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Seminar - “Valorization of Waste Protein Biomass for Bio-based Plastics, Composites and Adhesives Development” by Tizazu Mekonnen, Polymer Engineering Scientist, E.I. DuPont
ABSTRACT: The increasing demand, cost escalation and environmental impact of raw materials for industrial chemicals, materials, and energy production impel the development of sustainable strategies for resource utilization. Such sustainable resource demand spurred investigation for the utilization of agricultural and forestry wastes and by-products. The emergence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy reduced most of the traditional uses of rendered animal meals such as blood meal, meat, and bone meal as animal feed, effectively making it an industrial waste.
ݮƵ Undergraduate Nanotechnology Conference
Notice of PhD Oral Defence - "Water Leak Detection in Industrial Electric Arc Furnances" by Hamzah Al-Shawarghi
Notice of PhD Oral Defence - "Development, Modeling, Analysis, and Optimization of a Novel Inland Desalination with Zero Liquid Discharge for Brackish Groundwaters" by Khaled Elsaid
Notice of PhD Oral Defence - "Development, Modeling, Analysis, and Optimization of a Novel Inland Desalination with Zero Liquid Discharge for Brackish Groundwaters" by Khaled Elsaid
Technology Innovation & Policy Forum 2016 Conference
Notice of PhD Oral Defence - "Electrodeposition of p-Type Cuprous Oxide and its Applications in Oxide Solar Cells" by Yiyi Yang
Notice of PhD Oral Defence - "Cellulose Nanocrystals Incorporated Nanocomposites for Water Treatment Applicatons" by Nishil Mohammed
SEMINAR - “Engineering Smart Hydrogels on Multiple Length Scales for Biomedical and Biosensing Applications” by Todd Hoare, Associate Professor and University Scholar, Dept. of Chemical Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON
ABSTRACT:While multiple types of smart, environmentally-responsive materials have been explored for a variety of biomedical applications (e.g. drug delivery, tissue engineering, bioimaging, etc.), their ultimate clinical use has been hampered by their lack of biologically-relevant degradation as well as challenges regarding their non-surgical administration to the body. These factors have particularly limited the clinical use of temperature-responsive hydrogels, which are either highly labile in diluting environments like the body (e.g.