Conference Schedule
- Day 1
- Day 2
- Day 3
Title : A Unified Explanation for the Mechanism of Room-Temperature Superconductivity
Ang-Yang Yu, Southwest Jiaotong University
Title : Thermoelectronic Efficiency
Stanislav Ordin, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
Title : Azodye photoaligned nanolayers for liquid crystals: new applications
Vladimir G. Chigrinov, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
Professor Vladimir G. Chigrinov is Professor of Hong Kong University of Science and Technology since 1999. He is an Expert in Flat Panel Technology in Russia, recognized by the World Technology Evaluation Centre, 1994, and SID Fellow since 2008. He is an author of 6 books, 31 reviews and book chapters, about 333 journal papers, more than 718 Conference presentations, and 121 patents and patent applications including 50 US patents in the field of liquid crystals since 1974. He got Excellent Research Award of HKUST School of Engineering in 2012. He obtainedGold Medal and The Best Award in the Invention & Innovation Awards 2014 held at the Malaysia Technology Expo (MTE) 2014, which was hosted in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on 20-22 Feb 2014. He is a Member of EU Academy of Sciences (EUAS) since July 2017. He got A Slottow Owaki Prize of SID in 2018 http://www.ee.ust.hk/ece.php/enews/detail/660. He is 2019 Distinguished Fellow of IETI (International Engineering and Technology Institute). Since 2018 until 2020 he works as Professor in the School of Physics and Optoelectronics Engineering in Foshan University, Foshan, China. 2020-2024 Vice President of Fellow of Institute of Data Science and Artificial Intelligence (IDSAI) Since 2021 distinguished Fellow of Institute of Data Science and Artificial Intelligence. Since March 2022 he is A Fellow of National Academy of Technology for his contributions to Information Electrical and Electronic Research. He is a Editor in Chief of Liquid Crystal section in Crystals journal since 2023
Title : Exploring cuprous oxide polycrystalline thin films as an improved sensor for chemicals
Paulo Cesar De Morais, Catholic University Of Brasilia, Brazil
Professor Paulo César De Morais, PhD, was full Professor of Physics at the University of Brasilia (UnB) – Brazil up to 2013. Appointed as UnB’s (Brazil) Emeritus Professor (2014); Visiting Professor at HUST – China (2012-2015); Distinguished Professor at AHU – China (2016-2019); Full Professor at the Catholic University of Brasília (UCB) – Brazil (2018); CNPq-1A Research Fellow since 2010; 2007 Master Research Prize from UnB. He held two-years (1987-1988) post-doc position with Bell Communications Research, New Jersey – USA and received his Doctoral degree in Solid State Physics (1986) from the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG) – Brazil. With more than 13,000 citations, He has published over 500 papers and more than 15 patents.
Title : Preparation and in-vitro evaluation of tamoxifen conjugated eco-friendly, agar-based hybrid magnetic nanoparticles for their potential use in breast cancer treatment
Zanib Khan, comsats, Pakistan
I am Dr. Zanib Khan, and I have recently completed my Ph.D. degree in biosciences from the COMSATS, Islamabad Pakistan, where my research focused on association of virus with breast cancer. During my Ph.D. studies, I gained extensive experience in molecular biology, virology, microbiology, biotechnology, nanobiotechnology, which I believe will be valuable in advancing the goals of your research. I am also a skilled and qualified researcher with 4 years of teaching experience in the microbiology department of the Government postgraduate college Mandian II. I am currently working with a Fleming fund country grant on an AMR project. Have four years of experience as a Fleming consultant for AMR (anti-microbial resistance) surveillance from healthy animals and National External Quality Assurance Services at the National veterinary laboratory, it was my duty to coordinate, design and execute experiments and communicate results to the appropriate teams and data management. Other duties included developing and maintaining standard operating procedures for conducting experiments along with managing and resolving work-related issues in a timely and accurate manner.
Title : The mechanism study of selective cytotoxicity of a conformationally tunable bifunctional aptamer against tumor cells
Liyu Zhang, Xi’an Children’s Hospital, China
Title : Wave scattering by many small particles, creating materials with a desired refraction coefficient and other applications
Alexander G. Ramm, Kansas State University, USA
Alexander G. Ramm was born in Russia, emigrated to USA in 1979 and is a US citizen. He is Professor Emeritus of Mathematics with broad interests in analysis, scattering theory, inverse problems, theoretical physics, engineering, signal estimation, tomography, theoretical numerical analysis and applied mathematics. He is an author of 725 research papers, 23 research monographs and an editor of 3 books. He has lectured at many Universities throughout the world, gave more than 155 invited and plenary talks at various Conferences and had supervised 11 Ph.D students. He was Fulbright Research Professor in Israel and Ukraine; distinguished visiting professor in Mexico and Egypt; Mercator Professor in Germany; Research Professor in France; invited plenary speaker at the 7-th PACOM; he won Khwarizmi international award in 2004 and received other honors. A.G.Ramm was the first to prove uniqueness of the solution to inverse scattering problems with fixed-energy scattering data; the first to prove uniqueness of the solution to inverse scattering problems with non-over-determined scattering data and the first to study inverse scattering problems with under-determined scattering data. He studied inverse scattering problems for potential scattering and for scattering by obstacles. He solved many specific inverse problems and developed new methods and ideas in the area of inverse scattering problems. He introduced the notion of Property C for a pair of differential operators and applied Property C for one-dimensional and multi-dimensional inverse scattering problems. A. G. Ramm solved many-body wave scattering problem when the bodies are small particles of arbitrary shapes, assuming that a much less than d and d is much less that λ, where a is the characteristic size of the particles, d is the minimal distance between neighboring particles, and λ is the wavelength in the material in which the small particles are embedded. Multiple scattering is essential under these assumptions. He used this theory to give a theory for creating materials with a desired refraction coefficient and materials with a desired wave-focusing property. A. G. Ramm gave a recipe for creating materials with a desired refraction coefficient. These results attracted attention of the scientists working in nanotechnology. A. G. Ramm gave formulas for the scattering amplitude for scalar and electromagnetic waves by small bodies of arbitrary shapes and analytical formulas for the polarizability tensors for these bodies. A. G. Ramm gave a solution to the Pompeiu problem, proved the Schiffer’s conjecture and gave many results about symmetry problems for PDE, including first symmetry results in harmonic analysis. A. G. Ramm has developed the Dynamical Systems Method (DSM) for solving linear and nonlinear operator equations, especially ill-posed. These results were used numerically and demonstrated practical efficiency of the DSM. A. G. Ramm developed random fields estimation theory for a wide class of random fields. A. G. Ramm has developed a theory of convolution equations with hyper-singular integrals and solved analytically integral equations with hyper-singular kernels. These results he applied to the study of the NSP (Navier-Stokes problem). As a result, he solved the millennium problem concerning the Navier-Stokes equations. A. G. Ramm formulated and proved the NSP paradox which shows the contradictory nature of the NSP and the non-existence of its solution on the interval t ∈ [0.∞) for the initial data v0(x) 6≡ 0 and f(x, t) = 0. A. G. Ramm has introduced a wide class of domains with non-compact boundaries. He studied the spectral properties of the Schr¨odinger operators in this class of such domains and gave suffient conditions for the absence of eigenvalues on the continuous spectrum of these operators. A. G. Ramm developed the theory of local, pseudolocal and geometrical tomography. He has proved a variety of the results concerning singularities of the Radon transform and developed multidimensional algorithms for finding discontinuities of signals from noisy discrete data.
Title : Methodology for the elimination of accumulated damage objects in the territories of flooded copper mines in the Middle Urals
Boris Borisovich Zobnin, International Academy of Ecology, Russia
Boris Borisovich Zobnin, was born on August 25, 1941 in Sverdlovsk. After graduating from the Radio Engineering Faculty of the Ural Polytechnic Institute in 1963, he worked as an engineer at the Uralmashzavod. From 1966 to 1969, he worked as an acting Senior researcher at the Institute of Mining of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of the USSR. In 1969, he entered graduate school at the Department of Industrial Process Automation (APP) of the Sverdlovsk Mining Institute, In 1971 he defended his PhD thesis. He worked at the Department of APP as an assistant, senior lecturer, associate professor. From 1986 to 1993, he headed the Department of Operations Research, carried out scientific supervision of works aimed at automating crushing and grinding equipment in the branch laboratory established at the Sverdlovsk Mining Institute by the Ministry of Heavy Engineering (Mintyazhmash) of the USSR. In 1987, he was elected a member of the Scientific and Technical Council of the Ministry of Industry and Technology of the USSR. From 1993 to the present – Professor of the Department of Informatics of the Ural State Mining University. Research interests: mathematical modeling and management of complex technical and socio-economic systems; intellectualization of measurements in the tasks of monitoring complex objects; development of scenarios for the development of complex systems. About 200 articles, 40 copyright certificates and patents have been published. Magazines: News of universities. Mining Journal; New Refractories; Eastern European Journal of Advanced Technologies; American Science Journal; International Journal of Materials Science and Applications. Professor of the Department of Informatics of the Ural State Mining and Geological Academy. In 1988, he defended his doctoral dissertation on the topic "Synthesis of a controlled technological complex for magnetic enrichment of iron ores." In 1990, he was awarded the academic title of Professor at the Department of Operations Research. I teach the following disciplines: system modeling, information technology, optimization and decision-making. I am engaged in retraining specialists in monitoring the geological environment. He has trained fourteen candidates of technical sciences.