Biochemistry & Pharmacology: Open Access

Biochemistry & Pharmacology: Open Access
Open Access

ISSN: 2167-0501

Mihail Lucian Pascu

Mihail Lucian Pascu

Senior Research Scientist; Professor National Institute for Laser, Plasma and Radiation Physics, Romania

Biography

Mihail Lucian Pascu performed a PhD stage at the University of Texas at Dallas (USA) and obtained the PhD in Optics, Lasers and Plasma Physics from the University of Bucharest in 1975. He was Senior Research Scientist at the Institute for Physics and Technology of Radiation Devices since 1977 where he was Director between 1983 and 1990; he was at the same time member of the Scientific Council of the Physics Faculty of the University of Bucharest and of the Executive Committee of the Central Institute for Physics. He is currently Senior Research Scientist at the National Institute for Laser, Plasma and Radiation Physics and Associated Professor at the Physics Faculty of the University of Bucharest where he heads PhD in Optics, Laser and Spectroscopy. He worked as Science Officer at the European  Commission  DG RTD serving at COST Secretariat for the field Medicine and Health between 2001 – 2004; he was Science Officer of the European Science Foundation  at the COST Office between 2004 and 2006 responsible for Biomedicine and Molecular Biosciences. He published more than 120 papers, obtained 10 patents and presented more than 350invited papers or communications at national and international conferences. He co-authored two books. He is member of 12  national or international societies. He is member of five COST European networks in physics or biomedicine and biomedical sciences and liaison expert between COST BMBS Domain Committee and ESF PESC  Standing Committee. His professional interests are focused on inter- and multidisciplinary laser/optical spectroscopy:

 

 

 

 

Research Interest

His professional interests are focused on inter- and multidisciplinary laser/optical spectroscopy:

  1. basic research on tunable lasers dedicated to the chaotic properties of the laser beams and the extension of the chaos theory to basic human medicine and to economic systems;
  2. - optical and laser spectroscopy studies in micro-and nano-biomedicine and nano-pharmacology to overpass the resistance to treatment and to develop individual patient treatment procedures;
  3. development of methods to monitor environment (air, water, soil, biosphere) pollutants using laser spectroscopy methods/ techniques (CRDS, FTIR, fluorescence/ luminescence, pump-probe measurements, opto-acoustics). Typical pollutants considered are: NOx , SOx in air, pesticides, oil and oil components in water and soil, presence of pollutants in living organisms.

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