News & Stories
2014

News
Easy Access to Clean Water
A research team at HKUST has invented a low-voltage mini pulsed electric field device that can kill more than 90 percent of bacteria in the running tap water in a few seconds.
The technology is a possible way to help control the spread of waterborne diseases such as Legionellosis caused by microbial contamination of water, which is one of the recurrent diseases in Hong Kong. Healthy people have lower risk of infection while people with weakened immune systems can develop life threatening pneumonia.
The World Health Organisation estimates that ingestion of microbial contaminated water kills more than a million people worldwide every year.
The low-cost device is now being tested at Queen Elizabeth Hospital. It is able to run on two AA batteries for up to six months and is possible to become one of the household products.

News
Hong Kong – New York – Beijing
Carol Choi
Graduate of Bachelor of Business Administration (Marketing and Management), 2014
After three years of undergraduate studies, what do I get from HKUST? Stress and Tension? Well, I guess most of us encounter pressure when examinations approach in any university. I am grateful that HKUST not only offers a pleasant learning environment, but more importantly, the opportunities to gain international exposure.
As a business school student,I had been longing for a chance to visit Manhattan, the international financial center, and HKUST has made my dream come true! Exchanging in New York University (NYU) is one of the most exciting experiences in my college life! It was my first time living all on my own in another city on the other side of the world. Stepping out of my comfort zone was not easy. But eventually, I overcame the cultural shock and started meeting new friends, appreciating their culture, and even falling in love with this vibrant city.

News
HKUST Social Science Professor wins Barrington Moore Book Award
Prof Wenkai He, Associate Professor from the Division of Social Science at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST), became a co-winner of 2014 Barrington Moore Book Award of the American Sociological Association (ASA) on comparative and historical sociology. He is the first scholar from a non-American university to have won this prestigious award.
Prof He’s publication “Paths Toward the Modern Fiscal State”, which compares the history of modern public finance between England, Japan and China, is hailed by his peers as “a genuinely important piece of scholarship that has the potential to become a benchmark in the literature.” It is now an assigned reading for postgraduate students in several top American universities including the University of Chicago.

News
Migratory Bird
Ashima Saxena
MSc Electronics Engineering ,2011
- Life is about helping each other -
After working for three years in an R&D department, going back to university was an amazing experience. It was also the first time that I had lived alone and away from my home country of India.
On 2 February 2011, I landed in one of the most beautiful places in Asia – Hong Kong. It was raining and I was amazed by the green mountains and clean, calm atmosphere. I took a taxi to reach Hong Kong Adventist College, my temporary home in Clear Water Bay. My roommates were from Mainland China. They seemed shy about speaking English, and I wondered how I would manage over the coming year.

News
HKUST Chemists Unveil Mechanisms of Photosynthesis for Promising Renewable Energy Development
A research team at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) has solved a long-standing question in photosynthesis which provides insight into the design of artificial photosynthetic systems that may serve as alternative energy devices by effectively utilizing the sunlight. The research was led by Assistant Prof Xuhui Huang and Prof Yijing Yan of the Department of Chemistry and their findings were recently published in the prestigious journal Nature Communications.

News
HKUST Physics Expert Honored for Contributions in Materials Physics
Prof Yilong Han, Associate Professor in the Department of Physics at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) was awarded the 2014 Achievement in Asia Award (AAA) for his distinguished contributions in melting transition, glass transition and the observation of geometrical frustration through creative experiments in colloidal dynamics. The award was shared by Prof Han and Prof Wang Yao, Associate Professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Hong Kong.
Presented by the International Organization of Chinese Physicists and Astronomers (OCPA), the annual award acknowledges only one or two Chinese scientists below 50 years of age and working in Asia for their outstanding achievements in the field of physics and astronomy. Prof Han will receive his award at the meeting of the American Physics Society in March 2015.

News
Why Take Engineering and Why at HKUST?
KONG Wing Man Samantha
Year 3, Chemical and Environmental Engineering
Head Student Ambassador of HKUST
Recipient of the Hong Kong Top 10 Outstanding Youth
Engineering is not regarded as an immediate first choice by many top students in Hong Kong. However, you would be absolutely wrong to think in this way.
I went overseas to attend high school in Malaysia. Three years ago, just as every high school student does, I struggled as to what discipline to take at university.

News
HKUST Engineering Team Invents Cheaper, Lighter and Stronger Aluminium Composite for Wide Applications
A Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) research team led by Prof Yui-bun Chan from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, with support from leading global aluminium producer UC RUSAL (SEHK:486, EuroNext: RUSAL/RUAL, Moscow Exchange: RUALR/RUALRS), has discovered a new aluminium composite – Fiber Reinforced Aluminium. This new material is stronger than existing aluminium, cheaper and lighter than steel, and can also be used with insulation panels designed to produce a building envelope system that is safer, cheaper, more energy-efficient and easier to mount. The project is now undergoing its final phase and is expected to complete in 2015.