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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
Liwei Lin

Liwei Lin

· ProfessorVerified

University of California, Berkeley · Mechanical Engineering

Active 1986–2026

h-index99
Citations48.7k
Papers1.2k236 last 5y
Funding$2.9M
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About

Liwei Lin is a Distinguished Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, and the James Marshall Wells Academic Chair. His research focuses on MEMS (Microelectromechanical Systems), NEMS (Nanoelectromechanical Systems), nanotechnology, and the design and manufacturing of microsensors and microactuators. He specializes in the development of micromachining processes, including silicon surface and bulk micromachining, micromolding processes, and addresses mechanical issues in MEMS such as heat transfer, solid and fluid mechanics, and dynamics. Professor Lin has held various academic positions at UC Berkeley, including Vice Chair for Graduate Study in the Mechanical Engineering Department from 2006 to 2009. He earned his PhD in Mechanical Engineering from UC Berkeley in 1993, following his MS from the same institution in 1991 and a BS in Power Mechanical Engineering from National Tsing Hua University in 1986. His professional background also includes positions at the University of Michigan and National Taiwan University, as well as industry experience as a Senior Research Scientist at BEI Electronics Inc. His contributions to the field are recognized through his leadership roles and his extensive research in micro- and nano-scale mechanical systems.

Research topics

  • Computer Science
  • Nanotechnology
  • Materials science
  • Computer Security
  • Engineering
  • Organic chemistry
  • Chemical engineering
  • Biochemical engineering
  • Chemistry
  • Manufacturing engineering
  • Mechanical engineering

Selected publications

  • Multiple synergistic effects induced by Ge doping enhance the thermoelectric performance of n-type PbTe

    Journal of Materials Chemistry A · 2026-01-01

    article

    Cu/Ge co-doping in n-type PbTe enlarges interstitial voids, enhances Cu solubility, flattens bands, and softens the off-centered lattice, achieving peak zT ∼ 1.4, zT avg ∼ 1.0 (300–773 K), and ∼13% theoretical efficiency.

  • Risk-adaptive therapy guided by dynamic ctDNA in nasopharyngeal carcinoma

    Nature · 2026-03-11 · 2 citations

    article
  • Cyclodextrin metal-organic frameworks as templates for ordered polymerisation of polyaniline in supercapacitors with enhanced electrochemical performance

    Supramolecular chemistry · 2025-06-23 · 1 citations

    article

    A cyclodextrin metal-organic framework (CD-MOF) was used as a synthesis template to guide the ordered polymerisation of polyaniline (PANI). The resulting PANI/CD-MOF composites (PM) were successfully prepared via interfacial polymerisation, with their structure and properties regulated by adjusting the concentrations of aniline and CD-MOF. The electrochemical performance of PM was evaluated using cyclic voltammetry (CV), galvanostatic charge–discharge (GCD), and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Experimental results demonstrated that the material exhibited excellent electrochemical performance in supercapacitors. Specifically, when the aniline concentration was 0.04 mol/L, PM-0.04 achieved a capacitance of 628.8 F/g at 1 A/g. Furthermore, a symmetric supercapacitor assembled with PM-0.04 exhibited a specific capacitance of 119.4 F/g at 1 A/g, along with good cycling stability at 5 A/g. These results demonstrate the potential of CD-MOF-based composites in enhancing the performance of supercapacitors, offering high specific capacitance, good cycling stability, and rapid charge–discharge capability.

  • Laser-assisted direct three-dimensional printing of free-standing thermoset devices

    Nature Electronics · 2025-11-07 · 6 citations

    article
  • A 3.55‐µm Ultrathin, Skin‐Like Mechanoresponsive, Compliant, and Seamless Ionic Conductive Electrode for Epidermal Electrophysiological Signal Acquisition and Human‐Machine Interaction

    Exploration · 2025-07-08 · 17 citations

    articleOpen access

    Flexible ionic conductive electrodes, as a fundamental component for electrical signal transmission, play a crucial role in skin-surface electronic devices. Developing a skin-seamlessly electrode that can effectively capture long-term, artifact-free, and high-quality electrophysiological signals remains a challenge. Herein, we report an ultra-thin and dry electrode consisting of deep eutectic solvent (DES) and zwitterions (CEAB), which exhibit significantly lower reactance and noise in both static and dynamic monitoring compared to standard Ag/AgCl gel electrodes. Our electrodes have skin-like mechanical properties (strain-rigidity relationship and flexibility), outstanding adhesion, and high electrical conductivity. Consequently, they excel in consistently capturing high-quality epidermal biopotential signals, such as the electrocardiogram (ECG), electromyogram (EMG), and electroencephalogram (EEG) signals. Furthermore, we demonstrate the promising potential of the electrodes in clinical applications by effectively distinguishing aberrant EEG signals associated with depressive patients. Meanwhile, through the integration of CEAB electrodes with digital processing and advanced algorithms, valid gesture control of artificial limbs based on EMG signals is achieved, highlighting its capacity to significantly enhance human-machine interaction.

  • [The advances of artificial intelligence in the diagnosis and treatment of nasopharyngeal carcinoma].

    PubMed · 2025-12-07

    article
  • Hypersensitive pressure sensors inspired by scorpion mechanosensory mechanisms for near-body flow detection in intelligent robots

    Science Advances · 2025-08-20 · 11 citations

    articleOpen access

    Sensitivity enhancement for pressure sensors over a broad linear range can improve sensing performance for a wide range of applications such as health monitoring and artificial intelligence. Here, inspired by the high-precision mechanosensory mechanism of the scorpion, a bioinspired piezoresistive pressure sensor (BPPS) is reported for the synergistic enhancement of sensitivity and linearity at 65.56 millivolts per volt per kilopascal and 0.99934, respectively, in a pressure range from 0 to 500 kilopascals. The BPPS can distinguish laminar, transitional, and turbulent flows as well as identify approaching objects of different shapes with an accuracy exceeding 85.42% by integrating a wavelet transform algorithm and the ResNet18 deep learning network. As a proof of concept, BPPS has been engineered in a hexapod robot to enable near-body flow field sensing for active collision avoidance. This work underscores the potential to leverage key design concepts inspired by living insects for improved sensing performance and offers structural insights for other high-precision sensors.

  • The Perspectives of Families in Decision-Making Conflicts Related to Palliative Care Patients With Mechanical Ventilation in Taiwan

    American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine® · 2025-05-11

    articleOpen access

    BackgroundFamily members experience decision-making conflicts regarding changes in patient care. If the medical team does not attempt to understand the family members' awareness of palliative care, family members may experience medical decision-making stress and dilemmas. This study examined the decision-making conflicts of the family members of patients dependent on prolonged mechanical ventilator regarding palliative care in Taiwan.MethodsA cross-sectional design was used in this study. Family members of such patients in the subacute respiratory care ward and the respiratory intensive care unit of a medical center in Taiwan were recruited. A structured questionnaire was used to collect data.ResultsAmong the family members of the 127 patients included, 57.5% hesitated to make palliative medical decisions and 61.4% experienced palliative medical decision conflicts. The absence of other chronic diseases, family members' inability to accept the movement of patients to palliative care, and family members' hesitation in palliative care medical decision-making resulted in decision-making conflicts. In this study, 127 prolonged mechanical ventilation-dependent patients (PMVDP) and their family members were examined. The results revealed that family members experienced palliative care medical decision-making difficulties (61.40% = <2.5). Predictors of palliative care decision-making conflict for PMVDP and their family members included the following: absence of other comorbid chronic diseases, the inability of family to accept palliative care on behalf of patients, and hesitation in palliative care medical decision-making by family members.ConclusionThe study results are able to help Taiwanese medical staff in evaluating such conflicts and palliative care medical decisions of PMVDP.

  • Versatile Symbolic Music-for-Music Modeling via Function Alignment

    ArXiv.org · 2025-06-18

    preprintOpen access

    Many music AI models learn a map between music content and human-defined labels. However, many annotations, such as chords, can be naturally expressed within the music modality itself, e.g., as sequences of symbolic notes. This observation enables both understanding tasks (e.g., chord recognition) and conditional generation tasks (e.g., chord-conditioned melody generation) to be unified under a music-for-music sequence modeling paradigm. In this work, we propose parameter-efficient solutions for a variety of symbolic music-for-music tasks. The high-level idea is that (1) we utilize a pretrained Language Model (LM) for both the reference and the target sequence and (2) we link these two LMs via a lightweight adapter. Experiments show that our method achieves superior performance among different tasks such as chord recognition, melody generation, and drum track generation. All demos, code and model weights are publicly available.

  • Highly Responsive Self‐Healing and Degradable Piezoelectric Soft Machines

    Advanced Materials · 2025-07-14 · 15 citations

    articleSenior authorCorresponding

    Abstract Piezoelectric materials that are simultaneously healable, stretchable, and degradable have remained an unmet challenge, limiting advancements in wearable and implantable electronics, where devices face multidimensional mechanical deformation, causing a risk of damage. To address this critical gap, a biocompatible piezoelectric material is developed for ultrahigh piezoelectric effects with DL‐alanine amino acid crystals, which is stretchable, healable, and degradable. The in situ grown DL‐alanine piezoelectric crystals within an ionically cross‐linked gelatin hydrogel matrix strengthen the piezoelectric properties with an ultrahigh voltage coefficient of 1.6 Vm N −1 . The combination of the piezo‐ionic property and crystal alignment results in a record‐breaking energy harvesting figure‐of‐merit value at 57.6 pm 2 N −1 to deliver outstanding mili‐watt level power outputs in proof‐of‐concept devices which can power up even several electric light bulbs. An elastically stretchable, damage resistant strain sensor is further optimized for real‐time healthcare monitoring and biomechanical motion tracking. By integrating machine learning algorithms, the sensing system intelligently classifies biomechanical activities with high accuracy, enabling advanced applications in healthcare, rehabilitation, and sports monitoring.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Shu‐Hui Yeh

    Mackay Medical College

    183 shared
  • Xiaohao Wang

    Tsinghua–Berkeley Shenzhen Institute

    125 shared
  • Junwen Zhong

    111 shared
  • Yao Chu

    Shanghai Normal University

    90 shared
  • Yichuan Wu

    University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

    84 shared
  • Xining Zang

    73 shared
  • Huiliang Liu

    China National Space Administration

    72 shared
  • Chiu‐Yueh Hsiao

    Chang Gung University

    71 shared

Labs

Education

  • Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering

    University of California, Berkeley

    2002
  • M.S., Mechanical Engineering

    University of California, Berkeley

    1999
  • B.S., Mechanical Engineering

    University of Science and Technology of China

    1996
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