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SELECTBIO Conferences Track Two

Charles Yang Chun's Biography



Charles Yang Chun, Associate Professor, Nanyang Technological University

Dr. Chun YANG obtained his B.Sc. degree from the Department of Thermal Engineering at Tsinghua University, Master’s degree in Engineering Thermophysics from University of Science and Technology of China, and Ph.D. degree in Mechanical Engineering from University of Alberta.
Prior to joining Nanyang Technological University in 1999, he had been with Syncrude Canada Ltd. - Edmonton Research Centre under NSERC Chair Programme in Oil Sands for three years.
In 2005 he became an Associate Professor in the School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. He is the author and coauthor of more than 140 publications in referred international journals with SCI citations more than 3100 and H-index of 30.
He has six US patents in his name and has co-authored one text book entitled “Elementary Electrokinetic Flow” and 20 book chapters. He sits in several editorial advisory boards including, Microfluidics and Nanofluidics, International Journal of Emerging Multidisciplinary Fluid Sciences, American Journal of Analytical Chemistry, Advances in Chemical Engineering and Science and Nanoscience & Nanotechnology-ASIA. His current research interests are: micro/nano–fluidics, electrokinetic transport phenomena, surface and colloidal science, and microscale flow, heat & mass transfer.

Charles Yang Chun Image

Microfluidic Concentration of Sample Solutes and Particles/Cells and Patterning of Particles using Temperature Gradient Focusing

Thursday, 20 November 2014 at 11:15

Add to Calendar ▼2014-11-20 11:15:002014-11-20 12:15:00Europe/LondonMicrofluidic Concentration of Sample Solutes and Particles/Cells and Patterning of Particles using Temperature Gradient Focusing SELECTBIOenquiries@selectbiosciences.com

In microfluidic operations, enhancing detection sensitivity and resolution are needed to meet the detection limits because of the dilute sample solutions, ultra-small volumes and short detection length in microfluidic devices. This talk will present the use of microfluidic temperature gradient for concentrating solutes, DNAs and particles.


Add to Calendar ▼2014-11-20 00:00:002014-11-21 00:00:00Europe/LondonTrack TwoSELECTBIOenquiries@selectbiosciences.com