Seminars & Events
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| 15:00 - 16:00
Prof. Patrick FICKERS
The production at industrial scale of recombinant proteins (rProt) and metabolites is of increasing economic importance.
| 15:00 - 16:00
Professor Amy LI
Cooking volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is an important source of indoor VOCs, which has attracted more attention in recent years with increasing concerns about indoor health.
| 11:00 - 12:00
Dr. W. Tyler Mehler
Aquatic biotas are continuously exposed to multiple stressors, whether those be chemical or abiotic (for example acidity). Although this understanding of the presence of multiple stressors is common knowledge, the vast amount of research focuses on individual stressors.
| 11:15 - 12:15
Prof. Shicheng ZHANG
Hydrothermal conversion of biomass waste for valuable chemicals and materials is a promising environment friendly option for biomass resource utilization.
| 14:30 - 15:30
Prof. David Jassby
Electrochemical reactions and processes offer a wide and flexible set of tools that enable innovative and varied separations.
| 14:00 - 15:00
Prof. Dong-Qiang LIN
The improvements in upstream have boosted high productivity in the bio-manufacturing industry, which is shifting the bottlenecks to downstream processing. A multiscale approach of rational design would be introduced to improve the efficiency of downstream bioprocesses.
| 15:00 - 16:00
Prof. Konstantinos TRIANTAFYLLIDIS
The valorization of waste biomass, lipid or lignocellulosic, has been proposed as an alternative to first generation biofuels as well as for producing high value chemicals and related products.
| 17:00 - 18:00
Dr. Eddie CYTRYN
Antibiotic resistance (AR) has considerable epidemiological ramifications, predicted to reach pandemic proportions in the next few decades. Although AR is traditionally linked to hospitals and the community, there is growing evidence that it is also associated with the environment.
| 16:00 - 17:30
Prof. Jintao XU
Since accession of WTO in 2002, China’s export and annual GDP growth has accelerated, so has environmental aggravation, triggering the “pollution haven” debate.
| 14:00 - 14:50
Dr Jonathan Choi
Ultrafine particles [PM0.1 or nanoparticles (NPs)] are prevalent in the atmosphere, originating from fuel combustion and terrestrial vegetation.