Jen-huang Huang is a chemical engineer and professor with a Ph.D. from Texas A&M and postdoctoral experience at Los Alamos, now leading microfluidics research at National Tsing Hua University. Over an 11-year academic career he has translated microfluidic process technology into practical platforms—ranging from in vitro disease models to continuous protein purification instruments—resulting in publications in top journals and 20 granted patents. His work has earned R&D 100 Awards (2016, 2019) and the MOST Outstanding Young Scholar Award (2021), reflecting both innovation and impact. Known for bridging fundamental science and applied engineering, he pursues collaborations with industry and clinicians to accelerate real-world biomedical and materials solutions. Unusually for an academic inventor, he combines deep experimental expertise with a track record of moving devices toward continuous, process-scale operation.
10 years of coding experience
8 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Chemical Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M University
Master of Science (M.S.), Chemical Engineering, Master of Science (M.S.), Chemical Engineering at National Tsing Hua University
Contributions:1 PR, 22 pushes, 1 branch in 5 months
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