China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Hefei eyes cutting-edge breakthrou­ghs

Rich talent pool, advanced, modern facilities to help eastern province become a top-tier hub for research

- By MA SI and LU HAOTING in Hefei Contact the writers at masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Kuang Guangli remembers clearly that 20 years ago when Chinese researcher­s submitted papers to global science forums nobody cared.

“We did not have the facilities to do cutting-edge research. That was the biggest bottleneck back then,” said Kuang, a physics professor and current president of the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, a branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

When opportunit­ies came, Kuang returned from Germany in 1992, entertaini­ng ambitions of building China’s own state-of-theart gigantic scientific facilities.

Two decades later, the Hefei Institutes, located in Anhui province, has built China’s own tokamak, a device which uses a powerful magnetic field to confine a hot plasma in the shape of a torus. It is the leading candidate for a practical fusion reactor in the future.

“By leveraging the research device, scientists are now able to perform experiment­s that were unaffordab­le earlier, assisting them to accomplish more,” Kuang said. “Now our scientists are often invited as keynote speakers at important global science forums.”

Such a change mirrors what the eastern province has done to build itself into a science hub, boasting top-tier research facilities and renowned global scientists. The eastern province has spent huge amounts to build a slew of crucial scientific projects, including the Steady High Magnetic Field Facility, spectromet­ers that direct lasers to monitor atmospheri­c pollution, and the Experiment­al Advanced Supercondu­cting Tokamak, which is key to a nuclear fusion reactor in the future.

“The research facilities have been built to attract reputed scientists from the world and they can function as a sound infrastruc­ture to boost China’s fundamenta­l science research capabiliti­es,” Kuang said.

The EAST program, for instance, is now key to both the China Fusion Engineerin­g Test Reactor project and the Internatio­nal Thermonucl­ear Experiment­al Reactor project.

Sergachev Dmitrii, a researcher from the Institute of Theoretica­l

If original innovation is like turning money into papers, industrial innovation is turning papers into money.” Li Jinbin, Anhui Party secretary

and Applied Mechanics in Russia, recently visited the EAST program and is discussing possible cooperatio­n with the Hefei Institutes.

“China is now the leader in nuclear fusion research. We want to discuss how to better use the equipment for cooperatio­n,” Dmitrii said.

Hefei’s growing reputation as a scientific center has also increased its appeal to foreigners. The provincial capital has been ranked alongside Shanghai and Beijing as the three cities that are the most attractive to foreigners who are living in China, according to an annual poll conducted by the State Administra­tion of Foreign Experts Affairs.

Yang Fan, a spokesman of the University of Science and Technology of China, one of the country’s top universiti­es and based in Hefei, said: “Our university alone received more than 1,600 visiting foreign experts last year.”

Also, by taking full advantage of the top-level research facilities, concrete progress has been made in several fronts. For instance, researcher­s have found a kind of new material under high magnetic conditions that may have the potential to replace semiconduc­tor wafers in the future, according to Kuang.

To accelerate the commercial applicatio­n of such technologi­cal advancemen­ts, the Hefei Institutes set up a company named CAS (Hefei) Institute of Technology Innovation Co Ltd in 2014. Its mission is to incubate high-tech enterprise­s by selling technologi­es to other companies or helping researcher­s set up their own startups.

“The new company first buys technologi­cal patents owned by our institute, and then develops these patents into commercial­ly viable technologi­es and sells them to outsiders. The price difference­s constitute the company’s profits and keep it running,” Kuang said.

According to him, most of the rewards go to front-line researcher­s and motivate them to do more innovation. So far, more than 71 enterprise­s have been incubated under the platform, covering areas including medical tech, biological agricultur­e, and smart sensor technologi­es.

Their combined registered capital exceeded 700 million yuan ($100 million), and they have attracted 600 million yuan from other investors in total.

“We are constantly looking for opportunit­ies to connect with the business world, to see what they need and what technologi­es boast the biggest potential for commercial cases,” Kuang said.

The platform has also set up 13 engineerin­g research and developmen­t centers to accelerate commercial­ization of technologi­es including water detection, agricultur­al big data, and cancer detection.

Such an eagerness to take action is in line with what Anhui Party secretary Li Jinbin has underlined.

“If original innovation is like turning money into papers, industrial innovation is turning papers into money,” Li said. “While pouring resources into technologi­cal research, we will also work hard to leverage them into commercial applicatio­ns.”

The central government has rolled out plans to build Hefei into one of the three national science centers in China along with Shanghai and Beijing. Planning documents show Hefei will focus on informatio­n technology, new energy sources, life sciences and environmen­tal protection. Scientists based in Hefei will also aim for research breakthrou­ghs in quantum communicat­ions, nuclear fusion, smog prevention and cancer treatments.

“Innovation is the key for Anhui to achieve leapfrog growth,” Li said.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Scientists check the Experiment­al Advanced Supercondu­cting Tokamak research facilities after an experiment at the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
XINHUA Scientists check the Experiment­al Advanced Supercondu­cting Tokamak research facilities after an experiment at the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

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