HOME / News & Upcoming Events

News & Upcoming Events

3D Quantum Hall effect confirmed by experiment

2019-05-09

Recently, Associate Professor Zhang Liyuan from the Department of Physics at Southern University of Science and Technology worked with Professor Qiao Zhenhua of the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), and Associate Professor Shengyuan Yang of Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD).

3D Quantum Hall effect confirmed by experiment

2019-05-09

“Three-dimensional quantum Hall effect and metal-insulator transition in ZrTe5”,published on Nature on May, 2019, validates the prediction on Quantum Hall effect in 3D election gas proposed by Bertrand Halperin, a Harvard theoretical physicist in 1987. The research was led by prof. Liyuan ZHANG, department of physics.

Majorana bound state research moves ahead in leaps and bounds

2019-04-26

The Majorana zero mode in the semiconductor-superconductor nanowire is one of the promising candidates for topological quantum computing.

SUSTech scientists collaborate on new pancreatic cancer treatment targets

2019-04-18

Pancreatic cancer is thought to be the “king of cancers,” in that it has no obvious symptoms in its earliest stages, and is often only diagnosed after the tumor has metastasized and spread throughout the entire body.

SUSTech scientists collaborate on new pancreatic cancer treatment targets

2019-04-18

Associate Professor Tian Ruijun’s research group from the Department of Chemistry at Southern University of Science and Technology (SUSTech) joined a global effort over a long period of time to find new ways to target pancreatic cancer cells. Working with the Salk Institute for Biological Sciences, the collective group found that an interaction between pancreatic stellate cells (PSC) and pancreatic cancer cells (PCCs) could be taken advantage of through a key protein. This research was published today in Nature, under the title, “Targeting LIF-mediated paracrine interaction for pancreatic cancer therapy and monitoring.”

SUSTech researchers develop a transient yet highly stretchable hydrogel

2019-04-17

Shear forces can convert a colloid of tiny solid particles (a sol) into a gel. This process is similar to the biological activities that biological systems are capable of self-healing and could lead to dramatic changes in the smart materials sector.