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Qianjin Chen Professor College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at Donghua University
Dr. Chen Qianjin was awarded National Ten Thousand Talent Program for Young Top-Notch Talent. He earned bachelor's degree from the College of Polymer Science and Engineering at Sichuan University and Ph.D. from the Department of Chemistry at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, under the supervision of Chinese Academician Prof. Wu Chi. Subsequently, he conducted postdoctoral research in electrochemistry at the University of Utah (with Professor Henry White) and The University of Texas at Austin (with Academician Allen Bard). In December 2017, he established his independent research group at Donghua University, where he currently serves as a Professor and PhD Supervisor. To date, he has published over 50 SCI papers as the first or corresponding author in prestigious journals such as PNAS, Journal of the American Chemical Society, Angewandte Chemie International Edition, ACS Nano, and Analytical Chemistry. He has led several research projects, including the National Natural Science Foundation of China (General and Youth Programs), the Shanghai Natural Science Foundation (General and Free Exploration Programs), and specialized projects from the Shanghai Municipal Education Commission. In 2022, he received the Second Prize of the Natural Science Award from the Chinese Society of Particuology (ranked first), and in 2024, he was honored with the Youth Particuology Award from the Chinese Society of Particuology. He has been invited to serve as a council member of the 8th Board of the Chinese Society of Particuology, as a committee member and Deputy Secretary-General of the Micro-Nano Bubble Professional Committee, and as an editorial board member for journals such as Chinese Chemical Letters and Essential Chem.
College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at Donghua University
Research More >
1. Nanoelectrochemistry, electroanalytical chemistry, scanning electrochemical mapping (SECM/SECCM/SICM) 2. Fundamentals of electrochemistry for nanomaterials and electrocatalysis 3. Electrochemistry facilicated green chemistry and energy conversions