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Hang Yu

Researcher at Harbin Institute of Technology

Publications -  14
Citations -  589

Hang Yu is an academic researcher from Harbin Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Microbial fuel cell & Wastewater. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 14 publications receiving 214 citations.

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Development, current state and future trends of sludge management in China: Based on exploratory data and CO2-equivaient emissions analysis.

TL;DR: Challenges and existing problems of sludge disposal in China, including high CO2 emissions, unbalanced regional development, low stabilization and land utilization levels, were discussed and suggestions regarding potential technical and administrative measures in China and sustainable sludge management for developing countries were given.
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A review of bismuth-based photocatalysts for antibiotic degradation: Insight into the photocatalytic degradation performance, pathways and relevant mechanisms.

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes the performance, degradation pathways and relevant mechanisms of typical antibiotics during bismuth-based photocatalytic degradation, as well as the coupling processes for degradation enhancement.
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A review of ARGs in WWTPs: Sources, stressors and elimination

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a quantitative profile of the majority sources of ARGs in the influent of WWTPs and discuss the potential factors that affect the concentration distribution of the ARGs.
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Microbial fuel cell with high content solid wastes as substrates: a review

TL;DR: In this article, a review of electricity generation from HCSW and its stabilization in microbial fuel cell (MFC) is presented, focusing on: (1) MFCs with different fundamentals and configurations designed and constructed to produce electricity from high-content solid wastes; (2) performance of wastes degradation and electricity generation; (3) prospect and deficiency posed by MFC with HCSWas substrates.
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Accelerating anodic biofilms formation and electron transfer in microbial fuel cells: Role of anionic biosurfactants and mechanism

TL;DR: Analysis of the anodic bacterial communities revealed that rhamnolipids facilitated the enrichment of exoelectrogen, increasing the total proportion from 65% to 81%.