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Critical breakthrough for enhancing battery capacity
A pivotal breakthrough in battery technology that has profound implications for our energy future has been achieved by a joint-research team led by CityU.
Hydrogen generation breakthrough by CityU-led international collaboration holds great promise for a clean
An international team led by CityU has announced a groundbreaking step forward by successfully developing a highly efficient electrocatalyst that can enhance hydrogen generation through electrocatalytic water splitting. The discovery was published in one of the world’s premier science journals, Nature.
Two CityU start-ups listed in ‘Forbes Asia 100 to Watch 2023’
Two biotech start-ups incubated by CityU have been selected for the “Forbes Asia 100 to Watch 2023”, an annual list published by Forbes Asia highlighting small companies and start-ups on the rise across the Asia Pacific region that are targeting underserved markets with new technologies.
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Hong Kong’s GDP is expected to grow 4.3% in 2012 with growth coming mainly from domestic demand and services exports, according to CityU forecast.
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Professor Way Kuo discussed nuclear energy security and global safety with regional security experts at a Sino-US Colloquium on Energy Cooperation: challenges and opportunities on 13 January.
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The renowned physicist and Nobel Laureate Professor Claude Cohen-Tannoudji gave a lecture at CityU on major breakthroughs in the evolution of atomic physics.
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Professor Paul Chu of the Department of Physics and Materials Science delivers the latest in the President's Lecture Series: Excellence in Academia at CityU with a talk titled “Surface Engineering and Modification of Materials”.
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CityU is co-organising with Cornell University and The Hong Kong Jockey Club a 3-day symposium to enhance the expertise of equine veterinary surgeons in the treatment of equine upper airway disease.
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Bio-inspired materials newly developed by CityU can significantly improve the efficiency of electronic cooling, opening up the possibilities for shrinking the size of electronic products even further.

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