CUHK at cutting edge in science contest triumph

A miniaturized robotic steerable surgical drill invented by three PhD students at the Chinese University of Hong Kong has won the top prize at a nationwide science and technology contest for the first time.
CUHK was the only Hong Kong university to receive the top and first prizes at the 17th "Challenge Cup" National College Students' Extracurricular Academic Science and Technology Contest (Challenge Cup) - famed as the Olympics for science, technology and innovation among university students in China.
Date: 
Wednesday, May 25, 2022
Media: 
The Standard

CUHK Engineering develops new redox flow batteries for extreme cold weather

Date: 
2022-05-20
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A research team led by Professor Yi-Chun Lu, Associate Professor, Department of Mechanical and Automation Engineering (MAE) at The Chinese University of Hong Kong’s (CUHK), has successfully developed a new electrolyte that enables high power, long life flow battery applications at both room temperature and low temperatures down to –20℃. The new flow battery achieves a high power density of 282.4 mW cm-2 and stability over 800 cycles (more than 1,200 hours) without decay at –20℃. This work enables high power, long life redox flow batteries to be used in regions with cold weather or severe weather fluctuations, a significant step towards the practical application of redox flow batteries for grid-scale storage of renewable energy. The breakthrough has been recently published in Nature Energy, one of the world’s leading scientific journals.
 
Aqueous redox flow batteries are a promising technology for safe, long duration energy storage and are key to achieving massive utilisation of intermittent renewable energies such as solar and wind power. However, at temperatures below freezing, redox flow batteries cannot be used because of the freezing of aqueous electrolytes, low reaction rate and the limited solubility of active materials. These challenges not only preclude the use of redox flow batteries in cold weather regions but also make renewable electrical grids extremely vulnerable to severe weather fluctuations. For instance, the recent power failure in Texas caused by a devastating snowstorm affected many millions of people, highlighted the need for a more robust electrical grid and energy storage over a wide range of working temperatures.
 
The state-of-the-art vanadium redox flow batteries suffer from lower solubility and lower redox kinetics at decreasing temperatures. Therefore, most commercial redox flow batteries need to use expensive, energy-consuming heating systems for low temperature applications.
 
Professor Lu and her team describe a new active material, multi-electron heteropoly acid H6P2W18O62  (HPOM), which enables high power, long life aqueous redox flow batteries below freezing. The HPOM exhibits a low freezing point (–35℃) and a high conductivity (74.32mS cm–1  (–20℃)) , which makes it an ideal active material candidate for high-power-density flow battery application at low temperatures.
 
The new HPOM based redox flow batteries demonstrated a high capacity, record stability (more than 1,200 hours without decay) and power density (282.4 mW cm–2) at a low temperature of –20℃, which makes them the first high-power low-temperature redox flow batteries with industrially relevant cycling stability.
 
The full research paper can be found at: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41560-022-01011-y 
 

The first-author Mr. Fei Ai (Ph.D. student) showing the prototype of the HPOM based redox flow batteries at 25℃.

The prototype of the HPOM based redox flow batteries at 25℃ (left) and –20℃ (middle) and in the refrigerator (right). Water (H2O) is provided for reference.

Design principles of HPOM based redox flow batteries for low-temperature applications. HPOM electrolyte exhibits i) multi-electron reactions with fast redox kinetics; ii) a low freezing point down to –35℃; iii) high ionic conductivity; iv) high solubility of redox active materials.

 

 

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CUHK demonstrates the potential for multi-gas detection in just a split second using dual-comb photothermal spectroscopy

Date: 
2022-05-19
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An engineering research team from The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) has recently demonstrated the world’s first dual-comb photothermal spectroscopy (DC-PTS), a breakthrough in high-precision spectroscopy with proven potential for highly sensitive multi-gas detection from a small sample volume within a millisecond. It opens up a wider application in gas sensing, from the detection of toxic gases to the measurement of chemical compounds in breath samples, such as biochemical markers of COVID-19. The research has been reported in the scientific journal Nature Communications.
 
Laser absorption spectroscopy is a widely used technique for gas detection, in which the light source applied plays a pivotal role in broadband gas sensing and is the determining factor in its sensing resolution and sensitivity. An optical frequency comb, a special light source emitting numerous evenly spaced and phase-coherent laser lines simultaneously, has been introduced for high-precision spectroscopy. However, conventional frequency comb spectroscopy requires a sophisticated spectrometer or photodetector to resolve the comb line and a bulky gas cell to obtain sufficient sensitivity, limiting its wider applications outside the laboratory.
 
Professor Wei REN, Associate Professor, CUHK’s Department of Mechanical and Automation Engineering (MAE), and his collaborator from Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, China have proposed a novel sensing technique — dual-comb photothermal spectroscopy (DC-PTS) to take gas sensing technology to a new level. When light beams emitted from two coherent frequency combs pass simultaneously through a hollow-core fibre filled with the sample gas, an optical interference between the two combs, also known as the beating process, is induced in the fibre. This unique physical reaction causes the photothermal effect that modifies the refractive index of the sample gas. By measuring the modulations of the refractive index at various frequencies, absorption spectra of the sample gas can be detected precisely to infer the components.
 
The team is able to detect several gas species at one time, including ammonia (NH3), carbon dioxide (CO2), carbon monoxide (CO), hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and hydrocarbons. Acetylene (C2H2), a colourless and extremely flammable gas widely found in different industrial applications, was used as an example to illustrate the DC-PTS concept. The team has also successfully demonstrated a minimum detection limit of 8.7 parts-per-million (ppm) of C2H2 in the hollow-core fibre with a total sample volume of only 0.17 microlitre, while conventional laser-based spectrometers which usually only measure one species of gas with a single-frequency laser, require about 100,000 microlitres (100 ml) of sample gas and a longer testing time in order to achieve the same level of detection sensitivity.
 
One of the promising applications of DC-PTS is human breath analysis, for example, to detect chemical compounds in breath samples associated with a viral infection. Compared to conventional spectrometry, which requires additional gas sampling procedures and a relatively long analysis time, DC-PTS enables a more sensitive, wider broadband, and faster chemical analysis, so providing a more precise testing result.
 
“Our research is the world’s first to study DC-PTS to provide a new method of high-precision spectroscopy with the potential to measure up to tens to hundreds of gases in the future. We are now actively looking at the applications of the DC-PTS in breath analysis, in particular the development of novel COVID-19 tests and chemical analysers that can help address the current pandemic or future public health emergencies,” said Professor Ren. He added that this advancement in spectroscopy paves the way for a wider range of gas sensing applications in energy, environment and safety management.
 
The full research paper can be found at: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-29865-6 
 

The image demonstrates the beating process that occurs in the hollow-core fibre when the dual-comb light (top left of the image) is transmitted through the gas-filled fibre. The optical interference induced between the two combs further causes the photothermal effect that modifies the refractive index of the sample gas.

 

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中大創全球首個雙光梳光熱光譜儀 擬開發新冠病毒呼氣測試

香港中文大學中大工程研究團隊於光譜學研究有突破性技術發展,開發出全球首個「雙光梳光熱光譜儀」,能夠在千分之一秒內完成測量多種氣體,並且有極高靈敏度,即使低濃度氣體亦可檢測。研究有助開闢更多氣體傳感技術的應用,包括有毒氣體測量,甚至開發新冠病毒呼氣測試。研究成果已刊登在學術期刊《自然·通訊》。

Date: 
Thursday, May 19, 2022
Media: 
On.CC

中大驗證雙光梳光熱光譜技術 一毫秒測量出多種氣體

香港中文大學工程研究團隊展示全球首個雙光梳光熱光譜儀(DC-PTS),這項光譜學研究證實相關技術能在一毫秒(千分之一秒)內完成多種氣體測量,並有極高靈敏度,可檢測低濃度氣體。研究有助開闢更多氣體傳感技術的應用,包括有毒氣體測量、連同COVID-19生物標誌物在內的呼氣成分分析等。研究成果已刊登在學術期刊《自然·通訊》。

Date: 
Thursday, May 19, 2022
Media: 
Sing Tao Daily

中大盧怡君團隊研發新型液流電池 適用於極端低溫天氣

香港中文大學工程學院的一個研究團隊,成功研發一種新型活性電解液,讓液流電池能在室溫及低至-20℃的環境中運作。該團隊由機械與自動化工程學系副教授盧怡君領導,詳情已刊登於學術期刊《Nature Energy》。

Date: 
Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Media: 
香港商報

中大研新型低溫液流電池

 
太陽能、風能等斷續性的可再生能源所生產的電力,普遍以液流電池方式儲存,但電解液倘因天氣寒冷結冰,便會嚴重影響供電。中文大學機械與自動化工程學系副教授盧怡君偕團隊,研發採用活性電解液的新型液流電池,即使低至攝氏零下二十度的極端寒冷環境仍能運作,維持高電量及電池壽命。
Date: 
Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Media: 
Sing Tao Daily

數字孿生促虛實互動 元宇宙須防以假亂真

元宇宙的主體是虛擬世界,而實體世界擔當的是被同化者的角色,與智能製造的目標南轅北轍。然而,「實體世界被同化」的概念令人不寒而慄。試想想在未來一旦元宇宙成為世界文化主流的話,世界趨勢會如何演變?

Date: 
Monday, May 16, 2022
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Commentary
Media: 
Master Insight

CUHK Researcher Develops a Magnetic Slime Robot that Could be Used in Human Digestive Systems

Date: 
2022-04-28
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Professor Li Zhang of the Department of Mechanical and Automation Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), created a slimy fluid-based soft robot that performs the functions of both encircling objects and navigating tight-and-tortuous spaces by the control of magnetic fields, making it possible to be used inside the human digestive systems. 
 
Professor Zhang and his team mixed neodymium magnet particles with borax, a widely used household detergent, and polyvinyl alcohol, a kind of polymer, to form a slimebot that can be controlled by an external magnetic field. Robots that can either locate and hold onto objects or pass through tiny gaps. But it is less common to find a robot combing these two features.
 
The team tested the robot in different scenarios, including finding and encircling a lost battery in a model stomach, moving it along a piece of wire and getting through narrow gaps. It could be deployed inside the human bodies to retrieve objects swallowed by accident. However, the magnetic particles in the slime are toxic. Before it can be used inside a real person’s body, the team needs to test thoroughly to make sure the toxic magnetic particles would not separate from the slimebot. The team also needs to modify the magnetic control mechanism, enhancing its performance such as moving at higher speed as an entity in the future. It is hoped that it can be used as a surgical tool and to take it out after the endoluminal surgery. The team also plans to apply for an animal licence to test the technology at the Multi-scale Medical Robotics Center (MRC) at the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation. If the technology is promising, some human experimentation would be planned.
 
Professor Zhang's main research interests include small-scale robotics and their applications for translational biomedicine. Before he joined CUHK as an Assistant Professor in 2012, he worked in Professor Bradley Nelson’s group as a post-doctoral fellow, and then as a senior scientist and lecturer in the Institute of Robotics and Intelligent Systems (IRIS), Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, Switzerland. He has authored or co-authored over 270 papers, including Science Robotics, Nature Machine Intelligence, Science Advances, Nature Communications, TRO, IJRR, Annual Review of Control, Robotics, and Autonomous Systems, as the corresponding author. He is the recipient of the Hong Kong Research Grants Committee (RGC) Early Career Award in 2013, CUHK Young Researcher Award 2017, United College Early Career Research Excellence Merit Award 2018, CUHK Research Excellence Award 2019-20, and RGC Research Fellow (RFS) Award 2021/22. He is elected as the fellow of Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC), and acts as a senior member of IEEE.

Prof. Li Zhang

 

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CUHK FinTech Seminar Series How to make reading data less terrible – a beginner's guide to leveraging financial data for decision making

Topic: How to make reading data less terrible –  a beginner's guide to leveraging financial data for decision making

Date: 17 May 2022 (Tue)
Time: 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Format: Live virtual class (zoom)
Language: English

Register: https://cefar.cuhk.edu.hk/fintech-seminar-series

Fee: Free Registration

Speaker :
Emily Solution Specialist , Bloomberg
 
Abstract:
In today’s increasingly volatile and complex economic environment, how can you stay on top of the market and make better decisions? Many people turn to data studies for a solution. But there are many reasons to make using data terrible - poor data quality, lack of structure and data standardisation, all prevent us from making decisions based on data efficiently and effectively.
 
 
Biography:
Emily is a Buyside Solution Specialist and leads the APAC news advocacy strategy in Bloomberg. Emily is a staunch proponent of integrating the academia with industry practice –  she is a university part-time lecturer and pioneered the development of finance laboratories in Hong Kong universities.She is an Executive Committee member of a number of professional and industrial organisations. Emily is an Executive Committee Member of the HKUBBA Association, a Member of the Chartered Market Technician Association, an External Professional Advisor for UOW College and a former Committee Member of the FinTech Association of Hong Kong. She routinely speaks in university guest lectures and industry conferences on technology, data and technical analysis. She served in the HKSAR Government as an Assistant Secretary, who is responsible for policy formulation, resource allocation and the promotion of the interests of the HKSAR.
 
Emily is an avid volunteer and scales the cultivation of financial and technological inclusion and literacy through her networks. She led Government-subvented volunteer organisations and her work on youth development has been featured by the Government for public recognition.


 
 

 

Venue
Live virtual class (Zoom)
Date: 
Tuesday, May 17, 2022
Time
Tuesday, May 17, 2022 to 18:30
e_title: 
How to make reading data less terrible
Not Available
Allow Regsiter: 

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