¹ú¼ÒÁô»ùίCSC /ÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧUoL£¨×ÔÈ»¿ÆÑ§Ó빤³ÌѧԺ£©²©Ê¿ÉúÏîÄ¿ÕÐÉúÆôʾ (2020)
¹ú¼ÒÁôѧ»ù½ðίÓëÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧÁªºÏ½±Ñ§½ð (×ÔÈ»¿ÆÑ§Ó빤³ÌѧԺ)£º
2021Äê¶È²©Ê¿ÉúÏîÄ¿ÕÐÉúÐû´«
¹ú¼ÒÁôѧ»ù½ðίÓëÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧ (UoL)2021Äê¶ÈµÄ²©Ê¿¼°·ÃÎÊѧÕßÏîÄ¿-×ÔÈ»¿ÆÑ§Ó빤³ÌѧԺ-ÕÐÉúÕýÔÚ½øÐУ¬¸ÃÏîÄ¿ÒÔÖйú¹ú¼ÒÁôѧ»ù½ð¹ÜÀíίԱ»á(CSC)ºÍÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧ(UoL)Ö®¼äÒÑÇ©¶©µÄºÏ×÷ÐÒéΪ»ù´¡£¬Ö¼ÔÚΪÖйú´óѧ/Ñо¿»ú¹¹µÄ·ûºÏ×ʸñµÄѧÉú¡¢Ñ§ÕßÌṩÓÅÖʵÄÑо¿ÅàѵÓëºÏ×÷£¬ÎªÖйú´óѧ¼°Ñо¿»ú¹¹µÄÑо¿ÉúºÍ·ÃÎÊѧÕßÌṩ¶ÀÌØµÄ»ú»áºÍÁ¼ºÃµÄƽ̨£¬ÔÚÕâÒ»ÊÀ½çÁìÏȵÄÑо¿»ú¹¹ÖнøÐпÆÑ§Ñо¿¡¢¿ª·¢Ó¦Óã¬ÔÚ×î¸ß¼¶±ðµÄÆÚ¿¯ÉÏ·¢±íÑо¿³É¹û£¬²¢ÔÚ»¯Ñ§¡¢²ÄÁÏ¡¢Ò©Îï¡¢ÉúÎﻯѧµÈÏà¹ØÁìÓò»ñµÃÈ«ÐÂÑо¿¼¼Êõ·½ÃæµÄ·á¸»¾Ñé¡£
1. ¼Æ»®¸ÅÊö
CSC/UoLÁªºÏ½±Ñ§½ðÏîÄ¿½«ÔÚÒÔÏÂÈý¸öÏîÄ¿Àà±ðÖÐÕ¹¿ªºÏ×÷£º
1.1»¯Ñ§£¨²ÄÁÏ¡¢Ò©Îï¡¢ÉúÎﻯѧ¼°Ïà¹ØÁìÓò£©£¬Êýѧ£¬ÎïÀíרҵȫÈÕÖÆ¹¥¶Á²©Ê¿Ñ§Î»Ñ§Éú
ËùÑ¡ÖйúѧÉú½«²Î¼Ó CSC/UoL µÄÖ¸¶¨²©Ê¿¼Æ»®£¬Ê±³¤²»³¬¹ý 48 ¸öÔ¡£Èç¹ûËùÑ¡ÖйúѧÉú³É¹¦Íê³ÉÖ¸¶¨ÏîÄ¿µÄÒªÇó²¢ÎªÂÛÎÄ´ð±ç£¬UoL ½«ÒÀ¾ÝÆäÕý³£×ʸñÊÚÓè¹æÔòºÍ³ÌÐòÏò¸ÃµÈѧÉúÊÚÓ販ʿѧλ¡£ÕÐÉúÃû¶î5-10Ãû¡£
1.2»¯Ñ§£¨²ÄÁÏ¡¢Ò©Îï¡¢ÉúÎﻯѧ¼°Ïà¹ØÁìÓò£©£¬Êýѧ£¬ÎïÀíרҵµÄ¶¨ÆÚ·ÃÎÊѧÕß
·ÃÎÊѧÕß½«¼ÓÈëCSC/UoLµÄÖ¸¶¨Ñо¿ÏîÄ¿, ʱ³¤ÔÚ 6 ¸öÔÂÖÁ 12 ¸öÔÂÖ®¼ä¡£´ËÀà·ÃÎÊѧÕßµÄÈËÊý²»ÏÞÃû¶î¡£
2. ºÏ×÷ÁìÓò
åàÑ¡µÄ²ÎÓë2020ÄêµÄCSC/UoL ÁªºÏ²©Ê¿ÉúÏîÄ¿µÄ»¯Ñ§ÏµÏà¹Ø×¨Òµµ¼Ê¦°üÀ¨£º
1. O'Neil½ÌÊÚ¡ªÒ©Îﻯѧ£¬Ò©Àí»¯Ñ§ £¨Prof O'Neil's research interests include synthetic methodology including catalytic oxidation processes, fluorine substitution in bioorganic chemistry, drug metabolism and the medicinal chemistry of antimalarial and antimycobacterial drugs and novel drugs for the treatment of filariasis, pancreatitis and neuropathic pain. his group also has been involved in a project focused on the rationale redesign of resistance breaking vector control agents. he have published over 150 papers and reviews and fifteen patents. his research has led to a drug candidate (isoquine) entering clinical trials in 2008 and they also have recently candidate selected three additional antimalarials (rka 182, faq4, e209) for full preclinical testing on route to phase 1 clinical trials in humans. more recently, they have also candidate selected a new potential drug, awz1066, for the treatment of the filarial diseases lymphatic filariasis (elephnatisais) and ochocerciasis (river blindness). they have also initiated research into superoxide dismutase (sod-1) that are relevant to its involvement in motor neuron disease with hasnain and antonyuk.
he currently run the medicinal chemistry group at liverpool which is one of europe¡¯s leading academic groups focused on early stage drug discovery. through the establishment of public private partnerships with major pharma and organisations such as the medicines for malaria venture (mmv) and tb alliance many of our early stage projects have been developed to the point of candidate selection and clinical trials in humans. his group works on a wide range of therapeutic areas focussed on antimalarial, antibacterial (anti-wolbachia), anti-tuberculous agents with more recent studies focused in the pain, pancreatitis and anti-fungal areas. there are four main research themes that include: (1) drug design of new antimicrobial agents; (2) molecular modelling and cheminformatics; (3) safe-drug design; (4) semi-synthetic natural product drug design.1£©m. j. capper, gareth. s.a. wright et al., the cysteine-reactive small molecule ebselen facilitates effective sod1 maturation, nature communications, 2018, 9, 1693¡£ 2£©johnston, k. l.; cook, d. a. n.; berry, n. g.; hong, w. d.; clare, r. h.; goddard, m.; ford, l.; nixon, g. l.; o'neill, p. m.; ward, s. a.; taylor, m. j., identification and prioritization of novel anti-wolbachia chemotypes from screening a 10,000-compound diversity library. science advances 2017, 3 (9). 3£©o'neill, p. m.; amewu, r. k. et al., a tetraoxane-based antimalarial drug candidate that overcomes pfk13-c580y dependent artemisinin resistance. nature communications, 2017, 8, 15159¡£ 4£©hong, w. d.; gibbons, p. d. et al., rational design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of heterocyclic quinolones targeting the respiratory chain of mycobacterium tuberculosis. journal of medicinal chemistry, 2017, 60, 3703-3726. 5£©ismail, h.m.; barton, v.e.; panchana, m.; charoensutthivarakul, s. et al., a click chemistry-based proteomic approach reveals that 1,2,4-trioxolane and artemisinin antimalarials share a common protein alkylation profile, angewandte chemie-international edition 2016, 55, 6401-6405¡£ 6£©ismail, h. m.; barton, v.; phanchana, m.; charoensutthivarakul, s.; wong, m. h. l. et al., artemisinin activity-based probes identify multiple molecular targets within the asexual stage of the malaria parasites plasmodium falciparum 3d7. proc. natl. acad. sci. u. s. a., 2016, 113, 2080-2085¡£ 7£©wong, m.n.l.; bryan, h.k.; copple, i.m.; jenkins, r.e. et al., design and synthesis of irreversible analogues of bardoxolone methyl for the identification of pharmacologically relevant targets and interaction sites, j. med. chem. 2016, 59 , 2396-2409¡£
£¨Ïà¹ØÁ´½Ó£ºhttps://www.liverpool.ac.uk/chem ... edicinal-chemistry/£©
2. Brust ½ÌÊÚ¡ª¹¦ÄÜ»¯½çÃæ»¯Ñ§£¬ÄÉÃ×½ðÊô±íÃæ»¯Ñ§¼°³ÉĤ
£¨Prof. Mathias Brust has 25 years of experience in the chemistry of metal nanoparticles. his best-known work is the development of a simple two-phase liquid/liquid route for the preparation of thiolate-protected gold nanoparticles. this protocol is now generally referred to as the Brust-Schiffrin-method and is being used in laboratories all over the world for a host of applications ranging from molecular electronics to cancer research.
much of the more recent research in the Brust group has focused on the interactions of metal nanoparticles with biological systems, chiefly on the cellular and subcellular level. particular attention has been paid to cellular uptake and intracellular fate of nanoparticles and to opportunities arising from it for imaging, diagnostics and therapy.
Brust was awarded a prestigious European research council advanced grant in 2013 and, over the past five years, has explored the possibilities of creating active matter on the nanoscale, far away from chemical equilibrium. Energy conversion in living cells, such as atp production, has served as a guiding principle. This has led to novel research on ion and electron transport in micro-heterogeneous systems including emulsions and dispersions of vesicles.
Current and future projects include studies of ion and electron transfer across biological membranes, the use of gold nanoparticles as artificial carriers and shuttles for ionic and electronic charge, electrochemical studies in emulsions and pickering emulsions, interactions of gold nanoparticles with green plants and chloroplasts, self-propelling nano-motors, and nonequilibrium nanotechnology in general. we are interested in everything that is novel, exiting and can be attempted with simple functionalized gold nanoparticles.£©
£¨Ïà¹ØÁ´½Ó£ºhttps://www.liverpool.ac.uk/chem ... ias-brust/research/£©
3. Shchukin½ÌÊÚ¡ªÐ²ÄÁÏ£¬ÐÂÄÜÔ´£¨Prof. Dmitry Shchukin, works on controlled delivery of active agents and energy (electric, bio, thermal) by layer-by-layer planar and encapsulation approaches (>250 publications, h-factor 60, >10000 citations). He has been awarded by ERC consolidator grant (2015), ERC proof-of-concept grant (2017), and rsc brian mercer (uk) awards, nanofutur and format (germany) prizes.
Research activities include the study of the non-equilibrated interfaces, development of composite hollow nanocontainers with controlled shell permeability for encapsulation of the energy-enriched materials, phase change materials, drugs, corrosion inhibitors; development of nanocontainer-based feedback active surfaces for further application in active self-healing materials, catalysis, biochemistry and medicine; synthesis of nanomaterials with new properties in the ultrasonic cavitation zone, synthesis of amorphous nanocomposites with enhanced catalytic performance in non-equilibrated conditions at the cavitation interface; ultrasonic surface modification of metals for catalytic and biomedical (implants) applications.
applications from students with the background in materials chemistry, polymer chemistry, ultrasound, physical chemistry, self-healing materials, energy harvesting, storage and controlled delivery and other related fields.
Potential research topics are£º 1£© new nanomaterials for energy applications;2£©- self-healing materials (also including materials for wood and historical heritage preservation); 3£© antifouling coatings; 4£© application of ultrasound in photocatalysis and photovoltaics£©
Ïà¹ØÁ´½Ó£ºhttps://www.liverpool.ac.uk/chemistry/staff/dmitry-shchukin/,
4. Aissa ¸±½ÌÊÚ¡ªÓлú»¯Ñ§£¬¾«×¼´ß»¯ºÏ³É £¨Christophe Aïssa obtained his PhD under the supervision of professor Malacria (university paris 6, france) in 2001, focussing on the study of the factors influencing the outcome of transannular radical cyclisations cascades directed toward the synthesis of natural sesquiterpenes. he then joined professor F¨¹rstner group (mpi for coal research, M¨¹lheim/Ruhr, Germany) as postdoctoral research assistant, working on the total synthesis of biologically active marine secondary metabolites. in 2003, he was appointed senior scientist within the same group, working further on total syntheses, but also on transition-metal catalysed reactions. in July 2007, he was appointed lecturer at the university of Liverpool with a RCUK fellowship¡£
His group works on organic synthesis through transition-metal-catalysed activation of otherwise inert bonds, in particular c¨ch and c¨cc bonds, with the long-term aim to develop sustainable synthetic chemistry. here is a selection of papers that illustrate their work £ºbarday, m.; janot, c.; halcovitch, n. r.; muir, j.; aïssa, c. cross-coupling of ¦Á-carbonyl sulfoxonium ylides with c¨ch bonds. angew. chem. int. ed. 2017, 56, 13117¨c13121.2)yip, s. y. y.; aïssa, c. isomerization of olefins triggered by rhodium-catalyzed c¨ch bond activation: control of endocyclic ¦Â-hydrogen elimination. angew. chem. int. ed. 2015, 54, 6870¨c6873. 3)aïssa, c.; ho, k. y. t.; tetlow, d. j.; pin-no, m. diastereoselective carbocyclization of 1,6-heptadienes triggered by rhodium-catalyzed activation of an olefinic c¨ch bond. angew. chem. int. ed. 2014, 53, 4209¨c4212. 4)ho, k. y. t. h.; aïssa, c. regioselective cycloaddition of 3-azetidinones and 3-oxetanones with alkynes through nickel-catalysed carbon-carbon bond activation. chem. eur. j. 2012, 18, 3486¨c3489. 5)cr¨¦pin, d.; dawick, j.; aïssa, c. combined rhodium-catalyzed carbon-hydrogen activation and ¦Â-carbon elimination to access eight-membered rings. angew. chem. int. ed. 2010, 49, 620¨c623.£©
£¨Ïà¹ØÁ´½Ó£ºhttps://www.liverpool.ac.uk/chemistry/staff/christophe-aissa/£©
5. Hasell Ñо¿Ô±¡ª¸»ÁòÓлú¾ÛºÏÎïµÄÑз¢ÓëÓ¦Óÿª·¢porous materials are permeable, high surface area materials with applications in gas storage, catalysis, and filtration. there has been considerable interest in porous materials over the last ten years, and metal-organic frameworks and porous polymers with incredible properties have been reported. however, many of these new materials are limited in application due to the high cost of production. we are developing new porous materials from inorganic waste and other low cost or renewable resources. the target is to produce materials with superior properties, but at a cost that makes them useful for widespread practical applications, especially filtration of toxic pollutants from water and air flows. a good example is sulphur-polymers. sulfur is an industrial by-product of oil refining. we recently showed that when polymers made from elemental sulfur are made porous, they can be used to filter mercury from water. £¨Ïà¹ØÁ´½Ó£ºhttps://www.liverpool.ac.uk/chemistry/staff/thomas-hasell/£©
6. Cowan ½ÌÊÚ---Óлúµç»¯Ñ§£¬±íÃæµç»¯Ñ§ £¨Dr Alex Cowan ) is a reader in chemistry and epsrc research fellow (2013-21) in the department of chemistry and the Stephenson institute for renewable energy at the university of Liverpool (UoL). Prior to this role ac held the independent positions of senior Lecturer (2015-2017) and Lecturer (2012-2015) at UoL and Lecturer in renewable fuel synthesis at Imperial College London (2011-12). AC is a former associate editor of rsc advances and he sits on the advisory board of the uk solar fuels network (epsrc). through this role, and through additional activities with the royal society, ac has represented the uk academic communities interests in co2 conversion extensively to both uk government/policy makers and to policy and science leaders world-wide.
His research focuses on scalable catalytic systems for the production of fuels from abundant and was molecules including carbon dioxide and water. ac has particular expertise in the development and spectroscopic study of photo- and electrocatalytic water splitting and co2 catalysts and electrodes. his group is widely recognised for the application of fast transient spectroscopy to rationalise device and catalyst efficiencies under operating conditions. recent highlights in co2 chemistry (chem. sci., 2018, 2016, j. am. chem. soc., 2017) and water splitting materials (adv. energy mat., 2017, chem sci, 2015, angew. chem. int ed., 2016, 2014) appearing in high impact journals.
project for joint phd: understanding the mechanism of electrochemical carbon dioxide reduction to fuel ¨c enabling rational material design: the application of surface selective (sum frequency generation (sfg) spectroscopy to rationalise the mechanisms occurring during carbon dioxide reduction at electrodes. this knowledge will then be applied, through collaborative partnerships, to the design of new improved electrode materials.
(Ïà¹ØÁ´½Ó£ºhttps://www.liverpool.ac.uk/chemistry/staff/alexander-cowan/)
7. Macdonald¸ß¼¶½²Ê¦¡ªÄÉÃ×Ò©Îï/²ÄÁÏ»¯Ñ§---Tom graduated with a BSc and MSc from school of materials in manchester in 2005, before obtaining a PhD in 2008. his research focussed on the design and synthesis of enzyme responsive hydrogels for drug delivery, under the supervision of prof. rein ulijn and prof. Brian Saunders at the university of Manchester. he then worked from unilever as a research scientist investigating the delivery of home and personal-care actives, before joining the university of liverpool as a postdoctoral research associate working in prof. Steve Rannard's group, where he developed drug nanoparticles for the treatment of hiv/aids. tom went on to work in the group of prof. andy cooper in 2012, undertaking research investigating the high throughput synthesis and characterisation of microporous polymers. in November 2013, he was appointed to a lectureship in nanomedicine, his current research interests include the synthesis of nanomaterials for drug delivery and the design of responsive hydrogels for biomedical applications¡£Tom's research is focussed on synthesis of nanomaterials for drug delivery and the design of responsive hydrogels for biomedical applications. £¨projects: 1. design of degradable nanogels for use in long-acting in situ forming drug delivery systems; 2. using asymmetric flow field flow fractionation to characterise the properties and behaviours of nanomedicines£©
£¨Ïà¹ØÁ´½Ó£ºhttps://www.liverpool.ac.uk/chemistry/staff/thomas-mcdonald/£©
8. Dr. Andrea Vezzoli¡ª½²Ê¦ ·Ö×ÓÆ÷¼þ/ÄÉÃײÄÁÏDr. Andrea Vezzoli obtained his PhD in chemistry from the university of Liverpool in 2015, supervised by prof. Simon J. Higgins, working on the synthesis of compounds for molecular electronics studies. he has then remained in Liverpool as a research associate where his work focussed on the fabrication of hybrid metal-molecule-semiconductor devices for spintronics applications, under the supervision of prof. Richard J. Nichols. in 2019, he was promoted to the role of lecturer at the university of Liverpool, and he was then awarded a prestigious royal society university research fellowship to study single-photon molecular emitters.
Andrea¡¯s research interests lie in the synthesis and preparation of compounds suitable for molecular electronic studies and the fabrication of single-molecule and solid-state sandwich devices, where prominent quantum effects (e.g. interference, confinement, etc.) are harnessed and exploited to impart novel behaviour with high efficiency and low power consumption.
£¨projets: quantum-enhanced molecular devices: will study quantum effects in molecular electronic devices, to enhance their performances as sensors, light sources, and thermoelectric converters.£©
£¨more information are available at the address: https://pcwww.liv.ac.uk/~skeja/£©
3. ÈëÑ¡±ê×¼
(1) ºòÑ¡ÈËÔÚÉêÇëÖ®¼ÊÊÇÖлªÈËÃñ¹²ºÍ¹úµÄ¹«ÃñºÍÓÀ¾Ã¾ÓÃñ£»
(2) ºòÑ¡È˵±Ç°Î´ÔÚ¹úÍ⹤×÷»òѧϰ£»
(3) ³É¹¦ÈëÑ¡µÄºòÑ¡ÈËÔÚÍê³ÉѧϰºÍ/»òÑо¿ºó±ØÐë»Øµ½Öйú£»
(4) ºòÑ¡È˱ØÐë³ÖÓÐ UoL µÄÎÞÌõ¼þ¼ȡ֪ͨÊé¡£Òò´Ë£¬ËûÃDZØÐëÂú×ã UoL ¹æ¶¨µÄÏà¹ØÑ§ÊõÈëѧҪÇ󣬰üÀ¨½Ï¸ßµÄÓ¢ÓïÊìÁ·¶È£»
(5) ºòÑ¡ÈËÓ¦ÓÐÖ¾ÔÚ UoL ºÍ CSC È·¶¨µÄij¸öÓÅÏÈѧÊõÁìÓòÖÐѧϰ/Ñо¿¡£µ«ÊÇ£¬ÆäËûѧϰ/Ñо¿ÁìÓòµÄÉêÇëÕߣ¬Òà»áÁÐÈ뿼ÂÇ·¶Î§Ö®ÄÚ¡£´ËÍ⣬֧³ÖµÄѧÊõÁìÓò£¬»¹Êܵ½ UoL Ïà¹ØÑ§Ï°¼Æ»®¿ÉµÃÐÔµÄÔ¼Êø¡£
(6) ºòÑ¡ÈËÓ¦Ìîд¡°CSC ÉêÇë±í¡±ºÍ¡°CSC ÓÃÈ˵¥Î»ÍƼö±í¡±£¨¿É´ÓÒÔÏÂÍøÖ·»ñÈ¡£ºhttps://apply.csc.edu.cn/£©£¬À´Âú×ã CSC ÖÆ¶¨µÄÑ¡°Î±ê×¼¡£
(7) Ó¢Óï³É¼¨ÒªÇó£º
ÑÅ˼£º ×ܳɼ¨6.5£¬ ¸÷µ¥Ïî³É¼¨²»µÍÓÚ5.5¡£
Íи££º ×ܳɼ¨88£¬ ¸÷µ¥Ïî³É¼¨Ð´×÷¡¢ÌýÁ¦²»µÍÓÚ21£»ÔĶÁ²»µÍÓÚ22£»¿ÚÓï²»µÍÓÚ23¡£
4. ÉêÇëºÍÑ¡°ÎÁ÷³Ì
(1) UoL Ó¦ÔÚÿ¸öѧÄ꿪ʼ֮¼Ê£¬¸æÖª CSC ËæºóѧÄêÌṩµÄ½±Ñ§½ðÊýÒÔ¼°½¨ÒéµÄÏîÄ¿Ãû³Æ¡£
(2) ºòÑ¡ÈËÓ¦ÔÚ UoL Ëù¹æ¶¨ÉêÇë½ØÖ¹ÈÕÆÚǰֱ½ÓÉêÇë UoL ¼ȡ¡£
ºòÑ¡ÈËÓ¦ÔÚÉêÇëÖбíÃ÷ÆäÉêÇë CSC/UoL ÁªºÏ½±Ñ§½ð¼Æ»®£¬ ²¢×¢Ã÷²©Ê¿ÆÚ¼äËù¸ÐÐËȤµÄÑо¿ÁìÓò/·½ÏòÒÔ¼°ËùÑ¡µ¼Ê¦£¬ È磺ÄÉÃ×±íÃæ»¯Ñ§/Brust½ÌÊڵȵȡ£
(3) UoL½«¶ÔºòÑ¡È˽øÐÐÆÀ¹À¡£Ã¿Äê 3 Ô 1ÈÕǰ£¬UoL »áÏò CSC ºÍÿһλºÏ×ʸñºòÑ¡ÈËÌṩ¼ȡ֪ͨÊéµÄ¸±±¾¡£¸Ã¼ȡ֪ͨÊ飬ÔÚѧÊõ±íÏÖºÍÓ¢ÓïÄÜÁ¦·½ÃæÓ¦ÊÇÎÞÌõ¼þµÄ¡£¸Ã¼ȡ֪ͨÊ黹Ӧ±íÃ÷£¬ÈôºÏ×ʸñºòÑ¡ÈË»ñµÃ CSC Ö§³Ö£¬UoL ½«Ìṩ½±Ñ§½ðÃâ³ýÈ«¶îѧ·Ñ¡£
(4) ºòÑ¡ÈËÔÚÊÕµ½ UoL ¼ȡ֪ͨÊéºó£¬±ØÐëÌîд×ʽðÔÞÖúÉêÇë±íºÍÓÃÈ˵¥Î»ÍƼö±í£¨±í¸ñ¿Éͨ¹ýÒÔÏÂÍøÖ·ÔÚÏß»ñÈ¡£ºhttps://apply.csc.edu.cn£©£¬ÁíÍâÏò CSC ÉêÇë×ʽðÔÞÖú¡£ÒÑÇ©ÃûµÄ¡°CSC ÉêÇë±í¡±ÒÔ¼°ÌîдºÃµÄ¡°CSC ÓÃÈ˵¥Î»ÍƼö±í¡±µÄ¸´Ó¡Îı¾¡¢UoL ÍêÕûÉêÇëµÄ¸±±¾£¨°üÀ¨ÆäËüÖ§³ÖÐÔÎļþ£©¡¢UoL ÎÞÌõ¼þ¼ȡ֪ͨÊéµÄ¸±±¾£¬±ØÐëÔÚÿÄê 3 Ô 20 ÈÕ֮ǰͨ¹ý CSC ÉêÇë»ú¹¹Ìá½»ÖÁ CSC¡£
(5) CSC ½«ÒÀ¾Ý CSC µÄÒªÇóºÍÓÅÏÈ¿¼ÂÇÊÂÏî¶ÔºòÑ¡È˽øÐÐÆÀ¹À£¬²¢Ïò UoL/CSC Ìṩ½±Ñ§½ð»ñµÃÕßµÄ×îÖÕÃûµ¥£¬¸æÖª³É¹¦ÈëÑ¡µÄºòÑ¡ÈË¡£
5. ×ʽðÔÞÖúģʽ
UoL ½«Îª³É¹¦ÈëÑ¡µÄÉêÇëÕßÌṩ½±Ñ§½ðÃâ³ýÈ«¶îѧ·Ñ¡£CSC ½«¿¼ÂÇΪ³É¹¦ÈëÑ¡µÄÉêÇëÕßÌṩÖйúÕþ¸®¹æ¶¨µÄÉú»î½òÌù¡¢Íù·µÓ¢¹úµÄ¹ú¼Ê»úƱ·ÑÓÃÒÔ¼°Ç©Ö¤ÉêÇë·Ñ¡£
¶ÔÓÚÿλȫÈÕÖÆ²©Ê¿Ñ§Î»¼Æ»®µÄ½±Ñ§½ðÏíÊÜÕߣ¬½«»ñµÃ³¤´ï 48 ¸öÔµĽ±Ñ§½ð±£Ö¤£¬¶ÔÓÚÿλ¹²Í¬Ö¸µ¼Ê½¡°ÈýÃ÷ÖΡ±²©Ê¿Ñ§Î»ÏîÄ¿µÄ½±Ñ§½ðÏíÊÜÕߣ¬½«»ñµÃ 6-24 ¸öÔµÄ×ʽðÔÞÖú¡£
6. ºòÑ¡ÈËÖ¸µ¼
UoL ½«Îª³É¹¦ÈëÑ¡µÄºòÑ¡ÈË·ÖÅäһλÖ÷ҪѧÊõµ¼Ê¦¡£Ñ§Éú½«ÓÐȨʹÓÃ×ÔÈ»¿ÆÑ§Ó빤³ÌѧԺµÄÏà¹Ø¿ÆÑÐÅäÌ×É豸¡£
7. ÁªÏµ·½Ê½
Ç뽫ÌîºÃµÄ±¨ÃûÉêÇë±íÓëÏà¹ØÒªÇóÎļþ·¢ËÍÖÁ£º
Dr. Xiaofeng Wu, Email: cscfse@liverpool.ac.uk,
xfwu@liverpool.ac.uk
8. ±³¾°½éÉÜ
ÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧ»¯Ñ§Ïµ
ÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧ»¯Ñ§ÏµÊǼ¯Óлú»¯Ñ§¡¢ÎÞ»ú»¯Ñ§¡¢²ÄÁÏ»¯Ñ§¡¢ÉúÎﻯѧ¡¢·ÖÎö»¯Ñ§¡¢±íÃæ»¯Ñ§ÒÔ¼°¾ùÏà¶àÏà´ß»¯»¯Ñ§µÈÓÚÒ»ÌåµÄ´óϵ¡£»¯Ñ§¼ÒÂÞ²®ÌØ¡¤Â³±öÑ·¾ôÊ¿Ôڴ˹¤×÷ÆÚ¼ä»ñµÃÁË1947ÄêµÄŵ±´¶û»¯Ñ§½±¡£ÀûÎïÆÖ»¯Ñ§ÏµÒ»Ö±ÔÚ·¢Õ¹×³´ó¡£ÔÚ×îеĽøÕ¹ÖУ¬2014Äê12ÔÂ18ÈÕ£¬Ó¢¹úΨһÓɹٷ½Ã¿7Äê·¢²¼Ò»´ÎµÄREFÓ¢¹ú´óѧ¿ÆÑÐʵÁ¦£¨ÔRAE£©ÆÀ±ÈÖУ¬ÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧ»¯Ñ§ÏµÕûÌåÅÅÃûλÁÐȫӢ¹úµÚ2Ãû£¨½ö´ÎÓÚ½£ÇÅ£©£¬»¯Ñ§ÏµµÄ²ÄÁÏ»¯Ñ§ÒÔ¼°·¢±í¸ßÖÊÁ¿ÂÛÎÄÊýÁ¿¸üÊÇÅÅÃûµÚ1¡£Õâ³ä·ÖÌåÏÖºÍ˵Ã÷ÁËÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧ»¯Ñ§ÏµµÄ¿ÆÑÐʵÁ¦ÒÔ¼°¾ºÕùÁ¦£¬ÌرðÊDzÄÁÏѧ¿ÆµÄ¿ÆÑоºÕùÁ¦ºÍ³É¹û¸üÊÇÈÃÈ˾ªÌ¾£¡
[ Last edited by frank1139 on 2020-11-13 at 23:32 ]
[ À´×Ô°æ¿éȺ Å·ÖÞ¹«ÅÉ ]
·µ»ØÐ¡Ä¾³æ²é¿´¸ü¶à
¾©¹«Íø°²±¸ 11010802022153ºÅ
9
¡£
²»´í
£¬
×£¸£
£¡