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删除150字节 、​ 2021年9月23日 (星期四)
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Jian Yu (PhD, Chemical Engineering, University of British Columbia, 1991), has over 24 years of experience in bio-based plastics, chemicals and fuels with an emphasis in chemical, biochemical and microbial conversion of renewable feedstock (e.g. agricultural residues, domestic wastes, and CO2/H2). Following his 3-year postdoctoral training in industry and academia, Dr. Yu spent 7 years at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and developed his teaching and research in biochemical and environmental engineering. Dr. Yu joined the University of Hawaii at Manoa in 2001 and participated in teaching and research in multiple programs including Marine Bioproducts Engineering, Ocean and Renewable Resource Engineering, and Molecular Bioscience and Bioengineering. With funding from the US Department of Energy, the Office of Naval Research, and private companies, he has developed active programs in bioplastics and biofuels. His current projects include: high grade drop-in liquid fuel from biomass syngas, a green refinery of CO2 and solar energy, and bioplastics from food processing wastes and lignocellulosic biomass.
Dr. Jian Yu graduated from University of British Columbia (PhD, 1991), Zhejiang University (MSc, 1985) and Zhejiang Institute of Technology (BEng, 1982). He was an assistant professor at Hong Kong University of Science & Technology (1994-2001) and is now a researcher (research professor) at University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa (2001-present). His research is primarily focused on bioprocess and biochemical engineering for production of valuable products including bioplastics, biobased chemicals and alternative fuels from renewable resources. He has published 81 research papers in peer-reviewed journal as the first and/or corresponding author, in addition to 8 book chapters and numerous conference papers and presentations. His Google Scholar H-index is 29 with more than 3750 citations. He is the inventor of 5 patents that have been licensed to companies. One technology has been successfully scaled up for commercial production of bioplastics from industrial byproducts and wastes.


 http://www.hnei.hawaii.edu/staff/jian-yu
http://www.hnei.hawaii.edu/staff/jian-yu
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