Mark A. Burns, PhD

T.C. Chang Professor of Engineering
Chair & Professor of Chemical Engineering
Professor, Biomedical Engineering

734-764-1516
maburns@umich.edu

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Mark Burns, PhD is T. C. Chang Professor of Engineering and Chair of the Chemical Engineering Department at the University of Michigan.  He joined the University of Michigan in 1990 after teaching at the University of Massachusetts for 4 years.  He obtained his MS and PhD in Chemical and Biochemical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania, and his BS from the University of Notre Dame.

Dr. Burns’ group has published extensively on microfluidic technology.  In the late ‘90s, his collaborative research team including David Burke (Human Genetics) constructed arguably the first microfabricated integrated DNA analysis device. Since that time, Dr. Burns has published on a variety of microfluidic analysis systems including a nanoliter viscometer with automated drop detection and an influenza device that is capable of detecting and subtyping strains of influenza.  He has also published extensively on microfluidic pumping systems using, for example, temperature-controlled micropressure regulators and pneumatic logic gates.  His current work centers on constructing inexpensive diagnostic systems for infectious diseases and developing cost effective sensors for a variety of applications including water quality assessment.

Dr. Burns has over 150 publications and patents, and he is a licensed professional engineer and a Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering.  He has won numerous awards including an Engineering Initiation Award from the National Science Foundation, and both a Research Excellence Award and a Teaching Excellence Award from the College of Engineering at the University of Michigan.  He was the founding director of an Institutional Training Grant from the National Institutes of Health on Microfluidics in Biomedical Sciences, a program that involves 40 faculty from 14 different departments from across the University and is the only one of its kind in the country.  He also was one of the co-founders of the innovative seed-funding program at U-M called MCubed and currently serves as the chair of the MCubed Executive Committee.