Media Coverage

Shanghai scientists make breakthrough in X-ray research

The Shanghai-XFEL Beamline Project (SBP) and Shanghai Soft X-ray Free Electron Laser Facility (SXEFL), a core part in the global photon science research center in Zhangjiang, Pudong New Area, achieved another milestone in its progress recently. On June 14, the first single-shot coherent diffraction imaging (CDI) experiment was performed in a "water window" and online image reconstruction was achieved.


  The Shanghai-XFEL Beamline Project (SBP) and Shanghai Soft X-ray Free Electron Laser Facility (SXEFL), a core part in the global photon science research center in Zhangjiang, Pudong New Area, achieved another milestone in its progress recently. 
  On June 14, the first single-shot coherent diffraction imaging (CDI) experiment was performed in a "water window" and online image reconstruction was achieved.
  Scientists said that this achievement means that X-ray FEL research in China has advanced from the facility research and development phase to user operation phase. The "water window" refers to a soft X-ray with a wavelength that has a range between 2.3 and 4.4 nanometers. Water is relatively transparent to X-rays but other essential life elements, such as carbon, still interact strongly with X-rays. As such, the "water window" soft X-rays provide a unique opportunity for investigating biological materials, added the researchers.
  Within the "water window", SXFEL can generate high-intensity free electron laser pulses, which are 1 billion times brighter than those of synchrotron radiation light sources. Such ultrabright, ultrafast and coherent pulses enable scientists to take X-ray snapshots of atoms and molecules at work, revealing fundamental processes in materials, technology and living organisms.
  Researchers said that the research result this time will be applied in microscopic imaging of living cells, and may provide a revolutionary research tool for multiple disciplines, including physics, biology and chemistry.
  "The pulses from the X-ray FEL facility can detect super tiny structures and help researchers obtain dynamic structural images of atoms and molecules. It makes filming movies of molecules come true," said Liu Zhi, a professor from the ShanghaiTech University and general manager of the SXEFL.
  "If we compare a cell to a city, the technology will allow people to depict a three-dimensional traffic map of the city. That means scientists will see how proteins come and go in a cell using a combination of CDI and other imaging methods. This may provide new insights into important research areas, such as finding drug targets," he added.
  The SXFEL facility is scheduled to begin user operation next year and will be open to both users at home and abroad.
  Source: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202106/29/WS60da9ad8a310efa1bd65ea7e.html

2021-06-30 more+

Japan-China Third Country Cooperation Technical Seminar Held in Thailand

On March 6, 2019, NEDO and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) held a technical seminar in Bangkok, Thailand, targeted at Japanese, Chinese, and Thai businesses. The goal of the seminar was to disseminate in Thailand the results realized under a recent NEDO demonstration project on energy-efficient buildings carried out in Shanghai.


  On March 6, 2019, NEDO and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) held a technical seminar in Bangkok, Thailand, targeted at Japanese, Chinese, and Thai businesses. The goal of the seminar was to disseminate in Thailand the results realized under a recent NEDO demonstration project on energy-efficient buildings carried out in Shanghai.
  The impetus for this technical seminar was the First Japan-China Forum on Third Country Business Cooperation held in Beijing during October 2018, which was organized in line with the high expectations expressed at recent Japan-China summit meetings to make best use of each country's respective strengths and undertake bilateral cooperation that benefits third countries. In light of these developments, NEDO and CAS collaborated on a plan to hold a seminar in Thailand.
  The NEDO project began in 2017 at the CAS Shanghai Advanced Research Institute's newly completed Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Research Facility. Under the project, Japanese energy-efficient technologies introduced during the facility's design phase realized energy savings of 46 percent compared to previously deployed systems.
  Participants in the seminar included Professor Wei Wei, Vice President of the CAS Shanghai Advanced Research Institute, Dr. Supachai Sampao of the thai Ministry of Energy, the Chief Representatives of NEDO's overseas offices in Bangkok and Beijing, as well as many industry representatives.                                                                                                       
  Seminar participants
  Source: https://www.nedo.go.jp/english/news/whatsnew_00131.html

2019-03-08 more+

Completion Ceremony for Installation of an Energy-Efficient System at New Research Facility Held in Shanghai, China

NEDO, Yasui Architects & Engineers, Inc., Pacific Consultants Co., Ltd., and Sanki Engineering Co., Ltd. have completed the installation of an energy-efficient system at the new Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Research Facility in Shanghai, China. The building was constructed by the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute for a project to demonstrate an energy efficient building.


  Since China ranks first in global energy consumption, energy and environmental conservation are urgent priorities for China and it has announced that comprehensive improvement of ecosystem quality is a major goal in its 13th Five-Year Plan. At a time when high-rise buildings are being built mainly in major Chinese cities as a result of recent high economic growth, the proportion of tertiary versus primary industries is also increasing. Awareness of energy conservation is therefore increasing not only in the manufacturing sector, but also in the building sector.
  Against such a backdrop, NEDO, Yasui Architects & Engineers, Inc., Pacific Consultants Co., Ltd., and Sanki Engineering Co., Ltd. introduced a building energy management system (BEMS), which can comprehensively monitor and control energy-efficient equipment with energy-saving technologies to optimize energy consumption, at the Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Research Facility (total floor area: 16,000 m2). Construction of this building was recently completed in Pudong New Area, Shanghai by the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute (SARI), which was jointly established by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), China's largest national research organization, and the Shanghai Municipal Government, for a project to demonstrate an energy efficient building. Prior to the start of the project's demonstration phase, a ceremony to commemorate the installation of the energy-efficient system was held by SARI and NEDO on July 20, 2017.
  As the building has energy requirements unique to research facilities, such as 24-hour continuous operation and a constant fresh air system for cooling rooms housing animals, its primary energy consumption* per unit area is higher than that for a typical office building. For the project, Japan's energy-saving technology has been introduced from the building design phase, with the aim of reducing energy use by about 40% for air conditioning and lighting compared to conventional systems. The project also aims to demonstrate a level of energy saving nearly equal to that achievable for a general office building while meeting the special operational requirements for an advanced research facility.
  Source: https://www.nedo.go.jp/english/news/AA5en_100253.html 

2017-07-21 more+

Model Project for an Energy Efficient Building in Shanghai

NEDO and the Chinese Academy of Sciences reached an agreement to implement the Model Project for an Energy Efficient Building and concluded a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on March 19, 2014, in NEDO Kawasaki Head Office. The project incorporates Japan's advanced energy-saving technology into a new research building of the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute.


  NEDO and the Chinese Academy of Sciences reached an agreement to implement the Model Project for an Energy Efficient Building and concluded a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on March 19, 2014, in NEDO Kawasaki Head Office. The project incorporates Japan's advanced energy-saving technology into a new research building of the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute.
  NEDO Executive Director Ueda, who attended the MOU signing ceremony, stated his hope that the project would trigger the deployment of energy conservation technology in China's architecture field, increasing the number of such energy-efficient buildings in the country.
  Architectural rendering of a new research building of the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute
  MOU signing ceremony for the Model Project for an Energy Efficient Building
  Source: https://www.nedo.go.jp/english/news/whatsnew_20140321.html
  

2014-03-20 more+

Better Cities, Better and Prettier Underground Garbage Plants

Li is a senior local political adviser and head of the Low-Carbon City Research Center of Shanghai Advanced Research Institute, jointly established by the Municipal Government of Shanghai and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.(Shanghai Daily)


  A few years ago, a government plan to build a garbage incinerator close to residential areas in Panyu District in Guangzhou City triggered a furor and the plan was scrapped due to strong opposition.
  Building solid waste disposal plants near or inside cities has since been anathema in urban planning. But here in Shanghai, that's exactly where some planners would like to place such a facility.
  Another eggheads' pipe dream, you might say, but Li Kexin is convinced that a downtown trash facility is the first step toward leveraging what he calls the "unit city" development strategy. Li is a senior local political adviser and head of the Low-Carbon City Research Center of Shanghai Advanced Research Institute, jointly established by the Municipal Government of Shanghai and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
  A unit city is made up of areas that are self-sufficient in localized garbage treatment and energy generation. In addition, people live and work largely within their confines, rendering obsolete long and arduous commutes between workplace and home.
  Usually, urban garbage is carted away and dumped in faraway landfills, but limited land supply means this disposal method is unsustainable. Shanghai produces about 2,000 tons of trash a day, which makes its way to Laogang in Pudong, site of the city's biggest landfill, Li told Shanghai Daily.
  However, as Laogang is overburdened, the city is hatching plans to build another landfill, maybe more, in its suburbs. This is ferociously resisted by local residents on public health grounds. And rightly so, asked Li: why can garbage produced in Huangpu District be dumped in Jiading, and for that matter, Jing'an's be hauled to Jinshan?
  In response, maybe we can build an underground trash reprocessing plant in the expanse of People's Square opposite the municipal government headquarters, Li said.
  "Many people ridicule my suggestion as absurd, but 10 years from now, they won't scoff anymore. It may well become a reality," he said.
  A downtown trash facility isn't such an eyesore as many would have thought. Quite the opposite. It would be the best advertisement of Shanghai's trash disposal technology. After all, who would risk putting a scrap yard right under the mayor's nose if it's squalid and stinks?
  Besides, garbage can be recycled and reprocessed for human use. "I often say the assertion that 'garbage is a resource dumped at wrong places' is wrong. What's really wrong is the location where we choose to have a disposal plant," Li said.
  Li said he got this audacious idea from a recent visit to Tokyo, Japan, where he was stunned to find a corner of a park converted into a rubbish disposal facility, so beautifully constructed that it looked like a fairy tale palace, with not a whiff of stench. Later he learned that Tokyo was forced to handle its trash locally following protests from adjacent smaller cities against becoming the metropolis' junk fields.
  For Li, utilization should come before disposal, and this principle applies to rainwater as well, which is simply discharged into rivers - a sheer waste of an otherwise useful resource. Why not make urban roads water-permeable, so that rainwater can replenish the aquifer, rather than threaten the oft-overwhelmed urban sewage system?
  Urban disease
  Localization offers the best cure for many of the malaises known as "urban disease," all of which result from population pressure.
  China's urbanization rate stands at 47 percent. The number is expected to soar as 100 million rural dwellers will migrate to cities in the next 10 years. As cities grow in size to accommodate the new arrivals, their common strategy is to build satellite cities, linked with downtown by expressways. This development model has been criticized for creating more problems than it's solved. Explosive growth of cars for commutes leaves urban traffic severely snarled.
  Unit cities may address this predicament by encouraging - not ordering - people to go about their business in a fixed area, namely, the individual units.
  In order for that to happen, "units" must be designed for both working and living. Alas, many areas and districts in Shanghai are meant for specialized functions.
  For instance, the Lujiazui financial zone and Zhangjiang High-tech Park are bustling in the day but when night falls, they become deserted like ghost towns, Li said.
  The ultimate goal of forming separate units within cities is to mingle working and living. Besides, it's mandated by the fact that megalopolises face ever higher security risks. If one of Shanghai's pylons is sabotaged, half of the city will be crippled by a blackout. Imagine the consequences of the metro ceasing operation for 10 minutes, Li said.
  In a unit city, if every unit can generate some power for its own use, it is less vulnerable to massive power stoppages. Pioneering as it appears, the very idea of unit city is sometimes a hard sell, mainly because our urban planners haven't kept up with the times, Li said.
  Lujiazui may have been their pet project 20 years ago, but it won't stay advanced for ever. Urban planning has to constantly adjust to new conditions brought about by a fast changing economy.
  China's existing urban planning philosophy was imported from the Soviet Union, which stresses rigid "scientific" planning of everything. In the 1960s, the fad in urban planning was division of labor between districts. But any planning is inevitably influenced by market forces and the "division of labor" model gradually fell out of favor. The trend now is to mix different social functions in a given district or block, said Wang Jun, assistant researcher under Li.
  The underlying logic is roughly the same as what unit city endorses. Shanghai's urban planning model has to change, but how? It assigns clear-cut roles for districts and areas, for instance, Lujiazui is for finance, Zhangjiang for high-tech, Minhang for living and Jing'an for office work, with little crossover. How to break this entrenched model?
  Of course, commuting, refuse disposal, and energy and food production cannot be 100 percent localized. But we can at least localize sections of these enterprises.
  Li's ingenuous advice that is likely to be welcomed by housewives at a time of high inflation is to set up vegetable farms in the central city. This idea conforms to the current Western trend, which calls for cities to reduce reliance on the outside world for food.
  For instance, in Britain there is a coinage of the term "urban village." In Seoul, South Korea, people are planting wheat in outlying green belts. When autumn comes, the billowing wheat takes on a golden yellow, which is aesthetically pleasing and also contributes to Seoul's food supply, said Wang.
  Since seasonal vegetables are now available around the year, thanks to new planting techniques, children have a poor understanding of the climate differences between seasons, Li said.
  According to him, cities are theoretically space where people live their joy and sadness and experience the vagaries of life, but they are now meticulously designed to leave no room for human emotions other than materialist wants.
  Bike lanes
  For this reason, during a government meeting last Tuesday, he called for the creation of a slow-paced life zone in central Shanghai, which would require carving out a big chunk of territory that runs from west on Jiangsu Road to east at the Bund, from north on Nanjing Road to south on Huaihai Road. In the envisioned zone, bike lanes would outnumber highways, and life would be laid-back. People commute on foot and by bike.
  To be sure, that doesn't mean we should knock down the existing architecture to make way for an immense pedestrian mall. Neither can we turn the entire People's Square into a landfill. But it's always worth putting novel ideas to practice on a small scale, according to Li.
  And what used to be unthinkable is now made possible by the advent of sophisticated technologies. Take garbage. As long as officials change their mindset that it is a stigma to have a landfill in front of government buildings, the maturing of relevant technology is just a matter of time, Li said.
  His confidence is strengthened by technological breakthroughs in cloud computing and the "Internet of things," which could improve the efficiency of regulating trash disposal and rainwater gathering and sanitation.
  Nonetheless, what matters most is urban planners' attitudinal change. Many of China's cities are groaning under over-urbanization. By contrast, in Western cities like New York, urbanization has gone into reverse, a process whereby the haves live on cities' fringes and commute by car or public transport everyday. As a result, the population pressure in central cities is eased.
  "We hope Shanghai can skip this stage and reach the next phase of urbanization, which incorporates unit city at its core," said Wang.
  Source: http://www.china.org.cn/opinion/2012-04/18/content_25174238.htm
  Shanghai Daily, April 18, 2012

2012-04-19 more+

Drexel and Shanghai Advanced Research Institute Announce Research Collaboration

Drexel University and the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute (SARI), Chinese Academy of Sciences have signed a collaboration agreement that will bring together researchers from the two institutions for pioneering work in scientific and technological innovation.


  Drexel University and the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute (SARI), Chinese Academy of Sciences have signed a collaboration agreement that will bring together researchers from the two institutions for pioneering work in scientific and technological innovation.
  "Drexel is proud to launch this collaboration with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, a driving force in China’s development as a great hub for high-tech innovation,” said Drexel President, John A. Fry. “Together, our institutions can expand opportunities for groundbreaking research, outstanding education and the translation of new technologies to commercial applications. Our distinguished alumnus Jiang Mianheng played a key role in establishing this partnership, and I thank him on behalf of the University."
  The Chinese Academy of Sciences is China’s leading national comprehensive research and development center in natural sciences and innovative technologies. SARI is a research organization jointly established by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Shanghai municipal government to promote sustainable economic and social development, interdisciplinary exploration and innovation, and advanced platforms for technology development.
  The Drexel-SARI Center will be a permanent home for Drexel’s research collaborations and educational partnerships with SARI and other institutes of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, offering Drexel faculty insight into the latest technology and innovation in China. The Center will also serve as a base in Shanghai for other Drexel educational endeavors including internships and co-ops, and provide staging space for a wide range of programs, symposia and executive training for scientists and engineers covering all aspects of technology commercialization strategy.
  Source: http://globalphiladelphia.org/news/drexel-and-shanghai-advanced-research-institute-announce-research-collaboration
  

2011-10-26 more+