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Tianma Micro-electronics starts production at 6G AMOLED factory

Joan Wei, Taipei; Adam Hwang, DIGITIMES [Tuesday 25 April 2017]

China-based Tianma Micro-electronics has begun production of rigid and flexible AMOLED panels based on LTPS (low-temperature poly-Si) backplanes at a new 6G AMOLED line in Wuhan, central China, according to industry sources.

Tianma started construction of the plant in January 2016 and it is the first 6G AMOLED one in China as well as the world's first 6G fab producing both rigid and flexible AMOLED panels, the sources said.

Tianma set up a 4.5G AMOLED trial production line for R&D of AMOLED technology and manufacturing process in 2010 and a 5.5G AMOLED factory in 2013, with the factory beginning shipments to vendors of smart terminal devices in 2016.

@Bussard Ramjet BOE will start volume production at its Chengdu 6G AMOLED facility in Q4 2017, followed by production in 2019 at its 2nd 6G AMOLED fab in Mianyang。 India?:D:D
 
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Tianma Micro-electronics starts production at 6G AMOLED factory

Joan Wei, Taipei; Adam Hwang, DIGITIMES [Tuesday 25 April 2017]

China-based Tianma Micro-electronics has begun production of rigid and flexible AMOLED panels based on LTPS (low-temperature poly-Si) backplanes at a new 6G AMOLED line in Wuhan, central China, according to industry sources.

Tianma started construction of the plant in January 2016 and it is the first 6G AMOLED one in China as well as the world's first 6G fab producing both rigid and flexible AMOLED panels, the sources said.

Tianma set up a 4.5G AMOLED trial production line for R&D of AMOLED technology and manufacturing process in 2010 and a 5.5G AMOLED factory in 2013, with the factory beginning shipments to vendors of smart terminal devices in 2016.

@Bussard Ramjet BOE will start volume production at its Chengdu 6G AMOLED facility in Q4 2017, followed by production in 2019 at its 2nd 6G AMOLED fab in Mianyang。 India?:D:D


China Starts Production of 6th-generatin OLEDs

China has started production of the 6th-generation flexible OLED.
SEOUL,KOREA
27 April 2017 - 6:30pm
Cho Jin-young
China has started the chase of South Korea to dominate the organic light-emitting diode (OLED) market. China’s Tianma has started production of the 6th-generation flexible OLED, which is used in smartphones, for the second time in the world after Samsung Display.

According to foreign media including Taiwan’s DigiTimes on April 26, Tianma Micro-electronics Co., a China-based display producer, recently began production of the 6th-generation flexible OLED panel for smartphone at the Wuhan plant. The company planned to mass produce the panel from the second half of this year at first but it moved up the operation date three months ahead. Using the backplane process using low-temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS), Tianma will produce 30,000 OLED panels a month. It is the first Chinese company producing the 6th-generation flexible OLED panel.




As Tianma mass produces the 6th-generation flexible OLED early, not only Samsung Display, the largest supplier in the market, but also LG Display feel pressured. This is because more and more smartphone makers are using OLED panels for their displays and the Chinese industry is now targeting the market earlier than expected. LG Display plans to start mass production of the 6th-generation flexible OLED panel at the E5 plant in Gumi from June this year with a monthly production of 15,000 units. However, Tianma is one step ahead in terms of production date and production capacity.

In particular, Tianma plans to produce flat and flexible panels at the 6th-generation facility at the same time and supply them to Chinese smartphone manufacturers, such as Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo, which are LG Display’s customers. As Apple, which pursues “multi-vendor” strategy, is now seeking for a smaller OLED supplier, Tianma can emerge as a potential competitor of LG Display, which will supply OLED panels to the iPhone 8 from next year.

It is also the pressure for Samsung Display which monopolizes the small and mid-size OLED market. Samsung Display currently produces 55,000 units of the 4.5th-generation OLED panel a month at the A1 plant in Cheonan, 180,000 units of the 5.5th-generation panel a month at the A2 plant in Asan and 27,000 units of the 6th-generation panel a month at the A3 plant in Asan. The company outplays Tianma in terms of quantities but it is not happy to have a new competitor in the market. China’s BOE will start mass production of the 6th-generation OLED with a monthly production of 50,000 units from later this year in Chengdu, while China Star Optoelectronics Technology (CSOT) will produce 45,000 units a month in Wuhan from the first half of 2020.

The question is how much Chinese companies can raise the quality of small and mid-size OLED panels. An official from the electronics industry, who requested anonymity, said, “Tianma has developed the small and mid-size OLED for years but its quality is not so good. Even LG Display, which is a strong player in the large OLED market, is deliberate in the quality of small and mid-size panels when mass producing. When every company joins into the small and mid-size OLED market, only high quality products will be survived in the market.”

@cirr

Anybody with enough capital outlay can produce OLED. You can license the tech, buy the equipment, poach some talent, and then produce OLEDs technically.

However, I don't see Tianma being a Samsung or even LG display anytime soon. Samsung is an active company that owns all the tech, is active in research, and is the highest standard in OLED right now.

http://www.businesskorea.co.kr/engl...g-china-starts-production-6th-generatin-oleds
 
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Chinese scientists use drop of blood to detect cancer
By Xie Zhenqi
2017-05-01 15:08 GMT+8

Scientists around the world are striving for effective detection of cancer in the early stages, and a Chinese scientist may have found a quick way of knowing whether malignant tumors exist in a patient's body, with just one drop of blood.

Luo Yongzhang and his team in Tsinghua University's School of Life Sciences in Beijing have successfully invented a reagent test kit of Hsp90α for clinical use, which can diagnose multiple kinds of cancer by analyzing a drop of human blood.

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Luo and his team members in a lab. / CCTV Photo

Malignant tumors in early phases can be cured but once they have spread all over the patient's body there is no way to save the person's life.

However, it's extremely difficult to be aware of cancer in its early stages, as patients don't show obvious symptoms and thus it can only be found in its later stages, which is already too late, so to detect cancer early remains a global challenge for scientists.

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Scientists around the globe are working to find ways to detect cancer in its early stage. / VCG Photo

Back in 1989, scientists have found a kind of heat shock proteins (HSP), named Hsp90α, which existed in human bodies and can be used as a cancer biomarker detection kit.

Scientists around the globe have been working on it since then, and more than 10,000 journals have been published on accredited magazines, yet no one has actually turned their research results into medical products.

However, Luo and his team seemed to have cracked the code, after working on the problem since 2009. The team has produced an artificial Hsp90α protein that gains structural stability by regrouping proteins. This means they are able to "create" the protein, in any quantity, and at any time ‍they wish to.

The kit has since been used in clinical trials involving 2,347 patients at eight hospitals in China. It was the first clinical trial in the world to test if the protein could be a useful tumor biomarker for lung cancer, and it succeeded.

Now, the kit has been certified to enter the Chinese and European markets, 24 years after Hsp90α was discovered.

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The final product that has been approved by government and ready to enter markets in China and Europe. / CCTV Photo

Cancer is a group of diseases involving abnormal cell growth with the potential to invade or spread to other parts of the body.

In 2015, about 90.5 million people had cancer in the world, with roughly 14.1 million new cases occurring each year. Approximately 8.8 million human deaths, or 15.7 percent of all deaths in the world, are caused by cancer.

In China alone, 4.29 million people were detected as having cancer in 2015, and 2.8 million of them died in that year.
 
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Chinese scientists use drop of blood to detect cancer
CGTN | Updated: 2017-05-02

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A group of Chinese scientists have invented a reagent test kit which can diagnose multiple kinds of cancer by analyzing a drop of human blood. [Photo/CGTN]


Scientists around the world are striving for effective detection of cancer in the early stages, and a Chinese scientist may have found a quick way of knowing whether malignant tumors exist in a patient's body, with just one drop of blood.

Luo Yongzhang and his team in Tsinghua University's School of Life Sciences in Beijing have successfully invented a reagent test kit of Hsp90α for clinical use, which can diagnose multiple kinds of cancer by analyzing a drop of human blood.

Malignant tumors in early phases can be cured but once they have spread all over the patient's body there is no way to save the person's life.

However, it's extremely difficult to be aware of cancer in its early stages, as patients don't show obvious symptoms and thus it can only be found in its later stages, which is already too late, so to detect cancer early remains a global challenge for scientists.

Back in 1989, scientists have found a kind of heat shock proteins (HSP), named Hsp90α, which existed in human bodies and can be used as a cancer biomarker detection kit.

Scientists around the globe have been working on it since then, and more than 10,000 journals have been published on accredited magazines, yet no one has actually turned their research results into medical products.

However, Luo and his team seemed to have cracked the code, after working on the problem since 2009. The team has produced an artificial Hsp90α protein that gains structural stability by regrouping proteins. This means they are able to "create" the protein, in any quantity, and at any time they wish to.

The kit has since been used in clinical trials involving 2,347 patients at eight hospitals in China. It was the first clinical trial in the world to test if the protein could be a useful tumor biomarker for lung cancer, and it succeeded.

Now, the kit has been certified to enter the Chinese and European markets, 24 years after Hsp90α was discovered.

Cancer is a group of diseases involving abnormal cell growth with the potential to invade or spread to other parts of the body.

In 2015, about 90.5 million people had cancer in the world, with roughly 14.1 million new cases occurring each year. Approximately 8.8 million human deaths, or 15.7 percent of all deaths in the world, are caused by cancer.

In China alone, 4.29 million people were detected as having cancer in 2015, and 2.8 million of them died in that year.
 
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China Focus: Factory farms the future for Chinese scientists
Source: Xinhua| 2017-04-30 09:06:29|Editor: Yamei

XIAMEN, Fujian Province, April 30 (Xinhua) -- In a factory in eastern China, farming is becoming like scientific endeavor, with leafy vegetables embedded neatly on stacked layers, and workers in laboratory suits tending the plants in cleanrooms.

The factory, with an area of 10,000 square meters, is in Quanzhou, Fujian Province. Built in June 2016, the land is designed to be a "plant factory," where all environmental factors, including light, humidity, temperature and gases, can be controlled to produce quality vegetables.

The method is pursued by Sananbio, a joint venture between the Institute of Botany under the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IBCAS) and Sanan Group, a Chinese optoelectronics giant. The company is attempting to produce more crops in less space while minimizing environmental damage.

Sananbio said it would invest 7 billion yuan (about 1.02 billion U.S. dollars) to bring the new breed of agriculture to reality.

NEW FARMING

Plant factories, also known as a vertical farms, are part of a new global industry.

China now has about 80 plant factories, and Sananbio has touted its Quanzhou facility as the world's largest plant factory.

In the factory, leafy greens grow in six stacked layers with two lines of blue and red LED lights hung above each layer. The plants are grown using hydroponics, a method that uses mineral nutrient solutions in a water solvent instead of soil.

"Unlike traditional farming, we can control the duration of lighting and the component of mineral solutions to bring a higher yield," said Pei Kequan, a researcher with IBCAS and director of R&D in Sanabio. "The new method yields ten-times more crops per square meter than traditional farming."

From seedling to harvesting, vegetables in the farm usually take 35 days, about 10 days shorter than greenhouse plants.

To achieve a higher yield, scientists have developed an algorithm which automates the color and duration of light best for plant growth, as well as different mineral solutions suitable for different growth stages.

The plant factory produces 1.5 tonnes of vegetables every day, most of which are sold to supermarkets and restaurants in Quanzhou and nearby cities.

The world's population will bloat to 9.7 billion by 2050, when 70 percent of people will reside in urban areas, according to the World Health Organization.

Pei said he believes the plant factory can be part of a solution for potential future food crises.

In the factory, he has even brought vertical farming into a deserted shipping container.

"Even if we had to move underground someday, the plant factory could help ensure a steady supply of vegetables," he said.

HEALTHIER FUTURE

Before entering the factory, Sananbio staff have to go through strict cleanroom procedures: putting on face masks, gloves, boots, and overalls, taking air showers, and putting personal belongings through an ultraviolet sterilizer.

The company aims to prevent any external hazards that could threaten the plants, which receive no fertilizers or pesticides.

By adjusting the mineral solution, scientists are able to produce vegetables rich or low in certain nutrients.

The factory has already been churning out low-potassium lettuces, which are good for people with kidney problems.

Adding to the 20 types of leafy greens already grown in the factory, the scientists are experimenting on growing herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine and other healthcare products.

Zheng Yanhai, a researcher at Sananbio, studies anoectohilus formosanus, a rare herb in eastern China with many health benefits.

"In the plant factory, we can produce the plants with almost the same nutrients as wild anoectohilus," Zheng said. "We tested different light, humidity, temperature, gases and mineral solutions to form a perfect recipe for the plant."

The factory will start with rare herbs first and then focus on other health care products, Zheng said.

GROWING PAINS

Currently, most of the products in the plant factory are short-stemmed leafy greens.

"Work is in progress to bring more varieties to the factory," said Li Dongfang, an IBCAS researcher and Sananbio employee.

Some are concerned about the energy consumed with LED lights and air-conditioning.

"Currently, it takes about 10 kwh of electricity to produce one kilogram of vegetables," said Pei, who added that the number is expected to drop in three to five years, with higher LED luminous efficiency.

In a Yonghui superstore in neighboring Xiamen city, the vegetables from the plant factory have a specially designated area, and are sold at about a 30 percent premium, slightly higher than organic and locally produced food.

"Lettuce from the plant factory is a bit expensive, at least for now, there are many other healthy options," said Wang Yuefeng, a consumer browsing through the products, which are next to the counter for locally produced food.

Sananbio said it plans to expand the factory further to drive down the cost in the next six months. "The price will not be a problem in the future, with people's improving living standards," Li said.


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Public Release: 2-May-2017
Scientists develop efficient multifunctional catalyst for CO2 hydrogenation to gasoline
Chinese Academy of Sciences Headquarters

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This is a CO2 hydrogenation to gasoline-range hydrocarbons over Na-Fe3O4/Zeolite multifunctional catalyst.
Credit : Image by WEI Jian


Converting CO2 from a detrimental greenhouse gas into value-added liquid fuels not only contributes to mitigating CO2 emissions, but also reduces dependence on petrochemicals. However, since CO2 is a fully oxidized, thermodynamically stable and chemically inert molecule, the activation of CO2 and its hydrogenation to hydrocarbons or other alcohols are challenging tasks. Most research to date, not surprisingly, is focusing on selective hydrogenation of CO2 to short-chain products, while few studies on long-chain hydrocarbons, such as gasoline-range (C5-C11) hydrocarbons. The key to this process is to search for a high efficient catalyst.

The research team led by Dr. SUN Jian and Prof. GE Qingjie in Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, has succeeded in preparing a high efficient, stable, and multifunctional Na-Fe3O4/HZSM-5 catalyst for the direct production of gasoline from CO2 hydrogenation. This catalyst exhibited 78% selectivity to C5-C11 as well as low CH4 and CO selectivity under industrial relevant conditions. And gasoline fractions are mainly isoparaffins and aromatics thus favoring the octane number. Moreover, the multifunctional catalyst exhibited a remarkable stability for 1,000 h on stream, which definitely has the potential to be a promising industrial catalyst for CO2 utilization to liquid fuels.

In-depth characterizations indicate that this catalyst enables RWGS over Fe3O4 sites, olefin synthesis over Fe5C2 sites and oligomerization/aromatization/isomerization over zeolite acid sites. The concerted action of the active sites calls for precise control of their structures and proximity. This study paves a new path for the synthesis of liquid fuels by utilizing CO2 and H2. Furthermore, it provides an important approach for dealing with the intermittency of renewable sources (sun, wind and so on) by storing energy in liquid fuels.

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This work was recently published on Nature Communications (DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15174). This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and the Hundred-Talent Program of DICP, Chinese Academy of Sciences.


Scientists develop efficient multifunctional catalyst for CO2 hydrogenation to gasoline | EurekAlert! Science News

Jian Wei, Qingjie Ge, Ruwei Yao, Zhiyong Wen, Chuanyan Fang, Lisheng Guo, Hengyong Xu & Jian Sun (2017) “Directly converting CO2 into a gasoline fuel” Nature Communications (2017). DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15174
 
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Chinese scientists make quantum leap in computing
(Xinhua) 10:54, May 03, 2017

CHINESE scientists have built world's first quantum computing machine that goes beyond the early classical -- or conventional -- computers, paving the way to the ultimate realization of quantum computing beating classical computers.

Scientists announced their achievement at a press conference in the Shanghai Institute for Advanced Studies of University of Science and Technology of China on Wednesday.

Many scientists believe quantum computing could in some ways dwarf the processing power of today's supercomputers. The manipulation of multi-particle entanglement is the core of quantum computing technology and has been the focus of international competition in quantum computing research.

Recently, Chinese leading quantum physicist Pan Jianwei, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and his colleagues -- Lu Chaoyang and Zhu Xiaobo, of the University of Science and Technology of China, and Wang Haohua, of Zhejiang University -- set two international records in quantum control of the maximal numbers of entangled photonic quantum bits and entangled superconducting quantum bits.

Pan said quantum computers could, in principle, solve certain problems faster than classical computers. Despite substantial progress in the past two decades, building quantum machines that can actually outperform classical computers in some specific tasks -- an important milestone termed "quantum supremacy" -- remains challenging.

In the quest for quantum supremacy, Boson sampling, an intermediate (that is, non-universal) quantum computer model has received considerable attention, as it requires fewer physical resources than building universal optical quantum computers, Pan said.

Last year, Pan and Lu Chaoyang developed the world's best single photon source based on semiconductor quantum dots. Now, they are using the high-performance single photon source and electronically programmable photonic circuit to build a multi-photon quantum computing prototype to run the Boson sampling task.

The test results show the sampling rate of this prototype is at least 24,000 times faster than international counterparts, according to Pan's team.

At the same time, the prototype quantum computing machine is 10 to 100 times faster than the first electronic computer, ENIAC, and the first transistor computer, TRADIC, in running the classical algorithm, Pan said.

It is the first quantum computing machine based on single photons that goes beyond the early classical computer, and ultimately paves the way to a quantum computer that can beat classical computers. This achievement was published online in the latest issue of Nature Photonics this week.

#####
Hui Wang, Yu He, Yu-Huai Li, Zu-En Su, Bo Li, He-Liang Huang, Xing Ding, Ming-Cheng Chen, Chang Liu, Jian Qin, Jin-Peng Li, Yu-Ming He, Christian Schneider, Martin Kamp, Cheng-Zhi Peng, Sven Hoefling, Chao-Yang Lu, Jian-Wei Pan. High-efficiency multiphoton boson sampling. Nature Photonics (2017). DOI:10.1038/nphoton.2017.63
 
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Mini nuclear reactor now ready to be built
By ZHENG XIN | China Daily | Updated: 2017-05-03 07:22

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Visitors watch the models of ACP 100 nuclear reactor at an expo in Beijing, April 29, 2017. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Smaller, safer source of energy set for construction on pilot basis in Hainan

The first pilot project to use China National Nuclear Corporation's cutting-edge third-generation ACP100 nuclear reactor has completed its preliminary design stage and is qualified for construction in Hainan province.

The company said that the ACP100, China's first small reactor developed by CNNC for practical use, which the company calls the Linglong One, is expected to be built at the end of this year in the Changjiang Li autonomous county of Hainan.

All research, development and design procedures have been completed, and work will proceed on the feasibility study, soil and water conservation research, environmental impact assessment, construction land geological disaster risk assessment and seismic safety assessment following the issuing of the relevant permits by the end of next month.

Qian Tianlin, general manager of China Nuclear New Energy Investment, said earlier that small-scale nuclear reactor technology has reached a stage at which it can be used on a pilot basis.

It can be used to generate heat for a residential district replacing coal-fired boilers, he said.

According to Qian, small modular reactors are defined by the International Atomic Energy Agency as advanced reactors producing up to 300 megawatts of power that can largely be built in factories and shipped to utilities and end users.

They were widely promoted in the 1990s, thanks to their enhanced level of security and flexible use, including providing heat and sea desalination, he said.

China is highly supportive of small modular reactors, and the company's Linglong One is the first reactor of its kind in the world to have passed the safety review by the IAEA, a remarkable breakthrough in global small multipurpose modular reactor development.

Qian said he expects mass production of the small modular reactors after the pilot project in Hainan is up and running, and for the technology to be exported globally.

Many countries, including Pakistan, Iran, the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Mongolia, Brazil, Egypt and Canada, have shown a keen interest in potential use of the technology, it said.

Wan Gang, head of the China Institute of Atomic Energy, said small modular reactors are safe amid growing public concern over nuclear safety following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan.

According to CNNC, compared with million-kilowatt reactor nuclear power plants, the Linglong One features low and controllable core temperatures and is economically superior to other power supply modes and is more environmentally friendly.
 
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China has a $1.45B plan to build up its biotech hubs — and officials are moving fast

john_carroll_150.jpg

by john carroll

May 3, 2017 09:02 AM EDT

Updated: 07:02 PM

When the Chinese government sets its sights on a 5-year business development plan, you can always be sure that officials are willing to invest heavily in infrastructure to make things happen.

And they don’t waste time.

Earlier this week, Zhang Zhaofeng, a director of social development in China’s Ministry of Science and Technology (appropriately abbreviated to MOST) was quoted extensively in China’s media with his outline of a plan to build 10 to 20 new biotech research centers in the country — by 2020.

The People’s Daily put the price tag on that as 10 billion RMB ($1.45 billion). And drug research will be mixed with ag biotech and environmental sciences.

There are some problems that the country wants to address in biotech, including a shortage of original R&D work, too few disruptive plays (same thing) and a problem with execution. But the country says it’s second in the world on patents and published papers, so with some assistance from the government, Zhang believes the country is on the right path.

There’s no question that the amount of biotech news out of Shanghai and other biotech hubs in China is swelling. Just a couple of months ago BeiGene announced plans to build a $330 million facility in China, with government economic development officials chipping in the lion’s share of the money.

About the same time Richard Wang, the former site chief for GSK in Shanghai, took the CEO’s job at Fosun Kite, a joint venture established by Kite Pharma and Shanghai Fosun to advance Kite’s CAR-T $KITE to the market. And Shanghai-based Chi-Med scored positive overall survival and progression-free survival in a Phase III study of fruquintinib, its lead oncology drug, in colon cancer, putting it on track with Eli Lilly to seek marketing approval in China.

https://endpts.com/china-has-a-1-45...s-biotech-hubs-and-officials-are-moving-fast/
 
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Neutron research can facilitate stress tests of vehicles, enhancing safety
Source:Global Times Published: 2017/5/3 17:23:39

The construction of the China Spallation Neutron Source (CSNS), or "super microscope," has been finished in Dongguan, South China's Guangdong Province and the equipment is now being installed and tested, China's top science academy said.

The CSNS is expected to produce its first neutron beam - a stream of subatomic particles - in autumn and will be open to users in March 2018, said Chen Hesheng, director of the CSNS project and an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), according to a statement posted on the WeChat account of CAS on Tuesday.

After it is put into use, China will be the fourth country to have obtained such a neutron source after the US, Japan and the UK, according to CAS.

In simple terms, the CSNS is a tool to observe objects at the most detailed level, a "super microscope" that manipulates neutrons to help scientists study the microstructures of substances such as "DNA, crystalline materials and polymerized substances," CAS said.

The project will provide an advanced research platform for scientific and industrial fields, including material science, life science, physics, chemistry, environmental engineering as well as new energy, the report said.

In terms of specific application, the spallation neutron source could be used to test the remaining stress on tracks of high-speed rails and wings of planes to make the transportation safer and more comfortable. The stress level can determine the service life and safety of transport vehicles, but it could not be seen or touched, so its study could help avoid accidents, according to CAS.

While there are nuclear reactors in China that provide neutrons for researchers - such as the China Advanced Research Reactor in Beijing - the country has previously lacked this kind of "spallation" neutron source, according to the official website of CAS. Among the advantages that spallation offers over nuclear neutron generation is that it is cheaper and does not require dangerous nuclear material.

The CSNS was one of the two large-scale scientific facilities included in China's 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15) and is the first of its kind in a developing country, with a budget of 2.2 billion yuan ($319 million), according to a statement of CAS in October 2014.

The CSNS project is based in Dalang township, about 85 kilometers from Guangzhou and about 125 kilometers from Hong Kong. The CSNS will be the first large scientific facility in South China and is expected to boost its scientific and high-tech development.

According to a CAS report in October 2016, one challenge facing China in this field is that its neutron community is relatively small. This is being addressed via training schemes to boost the numbers of scientists and students who will be able to use neutrons for their research. In 2013, the Chinese Physical Society also set up a neutron scattering group to help in this endeavor.
 
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01:01 PM, May 04, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:38 PM, May 04, 2017
Chinese scientists create first photon quantum computer
China Daily, China


Chinese scientists have built the world's first quantum computing machine that goes far beyond the early classical -- or conventional -- computers, paving the way to the ultimate realization of quantum computing.

Scientists announced their achievement at a press conference in the Shanghai Institute for Advanced Studies of University of Science and Technology of China on Wednesday.

Scientists believe quantum computing could in some ways dwarf the processing power of today's supercomputers. One analogy to explain the concept of quantum computing is that it is like being able to read all the books in a library at the same time, whereas conventional computing is like having to read them one after another.

Pan Jianwei, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a leading quantum physicist, said quantum computing exploits the fundamental quantum superposition principle to enable ultra-fast parallel calculation and simulation capabilities.

In normal silicon computer chips, data is rendered in one of two states: 0 or 1. However, in quantum computers, data could exist in both states simultaneously, holding exponentially more information.

The computing power of a quantum computer grows exponentially with the number of quantum bits that can be manipulated. This could effectively solve large-scale computation problems that are beyond the ability of current classical computers, Pan said.

For example, a quantum computer with 50 quantum bits would be more powerful in solving quantum sampling problems than today's fastest supercomputer, Sunway TaihuLight, installed in the National Supercomputing Center of China.

Due to the enormous potential of quantum computing, Europe and the United States are actively collaborating in their research. High-tech companies, such as Google, Microsoft and IBM, also have massive interests in quantum computing research.

The research team led by Pan is exploring three technical routes: systems based on single photons, ultra-cold atoms and superconducting circuits.

Recently, Pan Jianwei and his colleagues -- Lu Chaoyang and Zhu Xiaobo, of the University of Science and Technology of China, and Wang Haohua, of Zhejiang University -- set two international records in quantum control of the maximal numbers of entangled photonic quantum bits and entangled superconducting quantum bits.

Pan explained that manipulation of multi-particle entanglement is the core of quantum computing technology and has been the focus of international competition in quantum computing research.

In the photonic system, his team has achieved the first 5, 6, 8 and 10 entangled photons in the world and is at the forefront of global developments.

Pan said quantum computers could, in principle, solve certain problems faster than classical computers. Despite substantial progress in the past two decades, building quantum machines that can actually outperform classical computers in some specific tasks -- an important milestone termed "quantum supremacy" -- remains challenging.

In the quest for quantum supremacy, Boson sampling, an intermediate (that is, non-universal) quantum computer model, has received considerable attention, as it requires fewer physical resources than building universal optical quantum computers, Pan said.

Last year, Pan and Lu Chaoyang developed the world's best single photon source based on semiconductor quantum dots. Now, they are using the high-performance single photon source and electronically programmable photonic circuit to build a multi-photon quantum computing prototype to run the Boson sampling task.

The test results show the sampling rate of this prototype is at least 24,000 times faster than international counterparts, according to Pan's team.

At the same time, the prototype quantum computing machine is 10 to 100 times faster than the first electronic computer, ENIAC, and the first transistor computer, TRADIC, in running the classical algorithm, Pan said.

It is the first quantum computing machine based on single photons that goes beyond the early classical computer, and ultimately paves the way to a quantum computer that can beat classical computers. This achievement was published online in the latest issue of Nature Photonics this week.

In the superconducting quantum circuit system, a research team from Google, NASA and the University of California at Santa Barbara announced a high-precision manipulation of 9 superconducting quantum bits in 2015.

Now the Chinese team led by Pan, Zhu Xiaobo and Wang Haohua have broken that record. They independently developed a superconducting quantum circuit containing 10 superconducting quantum bits and successfully entangled the 10 quantum bits through a global quantum operation.

Chinese scientists aim to realize manipulation of 20 entangled photons by the end of this year, and will try to design and manipulate 20 superconducting quantum bits. They also plan to launch a quantum cloud computing platform by the end of this year.

Copyright: China Daily/ Asia News Network
http://www.thedailystar.net/bytes/t...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all
 
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China’s first nuclear submarine was a joke. Launched in the 1970s and now an exhibit in a museum, it was loud, couldn’t fire missiles while submerged, and exposed its crew to high levels of radiation.

But it got the ball rolling. The nation’s modern subs make the US nervous with their technical advances, and China is now constructing the world’s largest submarine factory.

It isn’t just the subs. While China still lags the US badly in some areas, and its exported weapons have had reliability issues, signs abound that its military hardware is either catching up or becoming good enough to pose a real challenge in a potential conflict. A military modernization program pushed by Chinese president Xi Jinping is spurring things along.

“A ship that can fly”
Last week the world’s largest amphibious aircraft made its first taxiing test. The AG600, made by the state-owned Aviation Industry Corporation of China, is about the size of the Boeing 737 and is designed for marine takeoff and landing (or it can use conventional airstrips). One of its designers describes it as a “ship that can fly.”

The company says the plane will be used for marine rescue missions and fighting forest fires—it can scoop up 12 metric tons (13.2 tons) of water in 20 minutes. But given Beijing’s maritime ambitions in the South China Sea and elsewhere, the plane, with room for 50 passengers and a range of 4,500 km (2,800 miles), can also servethe People’s Liberation Army nicely, including via maritime patrols and troop and supplies transport—in other words, power projection. The hefty plane’s maiden flight over land is scheduled for this month, and over water later this year.

A made-in-China aircraft carrier
For years China has had just one operational aircraft carrier—hardly befitting an emerging maritime power. To make matters worse the Liaoning CV-16 was refitted from a laughably outdated Soviet-era Ukrainian ship. Last week China unveiled its first domestically built carrier at the northeast port of Dalian (see top image). The as-yet-unnamed vessel, to be fully operational in a few years, is technologically well behind its US counterparts. For instance it lacks a catapult to boost planes off the runway (making for inefficient operations) and uses conventional rather than nuclear power. But like China’s early subs, it’s a stepping stone to greater things. A third carrier is already under construction—one that more closely resembles a US carrier.

Stealthy fighter jets
China is making real progress in fighter jets, as evidenced by the J-20 that went into service in March. The supersonic aircraft packs stealth technology, advanced radar and sensor capabilities, and a nifty 360-degree helmet display that lets the pilot see “through” the aircraft itself. It’s also bigger than the US’s F-22 Raptor—to which it’s often compared—allowing it to hold more fuel and travel farther. While it might be stealthy from the front, however, it probably isn’t from the side. But China is testing another advanced fighter jet (the J-31) that does better in the stealth department and will possibly operate from aircraft carriers.

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Somewhat stealthy. (EPA/YhC)
A new spy ship
China launched in January a new electronic spy ship. The CNS Kaiyangxing, or Mizar, is capable of conducting all-weather, round-the-clock reconnaissance on multiple targets. During its unveiling, China shared an unusual amount of detail about the ship and the rest of its small intelligence fleet, now at about a half dozen vessels (the US has at least 15). That openness was probably for the deterrence factor: Beijing wants other navies know to that, should they operate in disputed waters, its forces will be able to detect them. Vessels like this one lack firepower but can be more dangerous than warships.

A (really) long-range air-to-air missile
Being able to hit enemy aircraft in a combat zone is expected. From well outside that zone? That’s a useful bonus. In January the state-run China Daily reported on a new, long-range air-to-air missile that could, a Chinese military researcher speculated, hit high-value targets like early-warning aircraft from up to 400 km (249 miles) away. That would be far better than China’s current range of less than 100 km for such missiles. It would also outdo US capabilities in that department—one where China might actually be in the lead.
 
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Peaceful rise and development.

This is all about China's continuing qualitative growth in many fields.

They should have already read the article by Zheng Bijin, published in Foreign Affairs in 2005. Peaceful Rise and Development is a fairly well-established IR theory now.



 
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