2018 Chinese Section of the Combustion Institute Report
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Tianjin University
Updates on Algal Biofuel Production in China Moderator: Guangyi Wang Prof. & Director Tianjin Univ. Center for Marine Ecology School of Environ. Science & Engineering Tianjin University 2013 Bio Pacific Rim Summit, December 8-11, San Diego, USA Energy Challenges of China Over 60% energy imported abroad New Energy Policy Reduce energy consumption and effectively control CO2 emission in the 12th “five-year”; By the end of the 12th five-year, non-fossil fuel consumption increased to 11.4% and major green house gases reduced by 8-20%; Food-crops can not be used to produce energy. Non-food fuel is the only option. 来源:国务院参事办公室 Advantages (cont’d) Advantages of Algal Biofuels Panel Speakers: Guangyi Wang (Tianjin University) Pengcheng Fu (Beijing University of Chemical Technology) Weiwen Zhang (Tianjin University) Zhongxin Yang (Hangzhou Xinwei Low-carbon Tech R&D Ltd) 2013 Bio Pacific Rim Summit, December 8-11, San Diego, USA Production of Biofuels and Chemicals Using Microalgae Isolated from the Coastal Regions of China Prof. & Director Guangyi Wang Tianjin University Center for Marine Ecology School of Environmental Science & Engineering Tianjin University & Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School 2013 Bio Pacific Rim Summit, December 8-11, San Diego, USA R&D Program for Algal Biofuels R&D Program for Algal Biofuels and High-valued Bioproducts Biodiversity & Life-cycle Analysis Extraction & environmental & environmental purification ecology impacts Large-scale Strain Improvement Thraustochytrids production & photo- using synthetic & DHA/oil bioreactor designing approaches production Biodiesel, aviation fuels, ethanol, protein, polysaccharide, materials etc. R&D Program (cont’d) Isolation cultivation and characterisation of Biological diversity and ecology algal species from Shenzhen Bay and Pearl River Delta To date >300 different species of local algae have been collected and identified. -
International Student Guide
Contents CHAPTER I PREPARATIONS BEFORE COMING TO CHINA 1. VISA APPLICATION (1) Introduction to the Student Visa.......................................................................2 (2) Requirements for Visa Application..................................................................2 2. WHAT TO BRING (1) Materials Required for Registration.................................................................2 (2) Other Recommended Items.............................................................................3 3. BANKING INFORMATION AND CURRENCY OPERATIONS (1) Introduction to Chinese Currency....................................................................4 (2) Foreign Currency Exchange Sites and Convertible Currencies................4 (3) Withdrawal Limits of Bank Accounts................................................................5 (4) Wire Transfer Services........................................................................................5 4. ACCOMMODATION (1) Check-in Time......................................................................................................5 (2) On-Campus Accommodation....................................................................5 (3) Off-Campus Accommodation and Nearby Hotels.......................................8 (4) Questions and Answers about Accommodation (Q&A).............................9 CHAPTER II HOW TO GET TO TIANJIN UNIVERSITY 5. HOW TO ARRIVE................................................................................................12 (1). How to Get to Weijin -
TREC-10 Video Track Proposal
TREC Video Retrieval Evaluation TRECVID 2017 George Awad#* Alan Smeaton (Dublin City University) Ian Soboroff * Wessel Kraaij (TNO, Radboud University Nijmegen) Asad Butt * Georges Quénot (Laboratoire d’Informatique de Grenoble) Angela Ellis* Roeland Ordelman (University of Twente) Darrin Dimmick* Maria Eskevich (Radboud University Nijmegen) Gareth Jones (Dublin City University) Jonathan Fiscus** Benoit Huet (EURECOM) David Joy** Martial Michel^ Stephanie Strassel+ Andrew Delgado** Xuansong Li+ et al * Retrieval Group / ** Multimodal Information Group Information Access Division Information Technology Laboratory NIST ^ Data Machines Corp. + Linguistic Data Consortium # Dakota Consulting, Inc What is TRECVID? Workshop series (2001 – present) http://trecvid.nist.gov to promote research/progress in content-based video analysis/exploitation Foundation for large-scale laboratory testing Forum for the ✓ exchange of research ideas ✓ discussion of approaches – what works, what doesn’t, and why. Focus: content-based approaches ✓ search / detection / summarization / segmentation / … Aims for realistic system tasks and test collections ✓ unfiltered data ✓ focus on relatively high-level functionality (e.g. interactive search) ✓ measurement against human abilities Provides data, tasks, and uniform, appropriate scoring procedures TRECVID 2017 TRECVID’s Evolution … 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 4500 Blib.tv YFCC 4000 100M Flickr 3500 New development or test data 3000 Data as added (hours) 2500 HAVIC BBC East- -
Participants: (In Order of the Surname)
Participants 31 Participants: (in order of the surname) Yansong Bai yyyòòòttt: Jilin University, Changchun. E-mail: [email protected] Jianhai Bao ïïï°°°: Central South University, Changsha. E-mail: [email protected] Chuanzhong Chen •••DDD¨¨¨: Hainan Normal University, Haikou. E-mail: [email protected] Dayue Chen •••ŒŒŒ: Peking University, Beijing. E-mail: [email protected] Haotian Chen •••hhhUUU: Jilin University, Changchun. E-mail: [email protected] Longyu Chen •••999ˆˆˆ: Peking University, Beijing. E-mail: [email protected] Man Chen •••ùùù: Capital Normal University, Beijing. E-mail: [email protected] Mu-Fa Chen •••777{{{: Beijing Normal University, Beijing. E-mail: [email protected] Shukai Chen •••ÓÓÓppp: Beijing Normal University, Beijing. E-mail: [email protected] Xia Chen •••ggg: Jilin University, Changchun; University of Tennessee, USA. E-mail: [email protected] Xin Chen •••lll: Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai. E-mail: [email protected] Xue Chen •••ÆÆÆ: Capital Normal University, Beijing. E-mail: [email protected] Zengjing Chen •••OOO¹¹¹: Shandong University, Jinan. E-mail: [email protected] 32 Participants Huihui Cheng §§§¦¦¦¦¦¦: North China University of Water Resources and Electric Power, Zhengzhou E-mail: [email protected] Lan Cheng §§§===: Central South University, Changsha. E-mail: [email protected] Zhiwen Cheng §§§“““>>>: Beijing Normal University, Beijing. E-mail: [email protected] Michael Choi éééRRRZZZ: The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen. E-mail: [email protected] Bowen Deng """ÆÆÆ©©©: Jilin University, Changchun. E-mail: [email protected] Changsong Deng """ttt: Wuhan University, Wuhan. E-mail: [email protected] Xue Ding ¶¶¶ÈÈÈ: Jilin University, Changchun. -
Daily Life for the Common People of China, 1850 to 1950
Daily Life for the Common People of China, 1850 to 1950 Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access China Studies published for the institute for chinese studies, university of oxford Edited by Micah Muscolino (University of Oxford) volume 39 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/chs Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access Daily Life for the Common People of China, 1850 to 1950 Understanding Chaoben Culture By Ronald Suleski leiden | boston Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access This is an open access title distributed under the terms of the prevailing cc-by-nc License at the time of publication, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited. An electronic version of this book is freely available, thanks to the support of libraries working with Knowledge Unlatched. More information about the initiative can be found at www.knowledgeunlatched.org. Cover Image: Chaoben Covers. Photo by author. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Suleski, Ronald Stanley, author. Title: Daily life for the common people of China, 1850 to 1950 : understanding Chaoben culture / By Ronald Suleski. -
Universities and the Chinese Defense Technology Workforce
December 2020 Universities and the Chinese Defense Technology Workforce CSET Issue Brief AUTHORS Ryan Fedasiuk Emily Weinstein Table of Contents Executive Summary ............................................................................................... 3 Introduction ............................................................................................................ 5 Methodology and Scope ..................................................................................... 6 Part I: China’s Defense Companies Recruit from Civilian Universities ............... 9 Part II: Some U.S. Tech Companies Indirectly Support China’s Defense Industry ................................................................................................................ 13 Conclusion .......................................................................................................... 17 Acknowledgments .............................................................................................. 18 Appendix I: Chinese Universities Included in This Report ............................... 19 Appendix II: Breakdown by Employer ............................................................. 20 Endnotes .............................................................................................................. 28 Center for Security and Emerging Technology | 2 Executive Summary Since the mid-2010s, U.S. lawmakers have voiced a broad range of concerns about academic collaboration with the People’s Republic of China (PRC), but the most prominent -
Conference Program Friday June 28, 2019
Organizing Committee Workshop Co-Chairs Daniel Zeng, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Guoqing Chen, Tsinghua University, China Leon Zhao, City University of Hong Kong, China Publications Chair Daning Hu, Southern University of Science and Technology, China Junior Faculty Forum Chair Kevin Zhu, University of California, San Diego Junior Faculty Forum Co-Chair Beibei Li, Carnegie Mellon University Michael Zhang, Chinese University of Hong Kong Publicity Co-Chairs Harris Wu, Old Dominion University, USA Han Zhang, Georgia Tech, USA Career Fair Co-Chairs Yanwu Yang, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China Xunhua Guo, Tsinghua University, China Local Arrangement Co-Chairs Wayne Huang, Xi’An Jiaotong Univesity, China Xin Li, City University of Hong Kong, China Hao Liao, Shenzhen University, China 2 Advisory Committee Ravi Bapna, University of Minnesota Anandhi Bharadwaj, Emory University Guoqing Chen, Tsinghua University Hsinchun Chen, University of Arizona Jian Chen, Tsinghua University Prabuddha De, Purdue University Anindya Ghose, New York University Paulo Goes, University of Arizona Alok Gupta, University of Minnesota Alan Hevner, University of Southern Florida Varghese Jacob, The University of Texas at Dallas Elena Karahanna, University of Georgia Robert Kauffman, Singapore Management University Ramayya Krishnan, Carnegie Mellon University T.P. Liang, National Sun Yat‐Sen University Feicheng Ma, Wuhan University Jiye Mao, Renmin University of China James Marsden, University of Connecticut Saby Mitra, Georgia Institute of Technology Vijay Mookerjee, The University of Texas at Dallas Sridhar Narasimhan, Georgia Institute of Technology Arun Rai, Georgia State University Sudha Ram, University of Arizona Vallabh Sambamurthy, Michigan State University Sumit Sarkar, The University of Texas at Dallas Michael Shaw, University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Olivia R. -
High School Profile
HIGH SCHOOL 2019-20 PROFILE www.istianjin.org MISSION The International School of Tianjin is a not-for-profit school offering an outstanding education for the students of the international community of Tianjin, China. School Community ‣ IST was established FACULTY in 1994 IST IB DP IST AVERAGE • 73—Full time certified IB DIPLOMA ‣ Around 500 teachers CANDIDATES PASSING RATE SCORE students, 31 nationalities, 39 • 33—With advanced 36/39 94% 35 (incl. 2 x 45s) seniors degrees • 1:7—Teacher to Student Ratio IB DIPLOMAS IB GLOBAL IB GLOBAL Academics • 22—Maximum class AWARDED AVERAGE ‣ 22 IB Diploma size PASSING RATE 34/36 77% 29.6 subjects offered ‣ IB Diploma GRADES AND Grade Descriptor Programme offered to all students RANKING 7 Excellent performance ‣ IST Diploma • Grades are reported on a 1-7 scale in line 6 Very good performance awarded to all with IB Programmes. graduates • Students must complete 32.5 credits and 5 Good performance CAS to graduate. ‣ IB predicted grades • Transfer students in good academic 4 Satisfactory performance sent to all standing receive credit from previous requesting 3 Remediation required universities schools. • Each full year course is 1 credit. 2 Incomplete ‣ Academic calendar: • IST does not rank its students, nor 180 contact days calculate GPA. 1 Incomplete Aug to June CONTACT DETAILS ADMINISTRATION No. 22 Weishan South Road, Director Steve Moody Student Activities Shuanggang, Jinnan District, Secondary Principal Michael Conway ‣ Student Council, TIANJIN 30050, P. R. China IB Coordinator Dr. Darryl Davies -
Wireless Sensor Networks 11Th China Wireless Sensor Network Conference, CWSN 2017 Tianjin, China, October 12–14, 2017 Revised Selected Papers
Communications in Computer and Information Science 812 Commenced Publication in 2007 Founding and Former Series Editors: Alfredo Cuzzocrea, Xiaoyong Du, Orhun Kara, Ting Liu, Dominik Ślęzak, and Xiaokang Yang Editorial Board Simone Diniz Junqueira Barbosa Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Phoebe Chen La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia Joaquim Filipe Polytechnic Institute of Setúbal, Setúbal, Portugal Igor Kotenko St. Petersburg Institute for Informatics and Automation of the Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia Krishna M. Sivalingam Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India Takashi Washio Osaka University, Osaka, Japan Junsong Yuan Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore Lizhu Zhou Tsinghua University, Beijing, China More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/7899 Jianzhong Li • Huadong Ma Keqiu Li • Li Cui Limin Sun • Zenghua Zhao Xiaofei Wang (Eds.) Wireless Sensor Networks 11th China Wireless Sensor Network Conference, CWSN 2017 Tianjin, China, October 12–14, 2017 Revised Selected Papers 123 Editors Jianzhong Li Limin Sun Harbin Institute of Technology Chinese Academy of Sciences Harbin Beijing China China Huadong Ma Zenghua Zhao Beijing University of Posts Tianjin University and Telecommunications Tianjin Beijing China China Xiaofei Wang Keqiu Li Tianjin University Tianjin University Tianjin Tianjin, Tianjin China China Li Cui Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China ISSN 1865-0929 ISSN 1865-0937 (electronic) Communications in Computer and Information Science ISBN 978-981-10-8122-4 ISBN 978-981-10-8123-1 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-8123-1 Library of Congress Control Number: 2018934338 © Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2018 This work is subject to copyright. -
Vice President of Beihang University December 13, 2018
EDUCATION TO MEET THE NEEDS OF FUTURE GLOBAL AVIATION COMMUNITY Prof. Haijun Huang Vice President of Beihang University December 13, 2018 CONTENT Trends of Global Aviation Industry Demand for Future Aviation Talents Beihang’s Education Practice - 2 - BEIHANG UNIVERSITY TRENDS OF GLOBAL AVIATION INDUSTRY Increasing markets and demands for aviation professionals Technology advancement: Personalization Automation Intelligentization Digitalization Challenges Safety Sustainability Hypersonic Vehicle BWB Airliner New Energy Aircraft - 3 - BEIHANG UNIVERSITY DEMAND FOR AVIATION PROFESSIONALS By 2032, 20,530 more airplanes needed globally, among which - 9,660 (1.89 trillion USD worth) needed in Asia Pacific - Boeing: China will need 7,690 new airplanes by 2037 - Airbus: 110,000 more aviators needed in China by 2035 China is scheduled to train nearly 3,000 pilots and 8,000 support personnel each year, with an annual growth rate of 10%-15% By 2030, China will be the world’s largest civil aviation market and the largest training base for aviation professionals Number of North Airplanes Americ Europe a Asia Pacific Middle East Latin Afric Americ a a - 4 - BEIHANG UNIVERSITY DEMAND FOR FUTURE TALENTS Capacities in global vision, systematic thinking, collaboration and innovation Ready to face the challenges of the diverse and rapidly changing world - understanding of different cultures and familiarity with general practices - systematic thinking and multi-disciplinary knowledge - innovation and critical thinking ability to tackle complex -
World Bank Document
SWP-535 Decentralized Renewable Energy Development in China Public Disclosure Authorized The State of the Art Robert P. Taylor WORLD BANK STAFF WORKING PAPERS Number 535 Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized ND 9502 C62 T39 1982 SLCO1 41 02 AUORLD BANK STAFF WORKING PAPERS Number 535 Decentralized Renewable Energy Development in China The State of the Art Robert P. Taylor sECTORAL UBI ANK IFOR 1)DEVELOPMF"I5 INTEItNA'gl IRECONSTRUCI1 A?DDVEN SEP 0 6 l989 The World Bank Washington, D.C., U.S.A. Copyright © 1982 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America This is a working document published informally by The World Bank. To present the results of research with the least possible delay, the typescript has not been prepared in accordance with the procedures appropriate to formal printed texts, and The World Bank accepts no responsibility for errors. The publication is supplied at a token charge to defray part of the cost of manufacture and distribution. The views and interpretations in this document are those of the author(s) and should not be attributed to The World Bank, to its affiliated organizations, or to any individual acting on their behalf. Any maps used have been prepared solely for the.convenience of the readers; the denominations used and the boundaries shown do not imply, on the part of The World Bank and its affiliates, any judgment on the legal status of any territory or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. -
Journal of Materials Science & Technology
JOURNAL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY The Journal of the Chinese Society for Metals AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK TABLE OF CONTENTS XXX . • Description p.1 • Impact Factor p.1 • Abstracting and Indexing p.1 • Editorial Board p.1 • Guide for Authors p.5 ISSN: 1005-0302 DESCRIPTION . Journal of Materials Science and Technology aims to enhance the international exchange of scientific activities in materials science and technology. The Journals reports principally the achievements of materials science and engineering all over the world, putting the stress on the original research papers, review articles invited by editor, letters, research notes with novelty as well as brief of scientific achievement, covering a broad spectrum of materials science and technology, encompassing: • metallic materials • inorganic nonmetallic materials • composite materials IMPACT FACTOR . 2020: 8.067 © Clarivate Analytics Journal Citation Reports 2021 ABSTRACTING AND INDEXING . Scopus ScienceDirect INSPEC Science Citation Index Expanded EDITORIAL BOARD . Editors-in-Chief Lawrence Murr, The University of Texas at El Paso Department of Metallurgical Materials and Biomedical Engineering, United States of America Rui Yang, Institute of Metal Research Chinese Academy of Sciences, China AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK 29 Sep 2021 www.elsevier.com/locate/jmst 1 Executive Vice Editor-in-Chief Zhe-Feng Zhang, Shenyang National Laboratory for Materials Sciences Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Vice Editors-in-Chief Yafang Han, Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials, China Yufeng Zheng, Peking University Department of Material Science and Engineering, China Yanchun Zhou, Aerospace Research Institute of Materials and Processing Technology, China Advisory Board Members Linan An, University of Central Florida Department of Philosophy, United States of America Harry Bhadeshia, University of Cambridge Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy, United Kingdom F.R.