Alumni
Seminar - “Size Matters: Developing Design Rules to Engineer Nanoparticles for Solid Tumour Targeting" by Edward A Sykes, Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering, University of Toronto
ABSTRACT: Nanotechnology offers highly customizable platforms for producing minimally invasive and programmable strategies to diagnose and treat cancer. Advances in this field have demonstrated that nanoparticles can enhance specificity of anti-cancer agents, respond to tumour-specific cues, and direct the visualization of biological targets in vivo.
Seminar - “Biochemical Control of Phosphate Mineral Saturation: A Proposal for Polyphosphates” by Sidney Omelon, Assistant Professor, Chemical Engineering, University of Ottawa
ABSTRACT: The rigidity of our skeleton is due to reinforcement with nano-sized minerals of biological apatite. Theories of skeletal apatite nucleation include initiation by the organic matrix (collagen and non-collagenous proteins), and increasing the phosphate concentration by hydrolysis of phosphoric acid monoesters. An enzyme that has been attributed to skeletal mineralization - tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) - is known to increase inorganic phosphate concentration by catalyzing phosphoric acid monoester hydrolysis. However, the substrate for TNAP in
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING BEST PUBLICATION PRIZE (2013) SEMINAR - “Hard Spherical Colloids at Fluid Interfaces: A Cellulosic Nanoparticle System” by Navid Bizmark, Chemical Engineering University of Waterloo
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING BEST PUBLICATION PRIZE (2013) SEMINAR
“Irreversible Adsorption-Driven Assembly of Nanoparticles at Fluid Interfaces Revealed by a Dynamic Surface Tension Probe” by Navid Bizmark, Marios A. Ioannidis, Dale E. Henneke, Langmuir, Vol. 30, pages 710-717
For: “A Balanced Theoretical-Practical paper, with a Significant Contribution for the Quantitative Description of Nanoparticle Adsorption at Fluid Interfaces”
Notice of PhD Oral Defence - "Development of Soft Sensors for Monitoring of Chinese Hamster Ovary Cell Professes" by Seyed Kaveh Ohadi
Notice of PhD Oral Defence - "Oil Sands Bitumen Emulsion Upgrading by using in situ Hydrogen Generated through the Water Gas Shift Reaction" by Lei Jia
Seminar - “Separation Processes – Soil Remediation and Air Pollution Control” by Kathryn Mumford, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Melbourne
ABSTRACT: Increasing challenges associated with environmental remediation projects has driven the development of new, efficient and effective separation materials, technologies and processes suitable for large scale deployment. This presentation will provide an overview to some of the work being conducted at the University of Melbourne in this area for soil and air pollution control.
Free Public Lecture and Expert Panel - The Science Behind Ebola - Evolution, Epidemiology, Experimental Treatment with Dr. Marc Aucoin, Dr. Christine Dupont, Dr. Shannon Majowicz, hosted by Dr. Josh Neufeld
Free Public Lecture and Expert Panel - The Science Behind Ebola
PARK AND VEVA REILLY DISTINGUISHED SEMINAR - “Genetic and Metabolic Engineering of Clostridium pasteurianum for Production of Butanol as a Renewable Biofuel” by Michael Pyne, PhD, Post-Doctoral Fellow, University of Waterloo
(Please be advised that signing a NDA will be required for attending this seminar)
ABSTRACT: The Acetone-Butanol-Ethanol (ABE) fermentation by anaerobic bacteria from the genus Clostridium was one of the first large-scale industrial bioprocesses, operating globally for the production of acetone during the first half of the 20th Century. Feedstock and product recovery costs prevented the ABE process from remaining profitable and acetone production was overtaken by the developing petroleum industry.
Seminar - “Discrete and Continuous Optimization Models for the Design and Operation of Sustainable and Robust Process Systems” by Ignacio E. Grossmann, Center for Advanced Process Decision-Making, Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University
ABSTRACT: In this presentation we give an overview of recent applications in Process Systems Engineering of new discrete and continuous optimization techniques. We first provide a brief overview of logic-based optimization methods, emphasizing the theoretical relation of the continuous relaxations between mixed-integer programming and generalized disjunctive programming for nonconvex optimization problems.
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