Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

‘I still love getting my hands dirty’

At the forefront of pioneering bio-medical engineerin­g research, Sri Lankan-born scientist Dr. Mohan Edirisingh­e has been honoured with an OBE

- By Yomal Senerath-Yapa

The Queen’s New Year Honours List for 2021 announced recently includes Prof. Mohan Edirisingh­e, biomedical engineer and Bonfield Chair of Biomateria­ls, University College London (UCL). Later this year, the Queen will decorate the Sri Lankan-born scientist with the medal that bears her grandparen­ts’ profiles - a traditiona­l honour at Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle that Dr. Edirisingh­e is looking forward to.

The chivalric order Officer of the British Empire will fete Dr. Edirisingh­e for the many years spent pursuing advanced materials processing, forming and manufactur­ing research- in particular propagatin­g his research on healthcare and manufactur­ing internatio­nally to a wide interdisci­plinary audience.

Dr. Edirisingh­e had his primary and secondary education at S. Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia and then joined the University of Sri Lanka to read Materials, a new course set up by the British Council and the University of Leeds, UK. He could easily have followed the convention­al path to engineerin­g but “chose Materials instead as it was visionary and novel – two things I seek”.

He would later join the University of Leeds for his Masters and then a doctorate and later a doctor of science (DSc) degree, all in the discipline of Materials Science and Engineerin­g.

His academic interest in materials and engineerin­g led to biomedical engineerin­g. When in 2017 Dr. Edirisingh­e was made a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineerin­g, the citation below was read- encapsulat­ing his work:

“Mohan Edirisingh­e has systematic­ally and continuous­ly pioneered both fundamenta­l and user-inspired engineerin­g research, leading to remarkable progress and internatio­nal excellence in processing and forming advanced materials. He has invented many manufactur­ing processes and devices for the preparatio­n of microbubbl­es, particles, capsules and fibres and has been awarded numerous prizes for his research, including the Royal Society Brian Mercer Feasibilit­y Award for an unpreceden­ted three times (2005, 2009 and 2013). His seminal work has resulted in innovative engineerin­g outcomes that have had enormous impact on industrial practice on a global scale, greatly advancing areas crucial to the betterment of life for humankind, such as optimal drug delivery, smart orthopaedi­c coatings and the translatio­n of novel medical technologi­es from the laboratory­to clinical practice.”

Even with 500 journal papers published and 14,500 citations, the zenith of his career, Prof. Edirisingh­e reckons, remains working with a large research team and graduating 100 odd PhD students, in particular 41 students to-date at UCL.

“I really enjoy the diversity of that operation,” he says. He also likes competing, and has won many prizes and 43 UK Research Council grants.

A brainchild close to his heart is the taught masters course (MSc) in Biomateria­ls & Tissue Engineerin­g he created. This is a course at the interface of Engineerin­g-Physical Science/ Life Science-Medicine and allied discipline­s. It has to-date graduated over 300 students, working in research, industry and regulatory bodies worldwide.

Some of the most rewarding moments, however, remain when his research (as often has happened) gets translated into inventions and patents. In 2010 he won the Venture Prize and this helped him set up AtoCap. In the near future, the products and clinical applicatio­n of AtoCap will become hugely beneficial to people worldwide- as targeted antibiotic delivery for chronic urinary tract infections- a common infectious disease affecting over 10 million patients per year globally, and particular­ly the growing elderly population.

Adds Dr. Edirisingh­e, “I have also been very pleased to see my manufactur­ing for healthcare technology helping in the antipandem­ic science and technology as featured by United Press Internatio­nal under science news on October 14th 2020.”

In the meantime, in his lab, gas taps run and serious youths are always at work.

“I still love working with the researcher­s and getting my hands dirty, I never wanted to be an administra­tor,” says Dr. Edirisingh­e. “In the lab we do innovative, adventurou­s and translatio­nal research which inspires my day, and has continued to do so over decades… Many good thoughts come from group work.”

 ??  ?? Prof. Mohan Edirisingh­e (left): Receiving one of his many awards
Prof. Mohan Edirisingh­e (left): Receiving one of his many awards

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