¸£Àû¼§

Photo of Xenofon Strakosas

Xenofon Strakosas

Assistant Professor

Publications

2025

Tobias Abrahamsson, Fredrik Ek, Rémy Cornuéjols, Donghak Byun, Marios Savvakis, Cecilia Bruschi, Ihor Sahalianov, Eva Miglbauer, Chiara Musumeci, Mary Donahue, Ioannis Petsagkourakis, Maciej Gryszel, Martin Hjort, Jennifer Gerasimov, Glib Baryshnikov, Renee Kroon, Daniel Simon, Magnus Berggren, Ilke Uguz, Roger Olsson, Xenofon Strakosas (2025) Angewandte Chemie International Edition (Article in journal)

2024

Changbai Li, Sajjad Naeimipour, Fatemeh Rasti Boroojeni, Tobias Abrahamsson, Xenofon Strakosas, Yangpeiqi Yi, Rebecka Rilemark, Caroline Lindholm, Venkata Perla, Chiara Musumeci, Yuyang Li, Hanne Biesmans, Marios Savvakis, Eva Olsson, Klas Tybrandt, Mary Donahue, Jennifer Gerasimov, Robert Selegård, Magnus Berggren, Daniel Aili, Daniel Simon (2024) SMALL SCIENCE, Vol. 4, Article 2400290 (Article in journal)
Hanne Biesmans, Alex Bersellini Farinotti, Tobias Abrahamsson, Katriann Arja, Caroline Lindholm, Xenofon Strakosas, Jennifer Gerasimov, Daniel Simon, Camilla I. Svensson, Chiara Musumeci, Magnus Berggren (2024) Science Advances, Vol. 10, Article eadr2882 (Article in journal)
Diana Priyadarshini, Tobias Abrahamsson, Hanne Biesmans, Xenofon Strakosas, Jennifer Gerasimov, Magnus Berggren, Daniel Simon, Chiara Musumeci (2024) Langmuir, Vol. 40, p. 27299-27306 (Article in journal)
Diana Priyadarshini, Changbai Li, Rebecka Rilemark, Tobias Abrahamsson, Mary Donahue, Xenofon Strakosas, Fredrik Ek, Roger Olsson, Chiara Musumeci, Simone Fabiano, Magnus Berggren, Eva Olsson, Daniel Simon, Jennifer Gerasimov (2024) Advanced Electronic Materials (Article in journal)

Research

News

A man in a lab coat holding a tube of blue liquid.

Electrodes created using light

Visible light can be used to create electrodes from conductive plastics completely without hazardous chemicals. This is shown in a new study carried out by researchers at Linköping and Lund universities.

A researcher is examining an object.

Electronic medicine – at the intersection of technology and medicine

Swedish researchers have developed a gel that can form a soft electrode capable of conducting electricity. In the long term, they aim to connect electronics to biological tissue, such as the brain.

Researcher (Xenofon Strakosas) by a microscope.

Ten million donation for research position in electronic medicine

The Stig Wadström Foundation is donating around SEK ten million to LiU, to fund a research position in electronic medicine. The researcher chosen for this position is Xenophon Strakosas at the Laboratory of Organic Electronics in Norrköping.

Organisation