Bae Tae-hyun
Assistant Professor
School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Nanyang Technological University
Singapore
Biography
Tae-Hyun Bae received his B.S. (1999), M.S. (2001), and Ph.D. (2006) degrees at school of biological resources and materials engineering at Seoul National University in Korea after studying polymeric membranes and their processes for water treatments. He earned his second Ph.D. (2010) in chemical engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology under the supervision of Prof. Christopher W. Jones and Prof. Sankar Nair. His research at Georgia Tech was focused on engineering nanoporous materials for applications in gas separation membranes. He worked as a postdoctoral fellow in Jeffrey Long’s research group at chemistry department of UC Berkeley, where he performed research on CO2 capture with metal-organic frameworks and other porous materials. Now he is an assistant professor of chemical engineering at Nanyang Technological University.
Research Interest
Chemistry of materials, Environmental technology, Molecular separaitons in chemical processes
Publications
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K. Sumida, D. L. Rogow, J. A. Mason, T. M. McDonald, E. D. Bloch, Z. R. Herm, T. H. Bae, J. R. Long. (2012). Carbon dioxide capture in metal-organic frameworks. Chemical Reviews, 122, 724-281.
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T. H. Bae, M.R. Hudson, J. A. Mason, W. L. Queen, J. J. Dutton, K. Sumida, K. J. Micklash, S. S. Kaye, C. M. Brown, J. R. Long. (2013). Evaluation of cation-exchanged zeolite adsorbents for post-combustion carbon dioxide capture. Energy & Environmental Science, 6, 128-138.
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Bae TH, Long JR. (2013). CO2/N2 Separations with mixed-matrix membranes containing Mg2(dobdc) nanocrystals. Energy & Environmental Science, 6, 3565.