas George
Proceedings Volume 7548, 75484K (2010) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.852455
KEYWORDS: Bone, Tissues, Laser ablation, Laser tissue interaction, Ultrafast phenomena, Laser dentistry, Picosecond phenomena, Absorption, Laser vision correction, Femtosecond phenomena

Proceedings Article | 17 February 2010 Paper
Renat Letfullin, Christian Iversen, Thomas George
Proceedings Volume 7576, 757611 (2010) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.852786
KEYWORDS: Nanoparticles, Particles, Gold, Pulsed laser operation, Metals, Absorption, Cancer, Spherical lenses, Nd:YAG lasers, Nanorods

Showing 5 of 23 publications
Course Instructor
SC1176: Computational Nanomedicine
This course will provide training in computational problem-solving techniques used to understand and predict properties of nanoscale systems for nanomedicine applications. We will focus on applications in cancer discovery and treatment using nanoparticles. The nanodrug, selectively delivered to the tumor site, can be activated by radiation for a strong drug release, or nanoparticles can be used as a drug themselves by producing biological damage through thermal and mechanical ablations or charged particle emission. The nanodrug design includes the physical properties like material, optical, thermal, etc., and morphological properties (shape, size and structure) of nanoparticles. Emphasis of this course will be placed on how to use simulations effectively to predict plasmonic properties that occur at the nanoparticles, and compute the optical properties of normal and cancerous cell organelles for the selective nanophototherapy applications. As a result of these simulations we will predict the optimal wavelength of radiation and the size of nanoparticles of given material for nanodrug design in cancer therapy and diagnostics.
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