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.. 2550 (2007 Outstanding Scientist Awards)
. .............................................................8
. .................................................................................10
Curriculum Vitae: Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury .............................................................13
List of Publications .................................................................................................................15
The Achievements of Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury ......................................................22
...........................................25
. ......................................................29
. ...........................................................................31
Curriculum Vitae: Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa ...................................................... 34
List of Publications .................................................................................................................37
The Achievements of Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa ............................................... 40
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.. 2550 (2007 Young Scientist Awards)
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(List of Outstanding Scientists)................................................92
(List of Young Scientists) .......................................................94
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.. 2550 (2007 Outstanding Scientist Awards)
. .............................................................8
. .................................................................................10
Curriculum Vitae: Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury .............................................................13
List of Publications .................................................................................................................15
The Achievements of Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury ......................................................22
...........................................25
. ......................................................29
. ...........................................................................31
Curriculum Vitae: Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa ...................................................... 34
List of Publications .................................................................................................................37
The Achievements of Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa ............................................... 40
....................................................................................44
.. 2550 (2007 Young Scientist Awards)
. ...........................................................................46
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481
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(List of Outstanding Scientists)................................................92
(List of Young Scientists) .......................................................94
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2550

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Biomathematics System Biology .



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Applicable Harmonic Analysis Beijing .. 2006 Molecular
Systems Biology Quezon City .. 2008
Top 25 hottest articles () download internet
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2550

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Biomathematics System Biology .



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Applicable Harmonic Analysis Beijing .. 2006 Molecular
Systems Biology Quezon City .. 2008
Top 25 hottest articles () download internet
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. dynamical modelling

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B.Sc. with A2 Honours (Applied Mathematics), Australian National University,

M.Sc. (Applied Mathematics), Australian National University,


Ph.D. (Mathematics), Vanderbilt University,


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B.Sc. with A2 Honours (Applied Mathematics), Australian National University,

M.Sc. (Applied Mathematics), Australian National University,


Ph.D. (Mathematics), Vanderbilt University,


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Reviewer, Mathematical Reviews, American Mathematical Society


Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International Conference in Computational
Mathematics and Modeling, 2002, Bangkok, Thailand
Chair of Organizing Committee, International Conference in Algebra and
Geometry, 2003, Bangkok, Thailand
Scientific Committee, International Conference in Mathematics and Applications
2005, Bangkok, Thailand
Scientific Committee, International Conference on Applicable Harmonic
Analysis: Approximation and Computation, 2006, Beijing, PR China
Program Committee, International Conference on Simulation and Modeling,
2007, Chiang Mai, Thailand
Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International Conference in Mathematics
and Applications 2007, Bangkok, Thailand
Program Committee, the 10th International Conference on Molecular Systems
Biology, Quezon City, Philippines

CURRICULUM
VITAE
Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury
DATE OF BIRTH

23 August 1952

PLACE OF BIRTH

Bangkok, Thailand

MARITAL STATUS

Married to Mr. Vate Lenbury


Sons: Mr. Vip Lenbury
Mr. View Lenbury
Mr. Vong Lenbury

OFFICE ADDRESS

Department of Mathematics
Faculty of Science, Mahidol University
Rama 6 Rd., Bangkok 10400
Tel. 02-201-5448
Fax 02-201-5448
Email: scylb@mahidol.ac.th

PRESENT POSITION

Full Professor, Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science,


Mahidol University

EDUCATION

1976
1978
1985

B.Sc. with A2 Honours (Applied Mathematics), Australian


National University, Australia
M.Sc. (Applied Mathematics), Australian National
University, Australia
Ph.D. (Mathematics), Vanderbilt University, U.S.A.


12

13

.. 2546 -
.. 2545
.. 2546
.. 2548
.. 2549
.. 2550
.. 2550
.. 2551

Reviewer, Mathematical Reviews, American Mathematical Society


Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International Conference in Computational
Mathematics and Modeling, 2002, Bangkok, Thailand
Chair of Organizing Committee, International Conference in Algebra and
Geometry, 2003, Bangkok, Thailand
Scientific Committee, International Conference in Mathematics and Applications
2005, Bangkok, Thailand
Scientific Committee, International Conference on Applicable Harmonic
Analysis: Approximation and Computation, 2006, Beijing, PR China
Program Committee, International Conference on Simulation and Modeling,
2007, Chiang Mai, Thailand
Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International Conference in Mathematics
and Applications 2007, Bangkok, Thailand
Program Committee, the 10th International Conference on Molecular Systems
Biology, Quezon City, Philippines

CURRICULUM
VITAE
Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury
DATE OF BIRTH

23 August 1952

PLACE OF BIRTH

Bangkok, Thailand

MARITAL STATUS

Married to Mr. Vate Lenbury


Sons: Mr. Vip Lenbury
Mr. View Lenbury
Mr. Vong Lenbury

OFFICE ADDRESS

Department of Mathematics
Faculty of Science, Mahidol University
Rama 6 Rd., Bangkok 10400
Tel. 02-201-5448
Fax 02-201-5448
Email: scylb@mahidol.ac.th

PRESENT POSITION

Full Professor, Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science,


Mahidol University

EDUCATION

1976
1978
1985

B.Sc. with A2 Honours (Applied Mathematics), Australian


National University, Australia
M.Sc. (Applied Mathematics), Australian National
University, Australia
Ph.D. (Mathematics), Vanderbilt University, U.S.A.

HONORS AND AWARDS

1993

14

1995 - 2000
1998

1999 - 2005
2005 - 2009

The Outstanding Research Work of the Year Award


(in Physical Science), The National Research Council,
Thailand
Research Award, The Thailand Research Fund
The Outstanding Researcher of the Year Award (in
Physical Science and Mathematics), The National
Research Council, Thailand
The Thailand Research Fund Senior Research Scholar
Research Team Strengthening Grant, National Center
for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, National
Science and Technology Development Agency

MEMBERSHIPS,
COMMITTEE
ASSIGNMENTS,
THAILAND

Fellow of the Academy of Science, The Royal Institute


of Thailand
2001 - present Member of the Thai Academy of Science and Technology
Foundation
2002 - present Physical Science and Mathematics Committee, the
National Research Council of Thailand
2002 - present Performance Follow-up and Evaluation Committee,
The Office for National Education Standards and Quality
Assessment

INTERNATIONAL

2003 - present Reviewer, Mathematical Reviews, American Mathematical


Society
2002
Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International
Conference in Computational Mathematics and Modeling,
Bangkok, Thailand
2003
Chair of Organizing Committee, International Conference
in Algebra and Geometry, Bangkok, Thailand
2005
Scientific Committee, International Conference in
Mathematics and Applications 2005, Bangkok, Thailand
2006
Scientific Committee, International Conference on
Applicable Harmonic Analysis: Approximation and
Computation, Beijing, PR China

2001 - present

INTERNATIONAL

2007
2007

2008

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

Program Committee, International Conference on


Simulation and Modeling, Chiang Mai, Thailand
Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International
Conference in Mathematics and Applications 2007,
Bangkok, Thailand
Program Committee, the 10th International Conference
on Molecular Systems Biology, Quezon City, Philippines

1. Lenbury Y, Steppan JJ, Park DH, Tanner RD. (1986) Modelling


oscillatory behavior in batch fermentations. Acta Biotechnologica. 6
(1): 45-53.
2. Lenbury Y, Crooke PS, Tanner RD. (1986) Relating damped
oscillations to sustained limit cycles describing real and ideal batch
fermentation processes. BioSystems. 19: 15-22.
3. Lenbury Y, Crooke PS. (1986) The effect of the specific growth rates
and the yield expressions on oscillations in a two-tank fermentor.
Journal of the Science Society of Thailand. 12: 171-186.
4. Lenbury Y, Chiaranai C. (1987) Bifurcation analysis of a product
inhibition model of a continuous fermentation process. Applied
Microbiology and Biotechnology. 25: 532-534.
5. Lenbury Y, Chiaranai C. (1987) Direction of the sustained oscillation
trajectory in the cell-product phase plane describing product inhibition
on continuous fermentation systems. Acta Biotechnologica. 7(6):
433-437.
6. Lenbury Y, Punpocha M. (1989) The effect of the yield expression on
the existence of oscillatory behavior in a three-variable model of a
continuous fermentation system subject to product inhibition.
BioSystems. 22: 273-278.
7. Lenbury Y, Punpocha M. (1989) On the stability of periodic solutions
for a product inhibition model of continuous biological reactors. Journal
of General and Applied Microbiology. 35: 269-279.
8. Lenbury Y, Roongruangsorakarn S, Tumrasvin N. (1989) Parameterspace classification of the dynamic behavior of the chemostat subject
to product inhibition. Journal of the Science Society of Thailand.
15: 281-291.

15

HONORS AND AWARDS

1993

14

1995 - 2000
1998

1999 - 2005
2005 - 2009

The Outstanding Research Work of the Year Award


(in Physical Science), The National Research Council,
Thailand
Research Award, The Thailand Research Fund
The Outstanding Researcher of the Year Award (in
Physical Science and Mathematics), The National
Research Council, Thailand
The Thailand Research Fund Senior Research Scholar
Research Team Strengthening Grant, National Center
for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, National
Science and Technology Development Agency

MEMBERSHIPS,
COMMITTEE
ASSIGNMENTS,
THAILAND

Fellow of the Academy of Science, The Royal Institute


of Thailand
2001 - present Member of the Thai Academy of Science and Technology
Foundation
2002 - present Physical Science and Mathematics Committee, the
National Research Council of Thailand
2002 - present Performance Follow-up and Evaluation Committee,
The Office for National Education Standards and Quality
Assessment

INTERNATIONAL

2003 - present Reviewer, Mathematical Reviews, American Mathematical


Society
2002
Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International
Conference in Computational Mathematics and Modeling,
Bangkok, Thailand
2003
Chair of Organizing Committee, International Conference
in Algebra and Geometry, Bangkok, Thailand
2005
Scientific Committee, International Conference in
Mathematics and Applications 2005, Bangkok, Thailand
2006
Scientific Committee, International Conference on
Applicable Harmonic Analysis: Approximation and
Computation, Beijing, PR China

2001 - present

INTERNATIONAL

2007
2007

2008

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

Program Committee, International Conference on


Simulation and Modeling, Chiang Mai, Thailand
Chair of Local Organizing Committee, International
Conference in Mathematics and Applications 2007,
Bangkok, Thailand
Program Committee, the 10th International Conference
on Molecular Systems Biology, Quezon City, Philippines

1. Lenbury Y, Steppan JJ, Park DH, Tanner RD. (1986) Modelling


oscillatory behavior in batch fermentations. Acta Biotechnologica. 6
(1): 45-53.
2. Lenbury Y, Crooke PS, Tanner RD. (1986) Relating damped
oscillations to sustained limit cycles describing real and ideal batch
fermentation processes. BioSystems. 19: 15-22.
3. Lenbury Y, Crooke PS. (1986) The effect of the specific growth rates
and the yield expressions on oscillations in a two-tank fermentor.
Journal of the Science Society of Thailand. 12: 171-186.
4. Lenbury Y, Chiaranai C. (1987) Bifurcation analysis of a product
inhibition model of a continuous fermentation process. Applied
Microbiology and Biotechnology. 25: 532-534.
5. Lenbury Y, Chiaranai C. (1987) Direction of the sustained oscillation
trajectory in the cell-product phase plane describing product inhibition
on continuous fermentation systems. Acta Biotechnologica. 7(6):
433-437.
6. Lenbury Y, Punpocha M. (1989) The effect of the yield expression on
the existence of oscillatory behavior in a three-variable model of a
continuous fermentation system subject to product inhibition.
BioSystems. 22: 273-278.
7. Lenbury Y, Punpocha M. (1989) On the stability of periodic solutions
for a product inhibition model of continuous biological reactors. Journal
of General and Applied Microbiology. 35: 269-279.
8. Lenbury Y, Roongruangsorakarn S, Tumrasvin N. (1989) Parameterspace classification of the dynamic behavior of the chemostat subject
to product inhibition. Journal of the Science Society of Thailand.
15: 281-291.

15

16

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

9. Crooke P, Tanner RD, Lenbury Y. (1989) Investigation of the volume


effect on a simple batch fermentation process. Mathematical and
Computer Modelling. 12: 1521-1530.
10. Lenbury Y, Pacheenburawana P. (1991) Modelling fluctuation
phenomena in the plasma cortisol secretion system in normal man.
BioSystems. 26: 117-125.
11. Lenbury Y, Siengsanan M. (1993) Coexistence of competing
microbial species in a chemostat where one population feeds on
another. Acta Biotechnologica. 13: 113-120.
12. Lenbury Y, Novaprateep B, Wiwatanapataphee B. (1994) Dynamic
behavior classification of a model for a continuous bio-reactor subject
to product inhibition. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 19(12):
107-117.
13. Lenbury Y, Novaprateep B. (1994) Theoretical investigation of a
product inhibition model for a continuous culture: effect of yield
expression and specific growth rate. Journal of the Science Society
of Thailand. 20: 43-59.
14. Lenbury Y, Likasiri C. (1994) Low- and high-frequency oscillations in
a food chain where one of the competing species feeds on the other.
Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 20: 71-89.
15. Lenbury Y, Maneesawarng C. (1994) Parameter space classification
of solutions to a model for the cortisol secretion system in normal
man, in Textbook of Biomedical and Life Physics (Vieweg Publishing
House, Weisbaden, Germany).
16. Lenbury Y, Orankitjaroen S. (1995) Dynamic behavior of a
membrane permeability sensitive model for a continuous bio-reactor
exhibiting culture rhythmicity. Journal of the Science Society of
Thailand. 21: 97-116.
17. Lenbury Y, Kamnungkit K, Novaprateep B. (1996) Detection of
slow-fast limit cycles in a model for electrical activity in the pancreatic
-cell. IMA Journal of Mathematics Applied in Medicine and Biology.
13: 1-21.
18. Lenbury Y, Sukprasong B, Novaprateep B. (1996) Bifurcation and
chaos in a membrane permeability sensitive model for a continuous
bio-reactor. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 24(9): 37-48.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

19. Lenbury Y. (1996) Singular perturbation analysis of a model for a


predator-prey system invaded by a parasite. BioSystems. 39: 251-262.
20. Lenbury Y. (1998) A singular perturbation analysis of a product
inhibition model for continuous bio-reactors. Dynamical Systems and
Differential Equations. 2: 60-72.
21. Lenbury Y, Ratanakul C, Pahupongsap S, Amornsamankul S. (1998)
Analysis of fast kinetics models for the distribution of polychlorinated
dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans in humans. Journal of the
Science Society of Thailand. 24: 205-214.
22. Lenbury Y, Neamvong A, Amornsamankul S, Puttapiban P. (1999)
Modelling effects of high product and substrate inhibition on oscillatory behavior in continuous bioreactors. BioSystems. 49: 191-203.
23. Lenbury Y, Rattanamongkonkul S, Tumrasvin N, Amornsamankul S.
(1999) Predator-prey interaction coupled by parasitic infection: limit
cycles and chaotic behavior. Mathematical and Computer Modelling.
30: 131-146.
24. Lenbury Y, Tumrasvin N. (2000) Singular perturbation analysis of a
model for the effect of toxicant in single-species systems.Mathematical
and Computer Modelling. 31: 125-134.
25. Lenbury Y, Ouncharoen R, Tumrasvin N. (2000) Higher dimensional
separation principle for the analysis of relaxation oscillations in nonlinear systems: application to a model of HIV infection. IMA Journal
of Mathematics Applied in Medicine and Biology. 17: 243-261.
26. Lenbury Y, Ruktamatakul S, Amornsamankul S. (2001) Modeling insulin
kinetics: responses to a single oral glucose administration or
ambulatory-fed condition. BioSystems. 59: 15-25.
27. Niamsup P, Palmore J, Lenbury Y. (2001) The composition of Halleys
and Newtons functions and its Schwarzian derivative. Complex
Variables. 45: 349-353.
28. Kunphasuruang W, Lenbury Y, Hek G. (2002) A nonlinear mathematical
model for pulsatile discharges of Luteinizing hormone mediated by
hypothalamic and extra-hypothalamic pathways. Mathematical
Models and Methods in Applied Sciences. 12(5): 607-624.
29. Dumrongpokaphan T, Lenbury Y. (2002) Cascade mechanism in
a self-regulatory endocrine system: modelling pulsatile hormone
secretion. Pure and Applied Chemistry. 74(6): 881-890.

17

16

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

9. Crooke P, Tanner RD, Lenbury Y. (1989) Investigation of the volume


effect on a simple batch fermentation process. Mathematical and
Computer Modelling. 12: 1521-1530.
10. Lenbury Y, Pacheenburawana P. (1991) Modelling fluctuation
phenomena in the plasma cortisol secretion system in normal man.
BioSystems. 26: 117-125.
11. Lenbury Y, Siengsanan M. (1993) Coexistence of competing
microbial species in a chemostat where one population feeds on
another. Acta Biotechnologica. 13: 113-120.
12. Lenbury Y, Novaprateep B, Wiwatanapataphee B. (1994) Dynamic
behavior classification of a model for a continuous bio-reactor subject
to product inhibition. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 19(12):
107-117.
13. Lenbury Y, Novaprateep B. (1994) Theoretical investigation of a
product inhibition model for a continuous culture: effect of yield
expression and specific growth rate. Journal of the Science Society
of Thailand. 20: 43-59.
14. Lenbury Y, Likasiri C. (1994) Low- and high-frequency oscillations in
a food chain where one of the competing species feeds on the other.
Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 20: 71-89.
15. Lenbury Y, Maneesawarng C. (1994) Parameter space classification
of solutions to a model for the cortisol secretion system in normal
man, in Textbook of Biomedical and Life Physics (Vieweg Publishing
House, Weisbaden, Germany).
16. Lenbury Y, Orankitjaroen S. (1995) Dynamic behavior of a
membrane permeability sensitive model for a continuous bio-reactor
exhibiting culture rhythmicity. Journal of the Science Society of
Thailand. 21: 97-116.
17. Lenbury Y, Kamnungkit K, Novaprateep B. (1996) Detection of
slow-fast limit cycles in a model for electrical activity in the pancreatic
-cell. IMA Journal of Mathematics Applied in Medicine and Biology.
13: 1-21.
18. Lenbury Y, Sukprasong B, Novaprateep B. (1996) Bifurcation and
chaos in a membrane permeability sensitive model for a continuous
bio-reactor. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 24(9): 37-48.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

19. Lenbury Y. (1996) Singular perturbation analysis of a model for a


predator-prey system invaded by a parasite. BioSystems. 39: 251-262.
20. Lenbury Y. (1998) A singular perturbation analysis of a product
inhibition model for continuous bio-reactors. Dynamical Systems and
Differential Equations. 2: 60-72.
21. Lenbury Y, Ratanakul C, Pahupongsap S, Amornsamankul S. (1998)
Analysis of fast kinetics models for the distribution of polychlorinated
dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans in humans. Journal of the
Science Society of Thailand. 24: 205-214.
22. Lenbury Y, Neamvong A, Amornsamankul S, Puttapiban P. (1999)
Modelling effects of high product and substrate inhibition on oscillatory behavior in continuous bioreactors. BioSystems. 49: 191-203.
23. Lenbury Y, Rattanamongkonkul S, Tumrasvin N, Amornsamankul S.
(1999) Predator-prey interaction coupled by parasitic infection: limit
cycles and chaotic behavior. Mathematical and Computer Modelling.
30: 131-146.
24. Lenbury Y, Tumrasvin N. (2000) Singular perturbation analysis of a
model for the effect of toxicant in single-species systems.Mathematical
and Computer Modelling. 31: 125-134.
25. Lenbury Y, Ouncharoen R, Tumrasvin N. (2000) Higher dimensional
separation principle for the analysis of relaxation oscillations in nonlinear systems: application to a model of HIV infection. IMA Journal
of Mathematics Applied in Medicine and Biology. 17: 243-261.
26. Lenbury Y, Ruktamatakul S, Amornsamankul S. (2001) Modeling insulin
kinetics: responses to a single oral glucose administration or
ambulatory-fed condition. BioSystems. 59: 15-25.
27. Niamsup P, Palmore J, Lenbury Y. (2001) The composition of Halleys
and Newtons functions and its Schwarzian derivative. Complex
Variables. 45: 349-353.
28. Kunphasuruang W, Lenbury Y, Hek G. (2002) A nonlinear mathematical
model for pulsatile discharges of Luteinizing hormone mediated by
hypothalamic and extra-hypothalamic pathways. Mathematical
Models and Methods in Applied Sciences. 12(5): 607-624.
29. Dumrongpokaphan T, Lenbury Y. (2002) Cascade mechanism in
a self-regulatory endocrine system: modelling pulsatile hormone
secretion. Pure and Applied Chemistry. 74(6): 881-890.

17

18

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

30. Lenbury Y, Pansuwan A, Tumrasvin N. (2002) Chaos and control


action in a Kolmogorov type model for food webs with harvesting or
replenishment. ScienceAsia. 28(3): 205-215.
31. Suwanwongse S, Chasreechai S, Lenbury Y, Kataunyuthita S. (2002)
Modeling of AIDS incidence and the response of transmission rates
to increased awareness: a case study of the Thai province of Nakorn
Pathom. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public
Health. 33(3): 581-588.
32. Siripunvaraporn W, Egbert G, Lenbury Y. (2002) Numerical accuracy
of Magnetotelluric modeling: a comparison of finite difference
approximations. Earth Planets Space. 54(6): 721-725.
33. Pongsumpun P, Lenbury Y, Tang IM. (2002) Age structure in a
model for the transmission of dengue Haemorrhagic fever in
Thailand. East-West Journal of Mathematics. Special Volume: 93-103.
34. Kammanee A, Lenbury Y, Tang IM. (2002) Transmission of Plasmodium
Vivax malaria. East-West Journal of Mathematics. Special Volume:
277-284.
35. Kanyamee N, Lenbury Y, Tang IM. (2002) The effect of migrant
workers on the transmission of malaria. East-West Journal of
Mathematics. Special Volume: 297-308.
36. Rattanakul C, Lenbury Y, Krishnamara N, Wollkind DJ. (2003) Modeling
of bone formation and resorption mediated by parathyroid hormone:
response to estrogen/PTH therapy. BioSystems. 70(1): 55-72.
37. Maneesawarng C, Lenbury Y. (2003) Total curvature and length
estimate for curves in CAT(K) spaces. Differential Geometry and its
Applications. 19: 211-222.
38. Dumrongpokaphan T, Lenbury Y, Crooke PS. (2003) The analysis of
higher-order cascade systems with separation conditions pivoting on
the slow components: application to a model of migration forsurvival
of the species. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 38: 671-690.
39. Triampo W, Triampo D, Tang IM, Lenbury Y. (2003) Random walk
on a plane-spin-rotator system: continuum theory and Monte Carlo
simulations. ScienceAsia. 29: 289-299.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

40. Wong-ekabut J, Triampo W, Tang IM, Triampo D, Baowan D, Lenbury


Y. (2004) Vacancy-mediated disordering process in binary alloys at
finite temperatures: Monte Carlo simulation. Journal of the Korean
Physical Society. 45(2): 310-317.
41. Poltem D, Wiwatanapataphee B, Ruengsakulrach P, Lenbury
Y, Punpocha M, Wu YH. (2004) A numerical study of blood flow
patterns in coronary artery bypass grafts. Quantitative Methods.
1(1): 1-7.
42. Lenbury Y, Giang DV. (2004) Nonlinear delay differential equations
involving population growth. Mathematical and Computer Modelling.
40: 583-590.
43. Lenbury Y, Pornsaward P. (2005) A delay-differential equation model
of the feedback-controlled hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis in
humans. Mathematical Medicine and Biology: A Journal of the IMA.
22: 15-33.
44. Crooke PS, Kongkul K, Lenbury Y, Adams AB, Carter CS, Marini JJ,
Hotchkiss JR. (2005) Mathematical models for pressure controlled
ventilation of oleic acid-injured pigs. Mathematical Medicine and
Biology. 22: 99-112.
45. Giang DV, Lenbury Y, Seidman TI. (2005) Delay effect in models of
population growth. Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications.
305: 631-643.
46. Siripunvaraporn W, Egbert G, Lenbury Y, Uyeshima M. (2005) Threedimension magnetotelluric inversion: data space method. Physics of
the Earth and Planetary Interiors. 150: 3-14.
47. Ngamsaad W, Triampo W, Kanthang P, Tang IM, Nuttawut N, Modjung
C, Lenbury Y. (2005) A lattice Boltzmann method for modeling the
dynamic pole-to-pole oscillations of min proteins for determining the
position of the midcell division plane. Journal of the Korean Physical
Society. 46(4): 1025-1030.
48. Modchang C, Kanthang P, Triampo W, Ngamsaad W, Nuttawut N,
Tang IM, Sanguansin S, Boondirek A, Lenbury Y. (2005) Modeling of
the dynamic pole-to-pole oscillations of the min proteins in bacterial
cell division: the effect of an external field. Journal of the Korean
Physical Society. 46(4): 1031-1036.

19

18

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

30. Lenbury Y, Pansuwan A, Tumrasvin N. (2002) Chaos and control


action in a Kolmogorov type model for food webs with harvesting or
replenishment. ScienceAsia. 28(3): 205-215.
31. Suwanwongse S, Chasreechai S, Lenbury Y, Kataunyuthita S. (2002)
Modeling of AIDS incidence and the response of transmission rates
to increased awareness: a case study of the Thai province of Nakorn
Pathom. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public
Health. 33(3): 581-588.
32. Siripunvaraporn W, Egbert G, Lenbury Y. (2002) Numerical accuracy
of Magnetotelluric modeling: a comparison of finite difference
approximations. Earth Planets Space. 54(6): 721-725.
33. Pongsumpun P, Lenbury Y, Tang IM. (2002) Age structure in a
model for the transmission of dengue Haemorrhagic fever in
Thailand. East-West Journal of Mathematics. Special Volume: 93-103.
34. Kammanee A, Lenbury Y, Tang IM. (2002) Transmission of Plasmodium
Vivax malaria. East-West Journal of Mathematics. Special Volume:
277-284.
35. Kanyamee N, Lenbury Y, Tang IM. (2002) The effect of migrant
workers on the transmission of malaria. East-West Journal of
Mathematics. Special Volume: 297-308.
36. Rattanakul C, Lenbury Y, Krishnamara N, Wollkind DJ. (2003) Modeling
of bone formation and resorption mediated by parathyroid hormone:
response to estrogen/PTH therapy. BioSystems. 70(1): 55-72.
37. Maneesawarng C, Lenbury Y. (2003) Total curvature and length
estimate for curves in CAT(K) spaces. Differential Geometry and its
Applications. 19: 211-222.
38. Dumrongpokaphan T, Lenbury Y, Crooke PS. (2003) The analysis of
higher-order cascade systems with separation conditions pivoting on
the slow components: application to a model of migration forsurvival
of the species. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. 38: 671-690.
39. Triampo W, Triampo D, Tang IM, Lenbury Y. (2003) Random walk
on a plane-spin-rotator system: continuum theory and Monte Carlo
simulations. ScienceAsia. 29: 289-299.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

40. Wong-ekabut J, Triampo W, Tang IM, Triampo D, Baowan D, Lenbury


Y. (2004) Vacancy-mediated disordering process in binary alloys at
finite temperatures: Monte Carlo simulation. Journal of the Korean
Physical Society. 45(2): 310-317.
41. Poltem D, Wiwatanapataphee B, Ruengsakulrach P, Lenbury
Y, Punpocha M, Wu YH. (2004) A numerical study of blood flow
patterns in coronary artery bypass grafts. Quantitative Methods.
1(1): 1-7.
42. Lenbury Y, Giang DV. (2004) Nonlinear delay differential equations
involving population growth. Mathematical and Computer Modelling.
40: 583-590.
43. Lenbury Y, Pornsaward P. (2005) A delay-differential equation model
of the feedback-controlled hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis in
humans. Mathematical Medicine and Biology: A Journal of the IMA.
22: 15-33.
44. Crooke PS, Kongkul K, Lenbury Y, Adams AB, Carter CS, Marini JJ,
Hotchkiss JR. (2005) Mathematical models for pressure controlled
ventilation of oleic acid-injured pigs. Mathematical Medicine and
Biology. 22: 99-112.
45. Giang DV, Lenbury Y, Seidman TI. (2005) Delay effect in models of
population growth. Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications.
305: 631-643.
46. Siripunvaraporn W, Egbert G, Lenbury Y, Uyeshima M. (2005) Threedimension magnetotelluric inversion: data space method. Physics of
the Earth and Planetary Interiors. 150: 3-14.
47. Ngamsaad W, Triampo W, Kanthang P, Tang IM, Nuttawut N, Modjung
C, Lenbury Y. (2005) A lattice Boltzmann method for modeling the
dynamic pole-to-pole oscillations of min proteins for determining the
position of the midcell division plane. Journal of the Korean Physical
Society. 46(4): 1025-1030.
48. Modchang C, Kanthang P, Triampo W, Ngamsaad W, Nuttawut N,
Tang IM, Sanguansin S, Boondirek A, Lenbury Y. (2005) Modeling of
the dynamic pole-to-pole oscillations of the min proteins in bacterial
cell division: the effect of an external field. Journal of the Korean
Physical Society. 46(4): 1031-1036.

19

20

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

49. Kaewong T, Lenbury Y, Niamsup P. (2005) A note on asymptotic


stability conditions for delay difference equations. International
Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences. 7: 1007-1013.
50. Pansuwan A, Rattanakul C, Lenbury Y, Wollkind DJ, Harrison L,
Rajapakse I. (2005) Nonlinear stability analyses of pattern formation
on solid surfaces during ion-sputtered erosion. Mathematical and
Computer Modelling. 41: 939-964.
51. Yanarojana S, Chantharaksria U, Wilairat P, Lenbury Y. (2005)
Kinetic modeling of lipoprotein peroxidation initiated by copper and
azo compounds. ScienceAsia. 31(4): 369-381.
52. Tiensuwan M, Yimprayoon P, Lenbury Y. (2005) Application of loglinear models to cancer patients: a case study of data from the
National Cancer Institute of Thailand. Southeast Asian Journal of
Tropical Medicine and Public Health. 36(5): 1283-1291.
53. Plienpanich T, Niamsup P, Lenbury Y. (2005) Controllability and
stability of the perturbed Chen chaotic dynamical system. Applied
Mathematics and Computations. 171: 927-947.
54. Wiwatanapataphee B, Poltem D, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006) Simulation of pulsatile flow of blood in stenosed coronary arterybypass with
graft. Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering. 3(2): 371-383.
55. Amornsamankul S, Wiwatanapataphee B, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006)
Effect of non-Newtonian behavior of blood on pulsatile flows in stenotic
arteries. International Journal of Biomedical Sciences. 1(1): 42-46.
56. Ruktamatakul S, Bell J, Lenbury Y. (2006) Wave front solution
behavior for continuous neural networks with Lateral-inhibition. IMA
Journal of Applied Mathematics. 71: 544-564.
57. Lenbury Y, Li D, Rattanakul C. (2006) Stability of solution of KuramotoSivashinsky-Korteweg-de Vries system. Computers and Mathematics
with Applications. 52: 497-508.
58. Boondirek A, Lenbury Y, Wong-ekkabut J, Triampo W, Tang IM,
Picha P. (2006) A stochastic model of cancer growth with immune
response. Journal of the Korean Physical Society. 49(4): 1652-1666.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

59. Poltem D, Wiwatanapataphee B, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006) A numeri


cal study of non-Newtonian blood flow in stenosed coronary artery
bypass with grafts. ANZIAM Journal. 47: C277-C291.
60. Wiwatanapataphee B, Amornsamankul S, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006)
Simulation of transient blood flow through stenosed coronary arteries. WSEAS Transactions on Fluid Mechanics. 1(7): 771-778.
61. Rattanakul C, Lenbury Y, Bell J, Chatsudthipong V, Triampo W,
Crooke PS. (2006) Spatial Turing-type pattern formation in a model
of signal transduction involving membrane-based receptors coupled
by G proteins. Cancer Informatics. 2: 1-15.
62. Puttasontiphot T, Lenbury Y, Rattanakul C, Rattanamongkonkul S,
Hotchkiss JR, Crooke PS. (2007) Dynamic processes permitting stable
coexistence of antimicrobial resistant and non-resistant organisms in
a gastrointestinal tract model. ScienceAsia. 33(2): 197-206.
63. Wiwatanapataphee B, Wu YH, Lenbury Y, Ruengsakulrach P. (2007)
Three-dimensional simulation of unsteady state blood flows in stenotic
arteries. International Journal of Applied Mathematics. 20(4): 467-482.
64. Sungkaworn T, Triampo W, Nalakarn P, Triampo D, Tang IM, Lenbury
Y, Picha P. (2007) The effects of TiO2 nanoparticles on tumor cell
colonies: fractal dimension and morphological properties. International
Journal of Biomedical Sciences. 2(1): 67-74.
65. Crooke PS, Rattanamongkonkul S, Lenbury Y, Hotchkiss JR.
Mathematical modeling of non-invasive pressure support ventilation:
investigation of tidal volume instability. Quantitative Medical Data
Analysis Using Mathematical Tools and Statistical Techniques.
(in press).
66. Lenbury Y, Giang DV. Periodicity and knots in delay models of
population growth. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. (in press).
67. Triampo D, Triampo W, Tang IM, Lenbury Y. The stochastic model of
non-equilibrium mutagen-induced alterations of DNA: implication to
genetic instability in cancer. BioSystems. (in press).

21

20

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

49. Kaewong T, Lenbury Y, Niamsup P. (2005) A note on asymptotic


stability conditions for delay difference equations. International
Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences. 7: 1007-1013.
50. Pansuwan A, Rattanakul C, Lenbury Y, Wollkind DJ, Harrison L,
Rajapakse I. (2005) Nonlinear stability analyses of pattern formation
on solid surfaces during ion-sputtered erosion. Mathematical and
Computer Modelling. 41: 939-964.
51. Yanarojana S, Chantharaksria U, Wilairat P, Lenbury Y. (2005)
Kinetic modeling of lipoprotein peroxidation initiated by copper and
azo compounds. ScienceAsia. 31(4): 369-381.
52. Tiensuwan M, Yimprayoon P, Lenbury Y. (2005) Application of loglinear models to cancer patients: a case study of data from the
National Cancer Institute of Thailand. Southeast Asian Journal of
Tropical Medicine and Public Health. 36(5): 1283-1291.
53. Plienpanich T, Niamsup P, Lenbury Y. (2005) Controllability and
stability of the perturbed Chen chaotic dynamical system. Applied
Mathematics and Computations. 171: 927-947.
54. Wiwatanapataphee B, Poltem D, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006) Simulation of pulsatile flow of blood in stenosed coronary arterybypass with
graft. Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering. 3(2): 371-383.
55. Amornsamankul S, Wiwatanapataphee B, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006)
Effect of non-Newtonian behavior of blood on pulsatile flows in stenotic
arteries. International Journal of Biomedical Sciences. 1(1): 42-46.
56. Ruktamatakul S, Bell J, Lenbury Y. (2006) Wave front solution
behavior for continuous neural networks with Lateral-inhibition. IMA
Journal of Applied Mathematics. 71: 544-564.
57. Lenbury Y, Li D, Rattanakul C. (2006) Stability of solution of KuramotoSivashinsky-Korteweg-de Vries system. Computers and Mathematics
with Applications. 52: 497-508.
58. Boondirek A, Lenbury Y, Wong-ekkabut J, Triampo W, Tang IM,
Picha P. (2006) A stochastic model of cancer growth with immune
response. Journal of the Korean Physical Society. 49(4): 1652-1666.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

59. Poltem D, Wiwatanapataphee B, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006) A numeri


cal study of non-Newtonian blood flow in stenosed coronary artery
bypass with grafts. ANZIAM Journal. 47: C277-C291.
60. Wiwatanapataphee B, Amornsamankul S, Wu YH, Lenbury Y. (2006)
Simulation of transient blood flow through stenosed coronary arteries. WSEAS Transactions on Fluid Mechanics. 1(7): 771-778.
61. Rattanakul C, Lenbury Y, Bell J, Chatsudthipong V, Triampo W,
Crooke PS. (2006) Spatial Turing-type pattern formation in a model
of signal transduction involving membrane-based receptors coupled
by G proteins. Cancer Informatics. 2: 1-15.
62. Puttasontiphot T, Lenbury Y, Rattanakul C, Rattanamongkonkul S,
Hotchkiss JR, Crooke PS. (2007) Dynamic processes permitting stable
coexistence of antimicrobial resistant and non-resistant organisms in
a gastrointestinal tract model. ScienceAsia. 33(2): 197-206.
63. Wiwatanapataphee B, Wu YH, Lenbury Y, Ruengsakulrach P. (2007)
Three-dimensional simulation of unsteady state blood flows in stenotic
arteries. International Journal of Applied Mathematics. 20(4): 467-482.
64. Sungkaworn T, Triampo W, Nalakarn P, Triampo D, Tang IM, Lenbury
Y, Picha P. (2007) The effects of TiO2 nanoparticles on tumor cell
colonies: fractal dimension and morphological properties. International
Journal of Biomedical Sciences. 2(1): 67-74.
65. Crooke PS, Rattanamongkonkul S, Lenbury Y, Hotchkiss JR.
Mathematical modeling of non-invasive pressure support ventilation:
investigation of tidal volume instability. Quantitative Medical Data
Analysis Using Mathematical Tools and Statistical Techniques.
(in press).
66. Lenbury Y, Giang DV. Periodicity and knots in delay models of
population growth. Mathematical and Computer Modelling. (in press).
67. Triampo D, Triampo W, Tang IM, Lenbury Y. The stochastic model of
non-equilibrium mutagen-induced alterations of DNA: implication to
genetic instability in cancer. BioSystems. (in press).

21

22

THE

ACHIEVEMENTS

OF
Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury

Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury was born in Bangkok on August 23, 1952.
Following primary and secondary education in Thailand, she went abroad to study
under the Columbo Plan Scholarship and received a B.Sc. and an M.Sc. in Applied
Mathematics from the Australian National University. She later received a Ph.D. in
Mathematics from Vanderbilt University in the United States of America and returned to
the Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University to teach,
conduct research in dynamical modeling of nonlinear systems in biology and medicine,
and guide students at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. She was appointed
professor of mathematics in 1996.

From her research contributions, she was


meritoriously given the Outstanding Researcher
Award in the field of Physical Science and Mathematics
from the National Research Council in 1998.
Professor Lenburys research interest is in
the construction and analysis of mathematical models
of systems in biology and medical science, using
theory of nonlinear and dynamical systems. Her
research has yielded over 60 international journal
publications, and may be grouped into 3 areas of
interest.
The first area is concerned with dynamical
modeling of nonlinear systems in biotechnology.
Consideration was given to the effects of different
important external factors on the efficient operation
of continuous bioreactors, such as the effect of
products of a fermentation system on the rates of
change of cells and limiting substrate, or the effect
of membrane permeability on the transfer of
nutrient across the cell membrane, due to geometric
field variation, for example. The results of such
research work on dynamical modeling can
be extremely useful for the optimal control and
management of such systems of crucial importance
in the pharmaceutical and food industries.

The second area involves the dynamical


modeling of nonlinear systems in the field of
medical science. Professor Lenbury and her research
team have been interested in modeling the cortisol
secretion as well as testosterone secretion
cascade systems in the human body, modeling the
control of plasma glucose by insulin secreted by
the pancreatic -cells, and modeling the roles of
estrogen and parathyroid hormones on bone
resorption, for example.
Lately, Professor Lenbury has produced
research results on the analysis of models for signal
transduction processes among living cells, which
has important implications on the study of how
different processes in the human body function or
disfunction. Professor Lenbury and her team
collaborate actively with medical experts such as a
heart surgeon who routinely carries out coronary
bypass operations on patients with atherosclerosis.
He would like advice on how the operation should
be carried out for optimal and long lasting result.
This needs mathematical modeling and numerical
computation to simulate blood flow in stenosed blood
vessels using real geometry. Moreover, Professor
Lenbury and her team have studied models of
several epidemics which create serious control
problems, such as HIV, malaria, parasitic infection,
and drug resistance.

23

22

THE

ACHIEVEMENTS

OF
Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury

Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury was born in Bangkok on August 23, 1952.
Following primary and secondary education in Thailand, she went abroad to study
under the Columbo Plan Scholarship and received a B.Sc. and an M.Sc. in Applied
Mathematics from the Australian National University. She later received a Ph.D. in
Mathematics from Vanderbilt University in the United States of America and returned to
the Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University to teach,
conduct research in dynamical modeling of nonlinear systems in biology and medicine,
and guide students at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. She was appointed
professor of mathematics in 1996.

From her research contributions, she was


meritoriously given the Outstanding Researcher
Award in the field of Physical Science and Mathematics
from the National Research Council in 1998.
Professor Lenburys research interest is in
the construction and analysis of mathematical models
of systems in biology and medical science, using
theory of nonlinear and dynamical systems. Her
research has yielded over 60 international journal
publications, and may be grouped into 3 areas of
interest.
The first area is concerned with dynamical
modeling of nonlinear systems in biotechnology.
Consideration was given to the effects of different
important external factors on the efficient operation
of continuous bioreactors, such as the effect of
products of a fermentation system on the rates of
change of cells and limiting substrate, or the effect
of membrane permeability on the transfer of
nutrient across the cell membrane, due to geometric
field variation, for example. The results of such
research work on dynamical modeling can
be extremely useful for the optimal control and
management of such systems of crucial importance
in the pharmaceutical and food industries.

The second area involves the dynamical


modeling of nonlinear systems in the field of
medical science. Professor Lenbury and her research
team have been interested in modeling the cortisol
secretion as well as testosterone secretion
cascade systems in the human body, modeling the
control of plasma glucose by insulin secreted by
the pancreatic -cells, and modeling the roles of
estrogen and parathyroid hormones on bone
resorption, for example.
Lately, Professor Lenbury has produced
research results on the analysis of models for signal
transduction processes among living cells, which
has important implications on the study of how
different processes in the human body function or
disfunction. Professor Lenbury and her team
collaborate actively with medical experts such as a
heart surgeon who routinely carries out coronary
bypass operations on patients with atherosclerosis.
He would like advice on how the operation should
be carried out for optimal and long lasting result.
This needs mathematical modeling and numerical
computation to simulate blood flow in stenosed blood
vessels using real geometry. Moreover, Professor
Lenbury and her team have studied models of
several epidemics which create serious control
problems, such as HIV, malaria, parasitic infection,
and drug resistance.

23

24

The third area of her research interest is on


the dynamical modeling of nonlinear systems in
ecology and environmental science. Extending
from the basic population model and that of a
predator-prey system, several important factors were
incorporated to discover their impacts, such as the
impact of toxic substances in the environment, impact
of migration, that of parasitic infection, or that of
delays in reproduction rate, on the stability of the
system or survival of the species. This type of
research provides valuable information for decision
or public policy makers who set regulations and
laws on the management and conservation of the
environment in parallel with economic and industrial
growth of this nation.
All the above research work involves
discovering and utilizing novel methodologies for
the analysis of complicated model systems, such
as nonlinear system theory, singular perturbation
theory, bifurcation theory, computational techniques,
control theory, knots theory, fixed point theory,
incorporation of time delays and stochastic

processes, which have to be applied to appropriate


model systems under study. Such research work,
apart from allowing us to better understand the
systems of interest, also enhances our ability to
diagnose, control and make life saving treatment
decisions. Professor Lenburys work is thus
multidisciplinary in nature that needs participation
of researchers from several overlapping fields. Her
research team involves mathematicians, physicists,
physiologists and medical scientists from several
institutions both in Thailand and abroad. Apart from
those from various departments at Mahidol
University, her team includes researchers from
Chiang Mai University, Thammasat University, King
Mongkuts Institute of Technology North Bangkok,
Burapha University, Bangkok Heart Hospital,
Silpakorn University, Vanderbilt University, CNR IASI
Laboratorio di Biomatematica in Italy, and so on.
Her effort has yielded over 60 publications in
international journals, some of which are in the
Science Directs lists of top 25 hottest articles in
the respective journals.

25

.
.



20 60

(continuous bioreactors)
.
(product)
geometric field variation product

24

The third area of her research interest is on


the dynamical modeling of nonlinear systems in
ecology and environmental science. Extending
from the basic population model and that of a
predator-prey system, several important factors were
incorporated to discover their impacts, such as the
impact of toxic substances in the environment, impact
of migration, that of parasitic infection, or that of
delays in reproduction rate, on the stability of the
system or survival of the species. This type of
research provides valuable information for decision
or public policy makers who set regulations and
laws on the management and conservation of the
environment in parallel with economic and industrial
growth of this nation.
All the above research work involves
discovering and utilizing novel methodologies for
the analysis of complicated model systems, such
as nonlinear system theory, singular perturbation
theory, bifurcation theory, computational techniques,
control theory, knots theory, fixed point theory,
incorporation of time delays and stochastic

processes, which have to be applied to appropriate


model systems under study. Such research work,
apart from allowing us to better understand the
systems of interest, also enhances our ability to
diagnose, control and make life saving treatment
decisions. Professor Lenburys work is thus
multidisciplinary in nature that needs participation
of researchers from several overlapping fields. Her
research team involves mathematicians, physicists,
physiologists and medical scientists from several
institutions both in Thailand and abroad. Apart from
those from various departments at Mahidol
University, her team includes researchers from
Chiang Mai University, Thammasat University, King
Mongkuts Institute of Technology North Bangkok,
Burapha University, Bangkok Heart Hospital,
Silpakorn University, Vanderbilt University, CNR IASI
Laboratorio di Biomatematica in Italy, and so on.
Her effort has yielded over 60 publications in
international journals, some of which are in the
Science Directs lists of top 25 hottest articles in
the respective journals.

25

.
.



20 60

(continuous bioreactors)
.
(product)
geometric field variation product

26



singular perturbation




cortisol
Cushing Syndrome

cortisol testosterone
cascade ()
time scale

singular perturbation


-





(electrical
activity)

(bursts)

(chaotic)

(activated)



chaotic
(initial condition)



insulin
supplement


(bone resorption)

(bone mass)

(osteoporosis)

27


neural
cells




(patterns) receptors
signaling hormone


patterns receptors









(target) (bypass graft)
atherosclerosis

/

osteoclastic cells osteoblastic cells


(PTH)

PTH bone mass
bone loss
estrogen supplements
supplement

26



singular perturbation




cortisol
Cushing Syndrome

cortisol testosterone
cascade ()
time scale

singular perturbation


-





(electrical
activity)

(bursts)

(chaotic)

(activated)



chaotic
(initial condition)



insulin
supplement


(bone resorption)

(bone mass)

(osteoporosis)

27


neural
cells




(patterns) receptors
signaling hormone


patterns receptors









(target) (bypass graft)
atherosclerosis

/

osteoclastic cells osteoblastic cells


(PTH)

PTH bone mass
bone loss
estrogen supplements
supplement

28


geometry

HIV


(food chain)


(migration)
(delay)

(cascade) (population
model) -
singular perturbation analysis








harvest

(delay)

(persistence)

Hopf bifurcation, -limit
sets, knots theory fixed point theory






(strategic models)

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.

2550

.

(pure mathematics)

A note on the
almost sure approximation of the empirical process of weekly dependent random vectors, Yokohama
Math. J. 32 (1984)
kernel density estimator Gaussian process

Uniform laws of the iterated logarithm for Lipschitz classes of
functions, Acta Sci. Math. 50 (1986)
(best possible result)

Rings in which additive mappings are multiplicative, Studia Sci. Math. Hungar. 22 (1987)
On modules whose singular subgenerated modules are weekly injective, Alg. Colloquium, 8 (2001)

29

28


geometry

HIV


(food chain)


(migration)
(delay)

(cascade) (population
model) -
singular perturbation analysis








harvest

(delay)

(persistence)

Hopf bifurcation, -limit
sets, knots theory fixed point theory






(strategic models)

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.

2550

.

(pure mathematics)

A note on the
almost sure approximation of the empirical process of weekly dependent random vectors, Yokohama
Math. J. 32 (1984)
kernel density estimator Gaussian process

Uniform laws of the iterated logarithm for Lipschitz classes of
functions, Acta Sci. Math. 50 (1986)
(best possible result)

Rings in which additive mappings are multiplicative, Studia Sci. Math. Hungar. 22 (1987)
On modules whose singular subgenerated modules are weekly injective, Alg. Colloquium, 8 (2001)

29

30

(fixed point theory) .



generalized Jordan-von Neumann constant generalized James constant
C. Yang F. Wang
On estimates of the generalized Jordan-von Neumann constant on Banach spaces
(J. Inequality in Pure and Applied Math., 7 (2006)) A new geometric constant related to von
Neumann-Jordan constant (JMAA, 324 (2006) .
( uniform normal structure)
Gao Lao (1991) Kato, Maligranda Takachi (2001)
(conjecture) 4 2

.

.




.
20

.
.
2550

31

.. 2550

27 2491 4 8
.

.. 2516
.. 2518
.. 2521
.. 2525

.. ()
.. ()
M.Sc. (Mathematics) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
Ph.D. (Mathematics) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,


.. 2515
.. 2525
.. 2526
.. 2529
.. 2532

30

(fixed point theory) .



generalized Jordan-von Neumann constant generalized James constant
C. Yang F. Wang
On estimates of the generalized Jordan-von Neumann constant on Banach spaces
(J. Inequality in Pure and Applied Math., 7 (2006)) A new geometric constant related to von
Neumann-Jordan constant (JMAA, 324 (2006) .
( uniform normal structure)
Gao Lao (1991) Kato, Maligranda Takachi (2001)
(conjecture) 4 2

.

.




.
20

.
.
2550

31

.. 2550

27 2491 4 8
.

.. 2516
.. 2518
.. 2521
.. 2525

.. ()
.. ()
M.Sc. (Mathematics) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
Ph.D. (Mathematics) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,


.. 2515
.. 2525
.. 2526
.. 2529
.. 2532

32

.. 2526
.. 2530
.. 2532
.. 2534
.. 2536
.. 2540

1. Analysis, Probability, Topology and Algebra


2.
3.

4.

5.
6. (reviewer) Mathematical Reviews
7. Ladkrabang Information
8. EAST WEST JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICS
9. (mentor) Module Theory Universal
Algebra Functional Analysis Mathematical Engineering
10. Intelligence
Technology
11. Journal of Scientific Research
12. Journal of Inequality in Pure and Applied Mathematics

13. Journal of Applied Mathematics and Stochastic Analysis

14. Computers and Mathematics with Applications


15. FILOMAT
16. Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications
17. Special Issue of the Journal of Information Science
18. JP Journal of Fixed Point Theory and Applications

.. 2543
.. 2548

(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(...)

.. 2518 - 2525
.. 2520 - 2525
.. 2530 - 2531

..
University of Illinois
Duetscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD)
the University of Bonn

.. 2541 - 2544
.. 2539 - 2546
.. 2547 - 2550
.. 2549 - 2551
.. 2550 - 2552
.. 2550 - 2551

(.) Investigating the structure of


rings and modules by means of relative injectivity and projectivity
(.) Fixed point property in Banach
spaces
(.) Geometry of Banach spaces in
hyperconvex fixed point theory
(.) Fixed point theory in Banach
spaces and Metric spaces
(.) Fixed point theorems in Banach
spaces and Banach algebras
(.) Franco-Thai
Cooperation Program in Higher Education and Research Year 2007

.. 2549
.. 2550

the 4th International Conference on Intelligent


Technologies (Intech 2003) 17-19 2546
the 8th International Conference on Fixed Point
Theory and Its Applications 16-22 2550

33

32

.. 2526
.. 2530
.. 2532
.. 2534
.. 2536
.. 2540

1. Analysis, Probability, Topology and Algebra


2.
3.

4.

5.
6. (reviewer) Mathematical Reviews
7. Ladkrabang Information
8. EAST WEST JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICS
9. (mentor) Module Theory Universal
Algebra Functional Analysis Mathematical Engineering
10. Intelligence
Technology
11. Journal of Scientific Research
12. Journal of Inequality in Pure and Applied Mathematics

13. Journal of Applied Mathematics and Stochastic Analysis

14. Computers and Mathematics with Applications


15. FILOMAT
16. Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications
17. Special Issue of the Journal of Information Science
18. JP Journal of Fixed Point Theory and Applications

.. 2543
.. 2548

(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(..)
(...)

.. 2518 - 2525
.. 2520 - 2525
.. 2530 - 2531

..
University of Illinois
Duetscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD)
the University of Bonn

.. 2541 - 2544
.. 2539 - 2546
.. 2547 - 2550
.. 2549 - 2551
.. 2550 - 2552
.. 2550 - 2551

(.) Investigating the structure of


rings and modules by means of relative injectivity and projectivity
(.) Fixed point property in Banach
spaces
(.) Geometry of Banach spaces in
hyperconvex fixed point theory
(.) Fixed point theory in Banach
spaces and Metric spaces
(.) Fixed point theorems in Banach
spaces and Banach algebras
(.) Franco-Thai
Cooperation Program in Higher Education and Research Year 2007

.. 2549
.. 2550

the 4th International Conference on Intelligent


Technologies (Intech 2003) 17-19 2546
the 8th International Conference on Fixed Point
Theory and Its Applications 16-22 2550

33

SCHOLARSHIP

1975 - 1982

34

1977 - 1982
1987 - 1988

CURRICULUM
VITAE
Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa
DATE OF BIRTH

27 September 1948

PLACE OF BIRTH

Bangkok

MARITAL STATUS

Married to Assistant Professor Dr. Gullaya Dhompongsa

OFFICE ADDRESS

Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University,


Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand Tel: (053) 943327 ext 138 Fax: (053) 892280
E-mail: sompongd@chiangmai.ac.th

HOME ADDRESS

133/241, Darawadee Housing Area, Chiang Mai Hangdong Road, Chiang


Mai 50100

PROFESSIONAL
EMPLOYMENT

1972
1982
1983
1986
1989

Mathematics Instructor, Ubon Ratchathani Teachers College


Mathematics Lecturer, Chiang Mai University
Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Chiang Mai University
Associate Professor of Mathematics, Chiang Mai University
Professor of Mathematics, Chiang Mai University

EDUCATION

1973
1975
1978
1982

B.Sc. (Mathematics), Srinakharinwirot University


M.Ed. (Mathematics), Srinakharinwirot University
M.Sc. (Mathematics), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.
Ph.D. (Mathematics), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.

ACADEMIC AND
RESEARCH
ACTIVITIES

Royal Thai Government Scholarship to study


Ph.D. in Mathematics
University of Illinois Teaching Assistantship
Duetscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD)
for a study visit at the University of Bonn, FRG.

1. Teaching for graduate students and Ph.D. candidates: Analysis,


Probability, Topology and Algebra.
2. Directing Masters thesis in many areas.
3. Committee member on various academic promotion committee for
evaluation of work submitted for an assistant, associate and professor
status.
4. Ph.D. dissertation committee member, Department of Mathematics,
Chulalongkorn University, Naresuan University and Suranaree University
of Technology.
5. Invited speaker, lecturer at symposiums, conferences or seminars held
at various institutions in the country and abroad.
6. Invited reviewer for Mathematical Reviews.
7. Editor of Ladkrabang Information Journal.
8. Executive editor of the East West Journal of Mathematics.
9. Serving as a mentor for postdoctoral students in various areas: Module
Theory, Universal Algebra, Functional Analysis, Mathematical Engineering.
10. Organizing international conferences both in mathematics and applied
mathematics for Intelligence Technology.
11. Referee for the Journal of Scientific Research, Chulalongkorn University,
Thailand.
12. Referee for the Journal of Inequality in Pure and Applied Mathematics,
Victoria, Australia.
13. Referee for the Journal of Applied Mathematics and Stochastic
Analysis, Florida, USA.
14. Referee for the Computers and Mathematics with Applications, USA.
15. Referee for the FILOMAT, Yugoslavia.

35

SCHOLARSHIP

1975 - 1982

34

1977 - 1982
1987 - 1988

CURRICULUM
VITAE
Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa
DATE OF BIRTH

27 September 1948

PLACE OF BIRTH

Bangkok

MARITAL STATUS

Married to Assistant Professor Dr. Gullaya Dhompongsa

OFFICE ADDRESS

Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University,


Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand Tel: (053) 943327 ext 138 Fax: (053) 892280
E-mail: sompongd@chiangmai.ac.th

HOME ADDRESS

133/241, Darawadee Housing Area, Chiang Mai Hangdong Road, Chiang


Mai 50100

PROFESSIONAL
EMPLOYMENT

1972
1982
1983
1986
1989

Mathematics Instructor, Ubon Ratchathani Teachers College


Mathematics Lecturer, Chiang Mai University
Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Chiang Mai University
Associate Professor of Mathematics, Chiang Mai University
Professor of Mathematics, Chiang Mai University

EDUCATION

1973
1975
1978
1982

B.Sc. (Mathematics), Srinakharinwirot University


M.Ed. (Mathematics), Srinakharinwirot University
M.Sc. (Mathematics), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.
Ph.D. (Mathematics), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.

ACADEMIC AND
RESEARCH
ACTIVITIES

Royal Thai Government Scholarship to study


Ph.D. in Mathematics
University of Illinois Teaching Assistantship
Duetscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD)
for a study visit at the University of Bonn, FRG.

1. Teaching for graduate students and Ph.D. candidates: Analysis,


Probability, Topology and Algebra.
2. Directing Masters thesis in many areas.
3. Committee member on various academic promotion committee for
evaluation of work submitted for an assistant, associate and professor
status.
4. Ph.D. dissertation committee member, Department of Mathematics,
Chulalongkorn University, Naresuan University and Suranaree University
of Technology.
5. Invited speaker, lecturer at symposiums, conferences or seminars held
at various institutions in the country and abroad.
6. Invited reviewer for Mathematical Reviews.
7. Editor of Ladkrabang Information Journal.
8. Executive editor of the East West Journal of Mathematics.
9. Serving as a mentor for postdoctoral students in various areas: Module
Theory, Universal Algebra, Functional Analysis, Mathematical Engineering.
10. Organizing international conferences both in mathematics and applied
mathematics for Intelligence Technology.
11. Referee for the Journal of Scientific Research, Chulalongkorn University,
Thailand.
12. Referee for the Journal of Inequality in Pure and Applied Mathematics,
Victoria, Australia.
13. Referee for the Journal of Applied Mathematics and Stochastic
Analysis, Florida, USA.
14. Referee for the Computers and Mathematics with Applications, USA.
15. Referee for the FILOMAT, Yugoslavia.

35

36

ACADEMIC AND
RESEARCH
ACTIVITIES

16. Referee for the Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications, USA.
17. Co-editor of the special issue of the Journal of Information Science,USA.
18. Editor of the JP Journal of Fixed Point Theory and Applications,
Allahabad, India.

RESEARCH GRANTS

1998 - 2001

2000 - 2003
2004 - 2007
2006 - 2008
2007 - 2009
2007 - 2008

PROFESSIONAL
ACTIVITIES

2003

2004
2007

2007
2007

The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG/11/2541,


Investigating the structure of rings and modules by means
of relative injectivity and projectivity
The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG/01/2544, Fixed
point property in Banach spaces
The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG4780013,
Geometry of Banach spaces in Hyperconvex fixed point theory
The Commission on Higher Education, Fixed Point Theory
in Banach spaces and Metric spaces
The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG4780013, Fixed
Point Theorems in Banach spaces and Banach algebras
The Commission on Higher Education and the French
Embassy, Franco-Thai Cooperation Program in Higher
Education and Research Year 2007
Conference Organization Secretariat, the 4th International
Conference on Intelligent Technologies (Intech 2003), Chiang
Mai, Thailand, December 17-19, 2003
Project Director, Mathematics for Gifted Students in Northern
Thailand
General Chair, the 8th International Conference on fixed
point theory and its applications, Chiang Mai, Thailand,
July 16-22, 2007
Project Director, Mathematics for High Ability Students,
Municipal School 6, Chiang Rai Province
Project Director, Center of Excellence in Mathematics,
Chiang Mai University

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

1.

S. Dhompongsa, A note on almost sure approximation of empirical


process of weakly dependent random vectors, Yokohama Math. J.,
34 (1984), 113-121.
2. S. Dhompongsa, Uniform laws of the iterated logarithm for Lipschitz
classes of functions, Acta Scient. Math. Szeged., 50 (1986), 105-124.
3. S. Dhompongsa, Almost sure invariance principle for the
multivariate empirical process of lacunary sequences, Acta Math.
Hungar., 49 (1986), 83-102.
4. S. Dhompongsa and J. Sanwong, Rings in which additiv e
mappings are multiplicative, Studia Scientiarium Math. Hungar., 22
(1987), 357-359.
5. S. Dhompongsa, Labelling theorem on lattices in [0,1]2, Science J.,
Srinakharinwirot Univ., 6 (1990), 7-10.
6. N.V. Sanh and S. Dhompongsa, On modules of finite length,Comm.
Algebra, 25 (1997), 2301-2309.
7. N.V. Sanh , S. Dhompongsa, and J. Sanwong, On generalized
q.f.d. modules and rings, Proceedings of ICAC, 97, Springer-Verlag,
Hongkong, 1997.
8. N.V. Sanh , K.P. Shum, S. Dhompongsa, and, S. Wongwai, On quasiprincipally injective modules, Algebra Colloquium, 6 (1999),
269-276.
9. N.V. Sanh , S. Dhompongsa, and P. Jantagan, On weak CS-modules,
Proceedings of the Conference on General Algebra and Discrete
Mathematics, Postdam 1998, Shaker Verlag, 1999, 175-180.
10. S. Dhompongsa, Equivalence of the properties and (NUC) in
Orlicz spaces, Comment. Math., 41 (2000), 449-457.
11. S. Dhompongsa, Convexity properties of Nakano spaces, Science
Asia, 26 (2000), 21-31.
12. S. Dhompongsa, S. Plubtieng, J. Sanwong, and H. Tansee, On
modules whose singular subgenerated modules are weakly
injective, Algebra Colloquium, 8 (2001), 227-236.

37

36

ACADEMIC AND
RESEARCH
ACTIVITIES

16. Referee for the Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications, USA.
17. Co-editor of the special issue of the Journal of Information Science,USA.
18. Editor of the JP Journal of Fixed Point Theory and Applications,
Allahabad, India.

RESEARCH GRANTS

1998 - 2001

2000 - 2003
2004 - 2007
2006 - 2008
2007 - 2009
2007 - 2008

PROFESSIONAL
ACTIVITIES

2003

2004
2007

2007
2007

The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG/11/2541,


Investigating the structure of rings and modules by means
of relative injectivity and projectivity
The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG/01/2544, Fixed
point property in Banach spaces
The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG4780013,
Geometry of Banach spaces in Hyperconvex fixed point theory
The Commission on Higher Education, Fixed Point Theory
in Banach spaces and Metric spaces
The Thailand Research Fund, Grant BRG4780013, Fixed
Point Theorems in Banach spaces and Banach algebras
The Commission on Higher Education and the French
Embassy, Franco-Thai Cooperation Program in Higher
Education and Research Year 2007
Conference Organization Secretariat, the 4th International
Conference on Intelligent Technologies (Intech 2003), Chiang
Mai, Thailand, December 17-19, 2003
Project Director, Mathematics for Gifted Students in Northern
Thailand
General Chair, the 8th International Conference on fixed
point theory and its applications, Chiang Mai, Thailand,
July 16-22, 2007
Project Director, Mathematics for High Ability Students,
Municipal School 6, Chiang Rai Province
Project Director, Center of Excellence in Mathematics,
Chiang Mai University

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

1.

S. Dhompongsa, A note on almost sure approximation of empirical


process of weakly dependent random vectors, Yokohama Math. J.,
34 (1984), 113-121.
2. S. Dhompongsa, Uniform laws of the iterated logarithm for Lipschitz
classes of functions, Acta Scient. Math. Szeged., 50 (1986), 105-124.
3. S. Dhompongsa, Almost sure invariance principle for the
multivariate empirical process of lacunary sequences, Acta Math.
Hungar., 49 (1986), 83-102.
4. S. Dhompongsa and J. Sanwong, Rings in which additiv e
mappings are multiplicative, Studia Scientiarium Math. Hungar., 22
(1987), 357-359.
5. S. Dhompongsa, Labelling theorem on lattices in [0,1]2, Science J.,
Srinakharinwirot Univ., 6 (1990), 7-10.
6. N.V. Sanh and S. Dhompongsa, On modules of finite length,Comm.
Algebra, 25 (1997), 2301-2309.
7. N.V. Sanh , S. Dhompongsa, and J. Sanwong, On generalized
q.f.d. modules and rings, Proceedings of ICAC, 97, Springer-Verlag,
Hongkong, 1997.
8. N.V. Sanh , K.P. Shum, S. Dhompongsa, and, S. Wongwai, On quasiprincipally injective modules, Algebra Colloquium, 6 (1999),
269-276.
9. N.V. Sanh , S. Dhompongsa, and P. Jantagan, On weak CS-modules,
Proceedings of the Conference on General Algebra and Discrete
Mathematics, Postdam 1998, Shaker Verlag, 1999, 175-180.
10. S. Dhompongsa, Equivalence of the properties and (NUC) in
Orlicz spaces, Comment. Math., 41 (2000), 449-457.
11. S. Dhompongsa, Convexity properties of Nakano spaces, Science
Asia, 26 (2000), 21-31.
12. S. Dhompongsa, S. Plubtieng, J. Sanwong, and H. Tansee, On
modules whose singular subgenerated modules are weakly
injective, Algebra Colloquium, 8 (2001), 227-236.

37

38

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

13. S. Dhompongsa, V. Kreinovich, and H.T. Nguyen, Interval mathematics:


Algebraic aspects, Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference
on Intelligent Technologies, Assumption University, Bangkok, 2001,
30-39.
14. S. Dhompongsa, V. Kreinovich, and H.T. Nguyen, How to interpret
neural networks in terms of fuzzy logic?, Proceedings of the Second
Vietnam-Japan Symposium on Fuzzy Systems and Applications, Hanoi,
2001, 184-190.
15. S. Dhompongsa and H.T. Nguyen, On random sets and idempotent
probability, Proceedings of the Second Vietnam-Japan Symposium on
Fuzzy Systems and Applications, Hanoi, 2001, 199-202.
16. S. Dhompongsa and H. Tansee, The exchange property of modules
with the finite exchange property, Commun. Algebra, 31 (2003),
859-868.
17. S. Saejung and S. Dhompongsa, Extreme points in Musielak-Orlicz
sequence spaces, Acta Math. Vietnam, 7 (2002), 219-229.
18. S. Dhompongsa and S. Saejung, On some local geometry in MusielakOrlicz sequence spaces, Comment. Math., 42 (2002), 43-62.
19. S. Dhompongsa, P. Piraisaengjun, and S. Saejung, Generalized
Jordan-von Neumann constants and uniform normal structure, Bull.
Austral. Math. Soc., 67 (2003), 225-240.
20. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewkao, and S. Tasena, On a Generalized
James constant, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 285 (2003), 419-435.
21. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewkhao, and S. Saejung, Uniform smoothness
and U-convexity of -direct sums, J. Nonlin. Convex Anal., 6 (2005),
327-338.
22. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewcharoen, and A. Kaewkhao, Fixed point
property of direct sums, Nonlinear Anal., 63 (2005), e2177-e2188.
23. S. Dhompongsa and A. Kaewkhao, A note on properties that imply
the weak fixed point property, Abs. Appl. Anal., 2006, Article ID
34959, 1-12.
24. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewkhao, and B. Panyanak, Lims theorems for
multivalued mappings in CAT(0) spaces, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 312
(2005), 478-487.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

25. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewcharoen, and A. Kaewkhao, The


Dominguez-Lorenzo condition and multivalued nonexpansive
mappings, Nonlinear Anal., 64 (2006), 958-970.
26. S. Dhompongsa, T. Dominguez Benavides, A. Kaewcharoen,
A. Kaewkhao, and B. Panyanak, The Jordan-von Neumann
constants and fixed points for multivalued nonexpansive
mappings, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 320 (2006), 916-927.
27. S. Dhompongsa, T. Dominguez Benavides, A. Kaewcharoen, and
B. Panyanak, Fixed point theorems for multivalued mappings in
modular function spaces, Scientiae Mathematicae Japonica, 63
(2006) 161-169; e2006, 139-147.
28. S. Dhompongsa, W. A. Kirk, and B. Sims, Fixed points of
uniformly Lipschitzian mappings in metric space, Nonlinear Anal.,
65 (2006), 762-772.
29. N. Theera-Umpon and S. Dhompongsa, Morphological granulometric
features of nucleus in automatic bone marrow white blood cell
classification, IEEE Trans. Inform. Tech. Biomed., 11 (2006),
353-359.
30. S. Auephanwiriyakul and S. Dhompongsa, An investigation of a
linguistic perception in a nonlinear decision boundary problem,
IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence, July 2006.
31. S. Dhompongsa, W.A. Kirk, and B. Panyanak, Nonexpansive
set-valued mappings in metric and Banach spaces, J. Nonlin.
Convex Anal., 8 (2007), Number 1.
32. S. Dhompongsa and H. Yingtaweesittikul, Diametrically
contractive multivalued mappings, Fixed Point Theory and
Applications, (2007), Article ID 19745.
33. S. Dhompongsa and A. Kaewkhao, An inequality concerning the
James constant and the weakly convergent sequence coefficient,
J. Nonlin. Convex Anal., accepted.

39

38

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

13. S. Dhompongsa, V. Kreinovich, and H.T. Nguyen, Interval mathematics:


Algebraic aspects, Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference
on Intelligent Technologies, Assumption University, Bangkok, 2001,
30-39.
14. S. Dhompongsa, V. Kreinovich, and H.T. Nguyen, How to interpret
neural networks in terms of fuzzy logic?, Proceedings of the Second
Vietnam-Japan Symposium on Fuzzy Systems and Applications, Hanoi,
2001, 184-190.
15. S. Dhompongsa and H.T. Nguyen, On random sets and idempotent
probability, Proceedings of the Second Vietnam-Japan Symposium on
Fuzzy Systems and Applications, Hanoi, 2001, 199-202.
16. S. Dhompongsa and H. Tansee, The exchange property of modules
with the finite exchange property, Commun. Algebra, 31 (2003),
859-868.
17. S. Saejung and S. Dhompongsa, Extreme points in Musielak-Orlicz
sequence spaces, Acta Math. Vietnam, 7 (2002), 219-229.
18. S. Dhompongsa and S. Saejung, On some local geometry in MusielakOrlicz sequence spaces, Comment. Math., 42 (2002), 43-62.
19. S. Dhompongsa, P. Piraisaengjun, and S. Saejung, Generalized
Jordan-von Neumann constants and uniform normal structure, Bull.
Austral. Math. Soc., 67 (2003), 225-240.
20. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewkao, and S. Tasena, On a Generalized
James constant, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 285 (2003), 419-435.
21. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewkhao, and S. Saejung, Uniform smoothness
and U-convexity of -direct sums, J. Nonlin. Convex Anal., 6 (2005),
327-338.
22. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewcharoen, and A. Kaewkhao, Fixed point
property of direct sums, Nonlinear Anal., 63 (2005), e2177-e2188.
23. S. Dhompongsa and A. Kaewkhao, A note on properties that imply
the weak fixed point property, Abs. Appl. Anal., 2006, Article ID
34959, 1-12.
24. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewkhao, and B. Panyanak, Lims theorems for
multivalued mappings in CAT(0) spaces, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 312
(2005), 478-487.

LIST OF
PUBLICATIONS

25. S. Dhompongsa, A. Kaewcharoen, and A. Kaewkhao, The


Dominguez-Lorenzo condition and multivalued nonexpansive
mappings, Nonlinear Anal., 64 (2006), 958-970.
26. S. Dhompongsa, T. Dominguez Benavides, A. Kaewcharoen,
A. Kaewkhao, and B. Panyanak, The Jordan-von Neumann
constants and fixed points for multivalued nonexpansive
mappings, J. Math. Anal. Appl., 320 (2006), 916-927.
27. S. Dhompongsa, T. Dominguez Benavides, A. Kaewcharoen, and
B. Panyanak, Fixed point theorems for multivalued mappings in
modular function spaces, Scientiae Mathematicae Japonica, 63
(2006) 161-169; e2006, 139-147.
28. S. Dhompongsa, W. A. Kirk, and B. Sims, Fixed points of
uniformly Lipschitzian mappings in metric space, Nonlinear Anal.,
65 (2006), 762-772.
29. N. Theera-Umpon and S. Dhompongsa, Morphological granulometric
features of nucleus in automatic bone marrow white blood cell
classification, IEEE Trans. Inform. Tech. Biomed., 11 (2006),
353-359.
30. S. Auephanwiriyakul and S. Dhompongsa, An investigation of a
linguistic perception in a nonlinear decision boundary problem,
IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence, July 2006.
31. S. Dhompongsa, W.A. Kirk, and B. Panyanak, Nonexpansive
set-valued mappings in metric and Banach spaces, J. Nonlin.
Convex Anal., 8 (2007), Number 1.
32. S. Dhompongsa and H. Yingtaweesittikul, Diametrically
contractive multivalued mappings, Fixed Point Theory and
Applications, (2007), Article ID 19745.
33. S. Dhompongsa and A. Kaewkhao, An inequality concerning the
James constant and the weakly convergent sequence coefficient,
J. Nonlin. Convex Anal., accepted.

39

40

THE

ACHIEVEMENTS
OF

Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa

Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa was born on 27 September


1948 in Bangkok. He received his Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1982 from
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.

His research interests involve Probability


Theory, Module Theory, and Fixed Point Theory.
It can be observed throughout that most of his
works were effectively cited. For examples, since
the publication of the first two papers in probabilities: A note on the almost sure approximation of
the empirical process of weekly dependent random
vectors, Yokohama Math. J. 32 (1984) and Uniform
laws of the iterated logarithm for Lipschitz classes
of functions, Acta Sci. Math. 50 (1986), the papers
were quoted as best known result, the result
could be used to approximate the kernel density
estimator by Gaussian process, and the result
was sharp, etc., respectively. Moreover, the
results were extended to various situations, and
being cited until now.
For the last seven years, his research
concentrates on Fixed Point Theory, the subject that
calls attention from many of great mathematicians

around the world. The fixed point theory has been


studied since J. Brouwer and S. Banach leading to
several celebrated theorems such as Brouwer Fixed
Point Theorem and the principle of Banachs
Contraction Mappings. The theory is one of the
most important subjects in pure and applied
mathematics. It contributes to a variety of applications
in many fields of mathematics such as the theory
of operators, control theory, approximation theory,
and theory of equations. John von Neumann used
Brouwer fixed point theorem to prove the basic
theorem in the theory of zero-sum, two person
games. The corresponding theorem for many-person
games was proved by J.F. Nash by using the
Brouwer fixed point theorem as well. The
well-known Kakutani fixed point theorem can also
be used to prove Nashs theorem. This work would
later earn Nash a Nobel prize in Economics. Using
geometric property to study the fixed point property

41

40

THE

ACHIEVEMENTS
OF

Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa

Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa was born on 27 September


1948 in Bangkok. He received his Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1982 from
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.

His research interests involve Probability


Theory, Module Theory, and Fixed Point Theory.
It can be observed throughout that most of his
works were effectively cited. For examples, since
the publication of the first two papers in probabilities: A note on the almost sure approximation of
the empirical process of weekly dependent random
vectors, Yokohama Math. J. 32 (1984) and Uniform
laws of the iterated logarithm for Lipschitz classes
of functions, Acta Sci. Math. 50 (1986), the papers
were quoted as best known result, the result
could be used to approximate the kernel density
estimator by Gaussian process, and the result
was sharp, etc., respectively. Moreover, the
results were extended to various situations, and
being cited until now.
For the last seven years, his research
concentrates on Fixed Point Theory, the subject that
calls attention from many of great mathematicians

around the world. The fixed point theory has been


studied since J. Brouwer and S. Banach leading to
several celebrated theorems such as Brouwer Fixed
Point Theorem and the principle of Banachs
Contraction Mappings. The theory is one of the
most important subjects in pure and applied
mathematics. It contributes to a variety of applications
in many fields of mathematics such as the theory
of operators, control theory, approximation theory,
and theory of equations. John von Neumann used
Brouwer fixed point theorem to prove the basic
theorem in the theory of zero-sum, two person
games. The corresponding theorem for many-person
games was proved by J.F. Nash by using the
Brouwer fixed point theorem as well. The
well-known Kakutani fixed point theorem can also
be used to prove Nashs theorem. This work would
later earn Nash a Nobel prize in Economics. Using
geometric property to study the fixed point property

41

42

has been developed since W.A. Kirk who proved in


1965 that a Banach space with a normal structure
has weak fixed point property. In terms of normal
structure, Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa
(2003) had proved in two papers, respectively,
that if J(X)<
or CNJ (X) <
, then the
Banach space X has uniform normal structure
improving the results that had been known for some
time by Gao and Lau (1991) and by Kato, Maligranda,
and Takahashi (2001). [Gao and Lau announced
the upper bound 3/2 for J(X) while Kato et. al.
obtained the bound 5/4 for CNJ(X).] By examining
the Bynum space IP, , Professor Dhompongsa had
conjectured that the number
for J(X) is
sharp, leading many curious mathematicians [e.g.,
Gao (2006), Mazcunan (2006), Wang and Cui (2007)]
attempt to prove or disprove the conjecture. So far,
they only obtained their results making Dhompongsas
conjecture as their consequence (see Diagram I).
Up to now, the latest upper bound for CNJ(X),
obtained independently by Dhompongsa and
Kaewkhao (2006) and Saejung (2006), is
.
Professor Dhompongsa and his group introduced
the so-called a generalized Jordan-von Neumann
constant CNJ(a,X) and a generalized James constant
J (a,X) for a 0. Many new results are obtained

using these constants. For instances, since it can


be proven that every LP () space satisfies CNJ(1,LP
())<2, and, indeed, all u-spaces X satisfy CNJ(a,X)<2,
equivalently J(a,X)>2, for all a (0,2) Thus, by our
result, all these spaces have uniform normal
structure. Moreover, Professor Dhompongsa constructed
examples showing that no previous results can be
applied to them, but the new results of his group
can do so. In their two papers, Yang and Wang
improved, extended, and applied results on J(a,X)
and CNJ(a,X): On estimates of the generalized
Jordan-von Neumann constant on Banach spaces
(J. of Inequality in Pure and Applied Math., 7(1),
2006) and A new geometric constant related to
von Neumann- Jordan constant (JMAA, 324 (2006)
555-565).
By introducing a concept of relative measure
of noncompactness, Dominguez and Lorenzo (2004)
proved that every multivalued nonexpansive mapping
T:E---->KC(E) has a fixed point where E is a nonempty
bounded closed convex subset of a Banach space
X with (X)<1. When looking closely into their proof,
there is a technique which now becomes standard
in proving the existence of a fixed point. As a result,
Professor Dhompongsa and his group introduced
the so-called the Dominguez-Lorenzo condition

((DL)-condition), i.e., an inequality concerning the


asymptotic radius and the Chebyshev radius of the
asymptotic center for some types of sequences and
proved a fixed point theorem for a nonselfmultivalued
nonexpansive mapping on a Banach space which
satisfies the (DL)-condition. In fact, we prove that
the (DL)-condition implies the weak multivalued fixed
point property (w-MFPP) (i.e., every nonexpansive
mapping T:E---->KC(E) has a fixed point, where E
is a weakly compact convex subset of X). His group
also introduced another property, namely, property
(D), which is strictly weaker than the (DL)-condition,
the property that implies w-MFPP. The notion of the
(DL)-condition has been transferred into ultrafilterlanguage by Wisnicki and Wosko (2006). It is evident
that the (DL) condition and property (D) turns
out to be effective tools for the fixed point theory as
many people are finding more and more well-known

spaces satisfy these geometric properties which in


turn having the fixed point property. For instance,
see Diagram II for such the work of Dominguez and
Gavira (2007). It is an open problem that if uniform
normal structure implies the fixed point property.
Gavira (2007) shows that many properties implying
uniform normal structure also satisfy the (DL)
condition. May be we are one step closer to solve
the open problem using the (DL) condition as a
device. Gaviras results immediately give positive
answers to the questions asking if each of the
conditions J(X)
andCNJ(X)
implies
the fixed point property. Besides Banach spaces,
our research group is also working on geodesic
spaces, especially CAT(0) spaces and hyperconvex
spaces. For examples, we use the celebrated theorem of Deimling (1992) to obtain a common fixed
point for nonexpansive commuting mappings t:E---->E
and T:E---->KC(E) where E is a nonempty bounded
closed convex subset of a CAT(0) space. This work
has been extended by Shahzad et.al. (2007). One
of our fixed point theorems on CAT(0) spaces has
been extended to more mappings by Markin (2006).
The following diagrams show the significance
of the (DL)-condition and Property (D):

43

42

has been developed since W.A. Kirk who proved in


1965 that a Banach space with a normal structure
has weak fixed point property. In terms of normal
structure, Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa
(2003) had proved in two papers, respectively,
that if J(X)<
or CNJ (X) <
, then the
Banach space X has uniform normal structure
improving the results that had been known for some
time by Gao and Lau (1991) and by Kato, Maligranda,
and Takahashi (2001). [Gao and Lau announced
the upper bound 3/2 for J(X) while Kato et. al.
obtained the bound 5/4 for CNJ(X).] By examining
the Bynum space IP, , Professor Dhompongsa had
conjectured that the number
for J(X) is
sharp, leading many curious mathematicians [e.g.,
Gao (2006), Mazcunan (2006), Wang and Cui (2007)]
attempt to prove or disprove the conjecture. So far,
they only obtained their results making Dhompongsas
conjecture as their consequence (see Diagram I).
Up to now, the latest upper bound for CNJ(X),
obtained independently by Dhompongsa and
Kaewkhao (2006) and Saejung (2006), is
.
Professor Dhompongsa and his group introduced
the so-called a generalized Jordan-von Neumann
constant CNJ(a,X) and a generalized James constant
J (a,X) for a 0. Many new results are obtained

using these constants. For instances, since it can


be proven that every LP () space satisfies CNJ(1,LP
())<2, and, indeed, all u-spaces X satisfy CNJ(a,X)<2,
equivalently J(a,X)>2, for all a (0,2) Thus, by our
result, all these spaces have uniform normal
structure. Moreover, Professor Dhompongsa constructed
examples showing that no previous results can be
applied to them, but the new results of his group
can do so. In their two papers, Yang and Wang
improved, extended, and applied results on J(a,X)
and CNJ(a,X): On estimates of the generalized
Jordan-von Neumann constant on Banach spaces
(J. of Inequality in Pure and Applied Math., 7(1),
2006) and A new geometric constant related to
von Neumann- Jordan constant (JMAA, 324 (2006)
555-565).
By introducing a concept of relative measure
of noncompactness, Dominguez and Lorenzo (2004)
proved that every multivalued nonexpansive mapping
T:E---->KC(E) has a fixed point where E is a nonempty
bounded closed convex subset of a Banach space
X with (X)<1. When looking closely into their proof,
there is a technique which now becomes standard
in proving the existence of a fixed point. As a result,
Professor Dhompongsa and his group introduced
the so-called the Dominguez-Lorenzo condition

((DL)-condition), i.e., an inequality concerning the


asymptotic radius and the Chebyshev radius of the
asymptotic center for some types of sequences and
proved a fixed point theorem for a nonselfmultivalued
nonexpansive mapping on a Banach space which
satisfies the (DL)-condition. In fact, we prove that
the (DL)-condition implies the weak multivalued fixed
point property (w-MFPP) (i.e., every nonexpansive
mapping T:E---->KC(E) has a fixed point, where E
is a weakly compact convex subset of X). His group
also introduced another property, namely, property
(D), which is strictly weaker than the (DL)-condition,
the property that implies w-MFPP. The notion of the
(DL)-condition has been transferred into ultrafilterlanguage by Wisnicki and Wosko (2006). It is evident
that the (DL) condition and property (D) turns
out to be effective tools for the fixed point theory as
many people are finding more and more well-known

spaces satisfy these geometric properties which in


turn having the fixed point property. For instance,
see Diagram II for such the work of Dominguez and
Gavira (2007). It is an open problem that if uniform
normal structure implies the fixed point property.
Gavira (2007) shows that many properties implying
uniform normal structure also satisfy the (DL)
condition. May be we are one step closer to solve
the open problem using the (DL) condition as a
device. Gaviras results immediately give positive
answers to the questions asking if each of the
conditions J(X)
andCNJ(X)
implies
the fixed point property. Besides Banach spaces,
our research group is also working on geodesic
spaces, especially CAT(0) spaces and hyperconvex
spaces. For examples, we use the celebrated theorem of Deimling (1992) to obtain a common fixed
point for nonexpansive commuting mappings t:E---->E
and T:E---->KC(E) where E is a nonempty bounded
closed convex subset of a CAT(0) space. This work
has been extended by Shahzad et.al. (2007). One
of our fixed point theorems on CAT(0) spaces has
been extended to more mappings by Markin (2006).
The following diagrams show the significance
of the (DL)-condition and Property (D):

43

44

.

(existence)
(fixed point theory)



Theory of
Operators, Control Theory, Theory of Equations, Mathematical Economics
Brower Fixed Point Theorem The Principle of Banachs Contraction
Mappings J. Brower S. Banach .. 1912 .. 1922

(mapping) contraction (nonexpansive
mapping) .. 1965 W.A. Kirk (closed
convex and bounded subset) (reflexive Banach space) normal
structure (geometric property) (sufficient condition)
normal structure

(fixed point property)



(valuable citation)


.

(geometric
property)
uniform
normal structure


(DL) (D)




..






(.)

(.)

45

44

.

(existence)
(fixed point theory)



Theory of
Operators, Control Theory, Theory of Equations, Mathematical Economics
Brower Fixed Point Theorem The Principle of Banachs Contraction
Mappings J. Brower S. Banach .. 1912 .. 1922

(mapping) contraction (nonexpansive
mapping) .. 1965 W.A. Kirk (closed
convex and bounded subset) (reflexive Banach space) normal
structure (geometric property) (sufficient condition)
normal structure

(fixed point property)



(valuable citation)


.

(geometric
property)
uniform
normal structure


(DL) (D)




..






(.)

(.)

45

46

47

.. 2550
Chalermchon Satirapod, Ph.D.
.
12 .. 2516

. ()
..
.


.


..

School of Surveying and


Information Systems
Professor Chris Rizos Dr. Jinling
Wang



2 .. 2544
Satellite Navigation and
Positioning Symposium (SATNAV)
International Technical Meeting of
the Institute of Navigation (ION)

.. 2545 .




.. 2545-2546,

(.) .. 2546-2547,
.. 2546-2548

.. 2547-2550
(.), 2
.. 2546-2547 ..
2548-2549, South-East Asia:
Mastering Environmental Research with GEodetic
Space Techniques (SEAMERGES) ASEAN-EU
University Network Program (AUNP) ..
2547-2549
.. 2549-2551
.


.


,

,

,

26 2547

.

.

4 .. 2545, 2546, 2548 2549


2
.. 2547 2548
SEAMERGES final symposium
.
Survey
Review, Journal of Surveying Engineering (ASCE),
IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology
International Journal of Geoinformatics

46

47

.. 2550
Chalermchon Satirapod, Ph.D.
.
12 .. 2516

. ()
..
.


.


..

School of Surveying and


Information Systems
Professor Chris Rizos Dr. Jinling
Wang



2 .. 2544
Satellite Navigation and
Positioning Symposium (SATNAV)
International Technical Meeting of
the Institute of Navigation (ION)

.. 2545 .




.. 2545-2546,

(.) .. 2546-2547,
.. 2546-2548

.. 2547-2550
(.), 2
.. 2546-2547 ..
2548-2549, South-East Asia:
Mastering Environmental Research with GEodetic
Space Techniques (SEAMERGES) ASEAN-EU
University Network Program (AUNP) ..
2547-2549
.. 2549-2551
.


.


,

,

,

26 2547

.

.

4 .. 2545, 2546, 2548 2549


2
.. 2547 2548
SEAMERGES final symposium
.
Survey
Review, Journal of Surveying Engineering (ASCE),
IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology
International Journal of Geoinformatics

48

Dr. Chalermchon Satirapod was born on


the 12th of August 1973. He is the elder son of
Mr. Pravit Satirapod and Mrs. Buchita Polsawang.
Dr. Chalermchon married to Mrs. Yaowarat
(Wisutmethangoon) Satirapod, and has one boy
named Maethud Satirapod. He finished high school
from Montfort College and received a bachelor
degree in survey engineering from Faculty of
Engineering, Chulalongkorn University. After that, he
joined the Department of Survey Engineering,
Chulalongkorn University as a lecturer and continued
his master degree study in survey engineering
at Chulalongkorn University. Working under
the supervision of Assoc.Prof.Dr. Chugiat
Wichiencharoen, he did his master research on
Global Positioning System (GPS) surveying.
After finishing his master degree, he received
a scholarship from Chulalongkorn University to
pursue his Ph.D. studies at the School of Surveying
and Information Systems, The University of New
South Wales, Australia, working under the supervision
of Professor Chris Rizos and Dr. Jinling Wang. His
Ph.D. research focuses on the development of new
GPS data processing technique for high precision
positioning applications. During his Ph.D. studies,

he was encouraged by his supervisors to give


presentations at international conferences and
published a number of international journal papers.
He has received two best student paper awards at
the Satellite Navigation and Positioning symposium
(SATNAV) 2001 in Australia and the International
Technical Meeting of the Institute of Navigation (ION)
2001 in U.S.A., respectively.
After the completion of his Ph.D. studies in
early 2002, Dr. Satirapod has been back to work as
a lecturer at the Department of Survey Engineering,
Chulalongkorn University. Since then, he has been
actively involved in a number of GPS related
research projects. He has received several research
funds, for example, Ratchadaphisek Somphot
Endowment Grants for Development of New Faculty
Staff from Chulalongkorn University (2002-2003),
Development in Geo-Informatics research grant
(2003-2004) from the Geo-Informatics and Space
Technology Development Agency (GISTDA), the new
researcher grant (2003-2005) and the Development
of an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) research grant
(2004-2007) from The Thailand Research Fund (TRF),
Ratchadaphisek Somphot Endowment Grants for
Invention from Chulalongkorn University (2003-2004

49

and 2005-2006), South-East Asia: Mastering


Environmental Research with GEodetic Space
Techniques (SEAMERGES) research project
(2004-2006) from the ASEAN-EU University Network
Program (AUNP) and Research Grant (2006-2008)
from Chulalongkorn Unisearch.
Dr. Satirapod is currently a member of the
Geo-Image Technology Research Unit funded by
Chulalongkorn University. Examples of his research
topics are A New Stochastic Modelling Procedure
for Precise Static GPS Positioning, Comparing
different GPS data processing techniques for
modeling residual systematic errors, Multipath
Mitigation By Wavelet Analysis for GPS Base
Station Applications, GPS Precise Point Positioning
Software for Ground Control Point Establishment in
Remote Sensing Applications, Application of GPS in
Determining Integrated Water Vapour (IWV) in
Thailand, and Deformation of Thailand as detected
by GPS measurements due to the December 26th,
2004 mega-thrust Earthquake.
Most of his works have been published in the
well-known peer reviewed international journals in

the field of GPS and Surveying. He has received


several awards as follows: the best paper presentations
at the National Conference on Mapping and
Geo-Informatics in years 2002, 2003, 2005 and 2006,
Quality Research awards for years 2004 and 2005
from Chulalongkorn University and the 3rd prize poster
award at the SEAMERGES final symposium. In
addition, Dr. Satirapod has been invited by several
prestigious international journals, i.e., Survey Review,
Journal of Surveying Engineering (ASCE), IEEE
Transactions on Control Systems Technology and
International Journal of Geoinformatics, to serve as
manuscript reviewer.

48

Dr. Chalermchon Satirapod was born on


the 12th of August 1973. He is the elder son of
Mr. Pravit Satirapod and Mrs. Buchita Polsawang.
Dr. Chalermchon married to Mrs. Yaowarat
(Wisutmethangoon) Satirapod, and has one boy
named Maethud Satirapod. He finished high school
from Montfort College and received a bachelor
degree in survey engineering from Faculty of
Engineering, Chulalongkorn University. After that, he
joined the Department of Survey Engineering,
Chulalongkorn University as a lecturer and continued
his master degree study in survey engineering
at Chulalongkorn University. Working under
the supervision of Assoc.Prof.Dr. Chugiat
Wichiencharoen, he did his master research on
Global Positioning System (GPS) surveying.
After finishing his master degree, he received
a scholarship from Chulalongkorn University to
pursue his Ph.D. studies at the School of Surveying
and Information Systems, The University of New
South Wales, Australia, working under the supervision
of Professor Chris Rizos and Dr. Jinling Wang. His
Ph.D. research focuses on the development of new
GPS data processing technique for high precision
positioning applications. During his Ph.D. studies,

he was encouraged by his supervisors to give


presentations at international conferences and
published a number of international journal papers.
He has received two best student paper awards at
the Satellite Navigation and Positioning symposium
(SATNAV) 2001 in Australia and the International
Technical Meeting of the Institute of Navigation (ION)
2001 in U.S.A., respectively.
After the completion of his Ph.D. studies in
early 2002, Dr. Satirapod has been back to work as
a lecturer at the Department of Survey Engineering,
Chulalongkorn University. Since then, he has been
actively involved in a number of GPS related
research projects. He has received several research
funds, for example, Ratchadaphisek Somphot
Endowment Grants for Development of New Faculty
Staff from Chulalongkorn University (2002-2003),
Development in Geo-Informatics research grant
(2003-2004) from the Geo-Informatics and Space
Technology Development Agency (GISTDA), the new
researcher grant (2003-2005) and the Development
of an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) research grant
(2004-2007) from The Thailand Research Fund (TRF),
Ratchadaphisek Somphot Endowment Grants for
Invention from Chulalongkorn University (2003-2004

49

and 2005-2006), South-East Asia: Mastering


Environmental Research with GEodetic Space
Techniques (SEAMERGES) research project
(2004-2006) from the ASEAN-EU University Network
Program (AUNP) and Research Grant (2006-2008)
from Chulalongkorn Unisearch.
Dr. Satirapod is currently a member of the
Geo-Image Technology Research Unit funded by
Chulalongkorn University. Examples of his research
topics are A New Stochastic Modelling Procedure
for Precise Static GPS Positioning, Comparing
different GPS data processing techniques for
modeling residual systematic errors, Multipath
Mitigation By Wavelet Analysis for GPS Base
Station Applications, GPS Precise Point Positioning
Software for Ground Control Point Establishment in
Remote Sensing Applications, Application of GPS in
Determining Integrated Water Vapour (IWV) in
Thailand, and Deformation of Thailand as detected
by GPS measurements due to the December 26th,
2004 mega-thrust Earthquake.
Most of his works have been published in the
well-known peer reviewed international journals in

the field of GPS and Surveying. He has received


several awards as follows: the best paper presentations
at the National Conference on Mapping and
Geo-Informatics in years 2002, 2003, 2005 and 2006,
Quality Research awards for years 2004 and 2005
from Chulalongkorn University and the 3rd prize poster
award at the SEAMERGES final symposium. In
addition, Dr. Satirapod has been invited by several
prestigious international journals, i.e., Survey Review,
Journal of Surveying Engineering (ASCE), IEEE
Transactions on Control Systems Technology and
International Journal of Geoinformatics, to serve as
manuscript reviewer.

50

.. 2550
Navadol Laosiripojana, Ph.D.
.
26 .. 2521

1 ..
.. ()
.


..
2542
Imperial College London

British
Council Rolls-Royce



Professor David Chadwick
.. 2546 .

..
..

.. 2547-2549 .

(.) . .

.
. .. 2548

.
.

(.) .. 2549
. .

Gas-to-Liquid (GTL)
Dimethyl Ether (DME) Biomassto-Liquid (BTL)



Fischer-Tropsch

.
.

.
.
Applied Catalysis B: Environmental,
Applied Catalysis A: General, Journal of Power
Sources, Chemical Engineering Science, Chemical
Engineering Journal, Fuel
.
26 5
ScienceDirect Top 25 hottest

articles .. 2548-2549 2
( Applied Catalysis
B: Environmental) 1 2548 - 2549
.

Chemical
Engineering Science, Applied Catalysis B:
Environmental, Fuel Cells, Catalysis Today
Autothermal
Reforming .
Encyclopedia of Electrochemical Power Sources
Elsevier
.

.
()

Rayong
Olefines Company Limited ()

.


(.)
(.)

(.)
.


(.)

51

50

.. 2550
Navadol Laosiripojana, Ph.D.
.
26 .. 2521

1 ..
.. ()
.


..
2542
Imperial College London

British
Council Rolls-Royce



Professor David Chadwick
.. 2546 .

..
..

.. 2547-2549 .

(.) . .

.
. .. 2548

.
.

(.) .. 2549
. .

Gas-to-Liquid (GTL)
Dimethyl Ether (DME) Biomassto-Liquid (BTL)



Fischer-Tropsch

.
.

.
.
Applied Catalysis B: Environmental,
Applied Catalysis A: General, Journal of Power
Sources, Chemical Engineering Science, Chemical
Engineering Journal, Fuel
.
26 5
ScienceDirect Top 25 hottest

articles .. 2548-2549 2
( Applied Catalysis
B: Environmental) 1 2548 - 2549
.

Chemical
Engineering Science, Applied Catalysis B:
Environmental, Fuel Cells, Catalysis Today
Autothermal
Reforming .
Encyclopedia of Electrochemical Power Sources
Elsevier
.

.
()

Rayong
Olefines Company Limited ()

.


(.)
(.)

(.)
.


(.)

51

52

Dr. Navadol Laosiripojana was born on 26th


June 1978 in Bangkok, Thailand. He is the son of
Mr. Songyos and Mrs. Navarut Laosiripojana,
having one sister namely Ms. Pensuda Laosiripojana
and is married with Dr. Weerawan (Sutthisripok)
Laosiripojana.
Dr. Laosiripojana finished high school from
Saint Gabriels College and received the B.Eng.
degree in Chemical Engineering from the Department
of Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering,
Chulalongkorn University in 1999. Under the financial
support from his parents and later be awarded the
scholarship and researchship supports by the
British Council and Rolls-Royce (UK), he received
the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees from the Department
of Chemical Engineering and Chemical Technology,
Imperial College London (UK) under supervision of
Professor David Chadwick. His M.Sc. and Ph.D.
researches mainly focused on the development of
novel reforming catalysts to produce hydrogen from
methane for later utilization in Solid Oxide Fuel
Cell (SOFC). After finished his Ph.D. in 2003,
Dr. Laosiripojana started his work at the Joint
Graduate School of Energy and Environment
(JGSEE), King Mongkuts University of Technology
Thonburi in the Energy Division under supervision of
Assoc.Prof.Dr. Bundit Fungtammasan, the Director,
and Asst. Prof.Dr. Chumnong Sorapipatana, the Head
of Division.
During the year 2004-2006, Dr. Laosiripojana
received the postdoctoral research grant from The
Thailand Research Fund (TRF) under supervision of
Assoc.Prof.Dr. Suttichai Assabumrungrat as the
mentor, and from the research outputs of this
grant, he received the 2005 Outstanding Young
Researcher Award together with the Outstanding
Poster Presentation Award from TRF in the year

2005. Currently, Dr. Laosiripojana has been granting


the research scholar scheme from TRF. Under the
close collaboration with Dr. Assabumrungrat, their
research interests related to the production of several
alternative fuels, i.e., synthesis gas, hydrogen, Gasto-Liquid (GTL), Dimethyl Ether (DME), Biomass-toLiquid (BTL) and biodiesel from available feedstock
in Thailand by focusing on the development and
testing of several nanoscale catalysts, i.e., ceria-based
catalysts toward various reactions, i.e., reforming with
steam, carbon dioxide, and air, Fischer-Tropsch (FT),
dehydration, and esterification reactions. In addition,
they have also been working on the design and
construction of the chemical reactor for alternative
fuel production as well as the development of
mathematical model for predicting the behaviors in
several chemical systems. Apart from above works,
Dr. Laosiripojana also has the research collaborations
with Dr. Sumittra Charojrochkul from National Metal
and Materials Technology Center (MTEC) to
develop the Solid Oxide Fuel Cell system fueled by
ethanol, methanol, and biogas and with Dr. Verawat
Champreda from National Center for Genetic
Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC) to develop
the process to convert various biomasses to liquid
fuels.

According to the research achievements, the


research works from Dr. Laosiripojana and Dr.
Assabumrungrat have been published in several
international journals, e.g., Applied Catalysis B:
Environmental, Applied Catalysis A: General, Journal
of Power Sources, Chemical Engineering Science,
Chemical Engineering Journal, and Fuel. Until now,
Dr. Laosirpojana has already published 26 articles
in several international journals. In addition, 5
articles are in the list of ScienceDirect Top 25 hottest
articles during the year 2005-2006, and 2 of
them in which published in Applied Catalysis
B: Environmental are in the first rank during JulySeptember 2005 and April-June 2006, respectively.
Recently, he also has experiences in article reviewing
with some international journals, e.g., Chemical
Engineering Science, Applied Catalysis B:
Environmental, Fuel Cells, and Catalysis Today. In
addition, he is one of the contributors, along with
Dr. Assabumrungrat, to write an article on the topic
of Autothermal Reforming in Encyclopedia of
Electrochemical Power Sources published by
Elsevier B.V.
Since the beginning of his work, Dr. Laosiripojana
has several research collaborations with both industrial
and governmental sections. He has been working

collaboratively with PTT Public Company Limited to


develop the reformer unit fueled by PTT natural gas
and, recently, to test the performance of absorbents
for mercury removal from natural gas. He has also
worked with Rayong Olefines Company Limited (Siam
Cement Group) to test the regenerated conditions
for the company spent absorbents. According to his
work with the governmental section, he has been
working as a part of the Thailand energy policy
research project under financial supported by The
Thailand Research Fund (TRF) and the Energy Policy
& Planning Office (EPPO), Ministry of Energy. Also,
he has been involved in the consultant project from
the Department of Alternative Energy Development
and Efficiency (DEDE), Ministry of Energy, for
promoting the use of renewable energies in Thailand.
Furthermore, he was recently one of the contributors
in writing the books Fuels and Fuel Technologies in
Thailand: Current Status and Recommendations for
the Future organized by the National Metal and
Materials Technology Center (MTEC) in the part of
hydrogen technology and Sustainable Energy
Development for Thailand organized by the Thai
Academy of Science and Technology Foundation
(TAST) in the part of alternative fuels in the near
future.

53

52

Dr. Navadol Laosiripojana was born on 26th


June 1978 in Bangkok, Thailand. He is the son of
Mr. Songyos and Mrs. Navarut Laosiripojana,
having one sister namely Ms. Pensuda Laosiripojana
and is married with Dr. Weerawan (Sutthisripok)
Laosiripojana.
Dr. Laosiripojana finished high school from
Saint Gabriels College and received the B.Eng.
degree in Chemical Engineering from the Department
of Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering,
Chulalongkorn University in 1999. Under the financial
support from his parents and later be awarded the
scholarship and researchship supports by the
British Council and Rolls-Royce (UK), he received
the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees from the Department
of Chemical Engineering and Chemical Technology,
Imperial College London (UK) under supervision of
Professor David Chadwick. His M.Sc. and Ph.D.
researches mainly focused on the development of
novel reforming catalysts to produce hydrogen from
methane for later utilization in Solid Oxide Fuel
Cell (SOFC). After finished his Ph.D. in 2003,
Dr. Laosiripojana started his work at the Joint
Graduate School of Energy and Environment
(JGSEE), King Mongkuts University of Technology
Thonburi in the Energy Division under supervision of
Assoc.Prof.Dr. Bundit Fungtammasan, the Director,
and Asst. Prof.Dr. Chumnong Sorapipatana, the Head
of Division.
During the year 2004-2006, Dr. Laosiripojana
received the postdoctoral research grant from The
Thailand Research Fund (TRF) under supervision of
Assoc.Prof.Dr. Suttichai Assabumrungrat as the
mentor, and from the research outputs of this
grant, he received the 2005 Outstanding Young
Researcher Award together with the Outstanding
Poster Presentation Award from TRF in the year

2005. Currently, Dr. Laosiripojana has been granting


the research scholar scheme from TRF. Under the
close collaboration with Dr. Assabumrungrat, their
research interests related to the production of several
alternative fuels, i.e., synthesis gas, hydrogen, Gasto-Liquid (GTL), Dimethyl Ether (DME), Biomass-toLiquid (BTL) and biodiesel from available feedstock
in Thailand by focusing on the development and
testing of several nanoscale catalysts, i.e., ceria-based
catalysts toward various reactions, i.e., reforming with
steam, carbon dioxide, and air, Fischer-Tropsch (FT),
dehydration, and esterification reactions. In addition,
they have also been working on the design and
construction of the chemical reactor for alternative
fuel production as well as the development of
mathematical model for predicting the behaviors in
several chemical systems. Apart from above works,
Dr. Laosiripojana also has the research collaborations
with Dr. Sumittra Charojrochkul from National Metal
and Materials Technology Center (MTEC) to
develop the Solid Oxide Fuel Cell system fueled by
ethanol, methanol, and biogas and with Dr. Verawat
Champreda from National Center for Genetic
Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC) to develop
the process to convert various biomasses to liquid
fuels.

According to the research achievements, the


research works from Dr. Laosiripojana and Dr.
Assabumrungrat have been published in several
international journals, e.g., Applied Catalysis B:
Environmental, Applied Catalysis A: General, Journal
of Power Sources, Chemical Engineering Science,
Chemical Engineering Journal, and Fuel. Until now,
Dr. Laosirpojana has already published 26 articles
in several international journals. In addition, 5
articles are in the list of ScienceDirect Top 25 hottest
articles during the year 2005-2006, and 2 of
them in which published in Applied Catalysis
B: Environmental are in the first rank during JulySeptember 2005 and April-June 2006, respectively.
Recently, he also has experiences in article reviewing
with some international journals, e.g., Chemical
Engineering Science, Applied Catalysis B:
Environmental, Fuel Cells, and Catalysis Today. In
addition, he is one of the contributors, along with
Dr. Assabumrungrat, to write an article on the topic
of Autothermal Reforming in Encyclopedia of
Electrochemical Power Sources published by
Elsevier B.V.
Since the beginning of his work, Dr. Laosiripojana
has several research collaborations with both industrial
and governmental sections. He has been working

collaboratively with PTT Public Company Limited to


develop the reformer unit fueled by PTT natural gas
and, recently, to test the performance of absorbents
for mercury removal from natural gas. He has also
worked with Rayong Olefines Company Limited (Siam
Cement Group) to test the regenerated conditions
for the company spent absorbents. According to his
work with the governmental section, he has been
working as a part of the Thailand energy policy
research project under financial supported by The
Thailand Research Fund (TRF) and the Energy Policy
& Planning Office (EPPO), Ministry of Energy. Also,
he has been involved in the consultant project from
the Department of Alternative Energy Development
and Efficiency (DEDE), Ministry of Energy, for
promoting the use of renewable energies in Thailand.
Furthermore, he was recently one of the contributors
in writing the books Fuels and Fuel Technologies in
Thailand: Current Status and Recommendations for
the Future organized by the National Metal and
Materials Technology Center (MTEC) in the part of
hydrogen technology and Sustainable Energy
Development for Thailand organized by the Thai
Academy of Science and Technology Foundation
(TAST) in the part of alternative fuels in the near
future.

53

54

55

.. 2550
Vinich Promarak, D.Phil.
.
18 .. 2516

1
1
()
.



(.)

2539 1
.

University of Sheffield

Institute of Materials Postgraduate Prize
Institute of Material Science & Engineering .

University of Oxford
Professor Paul L. Burn
porphyrin-dione
porhyrin-tetraone
porphyrin arrays porphyrin polymers

2545 .


.


(OLED)
(ODSSC)
carbazole
fluorene dendrimer oligomer

OLED

(
9)
(MTEC) (NANOTEC)

( )

(Advanced Organic Materials & Devices


Laboratory; www.sci.ubu.ac.th/chemistry/AdOrMater&
Devices/index.html)
.
dendrimer carbazole carbazoletriphenylamine

OLED NPB
TPD dendrimer
oligomer
thiophene fluorene carbazole

OLED
(OFET)

oligomer
meso dendrimer
OLED
dendrimer


dibenzothiophene-S,S-dioxide
OLED

ODSSC perylene
thiophene
.


. .

metal oxide
NRCT-JSPS

54

55

.. 2550
Vinich Promarak, D.Phil.
.
18 .. 2516

1
1
()
.



(.)

2539 1
.

University of Sheffield

Institute of Materials Postgraduate Prize
Institute of Material Science & Engineering .

University of Oxford
Professor Paul L. Burn
porphyrin-dione
porhyrin-tetraone
porphyrin arrays porphyrin polymers

2545 .


.


(OLED)
(ODSSC)
carbazole
fluorene dendrimer oligomer

OLED

(
9)
(MTEC) (NANOTEC)

( )

(Advanced Organic Materials & Devices


Laboratory; www.sci.ubu.ac.th/chemistry/AdOrMater&
Devices/index.html)
.
dendrimer carbazole carbazoletriphenylamine

OLED NPB
TPD dendrimer
oligomer
thiophene fluorene carbazole

OLED
(OFET)

oligomer
meso dendrimer
OLED
dendrimer


dibenzothiophene-S,S-dioxide
OLED

ODSSC perylene
thiophene
.


. .

metal oxide
NRCT-JSPS

56

Collaborative Project OLED


.

(TGIST)
ODSSC
..
Dr. Musubu Ichikawa Shinshu University
Professor Mitsuru Ueda Tokyo Institute of
Technology
OLED Professor James P. Lewis
West Virginia University
DSSC
Dr. Vinich Promarak was born on Saturday
the 18 August 1973 in Nakornphanom. He is the
elder son of Mr. Chanid and Mrs. Ratree Promarak
and married to Mrs. Vipasiri Promarak (Jomthisong).
He graduated high school from Thatphanom School
and went on under the Development and Promotion
of Science and Technology Talent Project (DPST) to
study at Khon Kaen University, leading to a B.Sc.
degree in Chemistry (first class honor). Dr. Promarak
received a scholarship from the Royal Thai
Government to study in graduate level in England.
He graduated his M.Sc. (Eng.) degree in Polymer
from University of Sheffield. He was awarded the
th

Institute of Materials Postgraduate Prize from the


Institute of Material Science & Engineering for his
best academic result. He then moved to study in the
field of organic chemistry at University of Oxford
under the guidance of Professor Paul L. Burn.
He has developed the synthetic methodology to
porphyrin-dione and porphyrin-tetraone intermediates
which lead to the synthesis of number of porphyrin
arrays and porphyrin polymers for the optoelectronic
devices applications.
After graduation of his D.Phil. degree in 2002,
Dr. Promarak joined Department of Chemistry, Faculty
of Science, Ubon Ratchathani University (UBU). At
UBU, apart from teaching in organic chemistry, he
kept up with his research interests. He has initiated
the research on the development of new organic
materials for the applications in organic light-emitting
diode (OLED) and organic dye-sensitized solar cell
(ODSSC). Dr. Promarak began his research career
with the use of chemicals available in the department
chemical store to synthesis a series of dendrimers
and oligomers of carbazole and fluorene as blue
light-emitting hole-transporting materials for OLED.
The supports from UBU and funding agencies namely
the Thailand Toray Science Foundation (TTSF), the
National Metal and Materials Technology Center

57

(MTEC), the National Nanotechnology Center


(NANOTEC) and The Thailand Research Fund (TRF),
allowed him to largely expand his research works.
Dr. Promarak and co-workers at the
Advanced Organic Materials & Devices Laboratory
(www.sci.ubu.ac.th/chemistry/AdOrMater&Devices/
index.html), UBU have produced a number of interesting research works. He developed a family of
hole-transporting carbazole and carbazoletriphenylamine dendrimers. OLED devices using such
materials as hole-transporting layer (HTL) have a
comparable devices efficiency to commercially
available HTLs. However, such dendrimers have a
superior thermal property. A series of oligomers of
thiophene and fluorene with and without the
end-capped carbazole was prepared for application
as light-emitters in OLED and organic semiconductors in OFET. The optical and electrochemical properties of these oligomers vary depending on the
oligomeric length. Meso dendronized porphyrins were
also synthesized as red light-emitters in OLED. The
generation of the dendron was found to have no

effect on the electronic property of the molecules.


White light-emitting compounds were developed based
on dibenzothiophene-S,S-dioxide derivatives for application as white OLED which is potential lighting.
The molecules show broad emission bands covering nearly the whole visible spectrum. Moreover,
new classes of organic materials based on perylene
and thiophene derivatives were also developed for
application as dye-sensitizers in ODSSC.
Dr. Promarak currently not only works with the
Advanced Organic Materials & Devices research
group, but he also works in collaboration with other
research groups in Thailand and abroad. For
example, Dr. Santi Maensiri at Khon Kaen University,
Nanotechnology Centre at Mahidol University, Dr.
Kamolwan Thumjareon at NANOTEC, Associate
Professor Tawatchai Tuntulani at Chulalongkorn
University, Dr. Musubu Ichikawa at Shinshu
University, Professor Mitsuru Ueda at Tokyo Institute
of Technology, Japan and Professor James P. Lewis
at West Virginia University, U.S.A.

56

Collaborative Project OLED


.

(TGIST)
ODSSC
..
Dr. Musubu Ichikawa Shinshu University
Professor Mitsuru Ueda Tokyo Institute of
Technology
OLED Professor James P. Lewis
West Virginia University
DSSC
Dr. Vinich Promarak was born on Saturday
the 18 August 1973 in Nakornphanom. He is the
elder son of Mr. Chanid and Mrs. Ratree Promarak
and married to Mrs. Vipasiri Promarak (Jomthisong).
He graduated high school from Thatphanom School
and went on under the Development and Promotion
of Science and Technology Talent Project (DPST) to
study at Khon Kaen University, leading to a B.Sc.
degree in Chemistry (first class honor). Dr. Promarak
received a scholarship from the Royal Thai
Government to study in graduate level in England.
He graduated his M.Sc. (Eng.) degree in Polymer
from University of Sheffield. He was awarded the
th

Institute of Materials Postgraduate Prize from the


Institute of Material Science & Engineering for his
best academic result. He then moved to study in the
field of organic chemistry at University of Oxford
under the guidance of Professor Paul L. Burn.
He has developed the synthetic methodology to
porphyrin-dione and porphyrin-tetraone intermediates
which lead to the synthesis of number of porphyrin
arrays and porphyrin polymers for the optoelectronic
devices applications.
After graduation of his D.Phil. degree in 2002,
Dr. Promarak joined Department of Chemistry, Faculty
of Science, Ubon Ratchathani University (UBU). At
UBU, apart from teaching in organic chemistry, he
kept up with his research interests. He has initiated
the research on the development of new organic
materials for the applications in organic light-emitting
diode (OLED) and organic dye-sensitized solar cell
(ODSSC). Dr. Promarak began his research career
with the use of chemicals available in the department
chemical store to synthesis a series of dendrimers
and oligomers of carbazole and fluorene as blue
light-emitting hole-transporting materials for OLED.
The supports from UBU and funding agencies namely
the Thailand Toray Science Foundation (TTSF), the
National Metal and Materials Technology Center

57

(MTEC), the National Nanotechnology Center


(NANOTEC) and The Thailand Research Fund (TRF),
allowed him to largely expand his research works.
Dr. Promarak and co-workers at the
Advanced Organic Materials & Devices Laboratory
(www.sci.ubu.ac.th/chemistry/AdOrMater&Devices/
index.html), UBU have produced a number of interesting research works. He developed a family of
hole-transporting carbazole and carbazoletriphenylamine dendrimers. OLED devices using such
materials as hole-transporting layer (HTL) have a
comparable devices efficiency to commercially
available HTLs. However, such dendrimers have a
superior thermal property. A series of oligomers of
thiophene and fluorene with and without the
end-capped carbazole was prepared for application
as light-emitters in OLED and organic semiconductors in OFET. The optical and electrochemical properties of these oligomers vary depending on the
oligomeric length. Meso dendronized porphyrins were
also synthesized as red light-emitters in OLED. The
generation of the dendron was found to have no

effect on the electronic property of the molecules.


White light-emitting compounds were developed based
on dibenzothiophene-S,S-dioxide derivatives for application as white OLED which is potential lighting.
The molecules show broad emission bands covering nearly the whole visible spectrum. Moreover,
new classes of organic materials based on perylene
and thiophene derivatives were also developed for
application as dye-sensitizers in ODSSC.
Dr. Promarak currently not only works with the
Advanced Organic Materials & Devices research
group, but he also works in collaboration with other
research groups in Thailand and abroad. For
example, Dr. Santi Maensiri at Khon Kaen University,
Nanotechnology Centre at Mahidol University, Dr.
Kamolwan Thumjareon at NANOTEC, Associate
Professor Tawatchai Tuntulani at Chulalongkorn
University, Dr. Musubu Ichikawa at Shinshu
University, Professor Mitsuru Ueda at Tokyo Institute
of Technology, Japan and Professor James P. Lewis
at West Virginia University, U.S.A.

58

.. 2550
Santi Maensiri, D.Phil.
.
31 .. 2516
( )

.
.



.. 2538
(
)
YBaCuO
..


.. 2539
-

() .. 2540
The University of Leeds

Surface mechanical properties of


alumina-silicon carbide nanocomposites
Dr. Paul D. Warren
() ..
2544 St. Cross College, the University of Oxford
Thermal shock resistance of
pressureless-sintered alumina-silicon carbide
nanocomposites Prof. Dr. Steve
G. Roberts

.

/
..
.-.
.. 2545 .
Small & Strong Materials Group (SSMG)



2545



1)

2)
3)
4)




(.)
(.)
(MTEC)
(NANOTEC)
(.)

/

(.)
(TGIST)

(THAISTs Pilot Project)


.


1)

/
..
() ..
() .. (
) ...
() 2)

(hyperthermia)
MRI (MRI contrast
agent) .
. ..
..
1) .
MTEC .. (
)
2) ..
()

59

58

.. 2550
Santi Maensiri, D.Phil.
.
31 .. 2516
( )

.
.



.. 2538
(
)
YBaCuO
..


.. 2539
-

() .. 2540
The University of Leeds

Surface mechanical properties of


alumina-silicon carbide nanocomposites
Dr. Paul D. Warren
() ..
2544 St. Cross College, the University of Oxford
Thermal shock resistance of
pressureless-sintered alumina-silicon carbide
nanocomposites Prof. Dr. Steve
G. Roberts

.

/
..
.-.
.. 2545 .
Small & Strong Materials Group (SSMG)



2545



1)

2)
3)
4)




(.)
(.)
(MTEC)
(NANOTEC)
(.)

/

(.)
(TGIST)

(THAISTs Pilot Project)


.


1)

/
..
() ..
() .. (
) ...
() 2)

(hyperthermia)
MRI (MRI contrast
agent) .
. ..
..
1) .
MTEC .. (
)
2) ..
()

59

60

1) Prof. Dr. Supapan Seraphin (University of Arizona


) .. 2546

2) Prof. Dr. Micheal Coey (Center


for Research on Adaptive Nanostructures and
Nanodevices (CRANN) and Department of Physics,
Trinity College, the University of Dublin )



3) Prof. Dr. Ji-Huan He (College of Science,
Shanghai Donghua University)
Prof. He

.
2545
( 10 )
( 20 )

Applied Physics Letters, Acta Materialia, Crystal
Growth & Design, Scripta Materialia, Journal of
Physics: Condensed Matters, Journal of Colloid and
Interface Sciences
2007 Journal of Physics:
Condensed Matters (19 (2007) 236208)

CaCu3Ti 4O 12

CaCu3Ti4O12


2 Applied

Physics Letters (90 (2007) 202908/1-3)

(> 105)
CaCu3Ti4O12/(Li,Ti)-doped NiO

(90
(2007) 162506/1-3)

La0.5Sr0.5TiO3 Co
Ti





.
(reviewer)

Applied Physics Letters, Crystal Growth &


Design, Chemistry Letters, Journal of Solid State
Chemistry, Powder Technology, Materials Chemistry
and Physics Journal of Materials Processing
and Technology
International Journal of Electrospun
Nanofibers and Applications
. Science and Technology
Research Grants in Physics ( Carbon
Nanofibres Synthesized by Electrospinning)
.. 2548
()
2549
(.) (


.

Assist. Prof. Dr. Santi Maensiri was born


on January 31, 1973 in Naklang District, Udonthani
Province (now Nongbualamphu Province). He is the
youngest son of Mr. Subin and Mrs. Thonglaun
Maensiri, having four brothers and a sister. He is
married to Assist. Prof. Dr. Daungkamol Maensiri.
He finished primary school from Kokkor-Kokphor
school, high school from Khumsaenwittayason, and
received B.Sc. degree in Physics in 1995 from Khon
Kaen University. His senior research project was on
Preparation of YBaCuO superconducting thin films
by spin coating under the supervision of Assist. Prof.
Dr. Ekapan Swatsitang. During his undergraduate
study, he received a scholarship under the university
lecturer development programme from the Ministry
of University Affairs (now the Commission of Higher
Education). He was allocated as a lecturer at the
Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Khon
Kaen University after his first degree. In 1996, Dr.
Maensiri received a scholarship from the Ministry of
Science and Technology to do further degrees in
Materials Science in the United Kingdom. He
obtained his M.Sc. in Materials Science (Ceramic
Processing) in 1997 from the University of Leeds.
His M.Sc. thesis entitled Surface mechanical
properties of alumina-silicon carbide nanocomposites
was under the supervision of Dr. Paul D. Warren. In
1997, Dr. Maensiri moved to Oxford where he joined
St. Cross College, the University of Oxford. Prof.
Dr. Steve G. Roberts was his supervisor then. His
doctoral thesis was entitled Thermal shock
resistance of pressureless-sintered alumina-silicon
carbide nanocomposites. He received D.Phil. in

Materials Science (Ceramic Nanocomposites)


in August 2001. After graduation, Dr. Maensiri
returned to Khon Kaen where along with teaching
Physics he started his research on Fabrication
of mechanical properties of alumina-carbon nanofiber
nanocomposites which was supported by The
Thailand Research Fund and the Commission
on Higher Education. This research was
under the supervision of Assist. Prof. Dr. Vittaya
Amornkitbamrung. Currently, Dr. Maensiri is a leader
of the Small & Strong Materials Group (SSMG),
Solid State Physics Laboratory, Department of
Physics, Faculty of Science, and is one of the main
researchers of the Integrated Nanotechnology
Research Center (INRC), Khon Kaen University. His
researches of interest that have been carrying out
since 2003 are in the filed of Materials Physics and
Nanomaterials, which focus mainly on the
fabrication, synthesis, physical and biological
properties, and applications of materials either in
the forms of nanoparticle, nanofiber and thin film.
The materials of interest include: 1) functional
nanostructured materials of ceramic compounds,
metal oxides and nanocomposites, 2) diluted
magnetic semiconductors and magnetic nanoparticles
for medical applications, 3) giant dielectric ceramics
and nancomposites, and 4) electrospun nanofibers
of ceramics, polymers, and nanocomposites for
electronic device, environmental, energy, and
medical and pharmaceutical applications. These
researches have been funded by various main
Thailand funding agencies including the National
Research Council of Thailand (NRCT), The Thailand

61

60

1) Prof. Dr. Supapan Seraphin (University of Arizona


) .. 2546

2) Prof. Dr. Micheal Coey (Center


for Research on Adaptive Nanostructures and
Nanodevices (CRANN) and Department of Physics,
Trinity College, the University of Dublin )



3) Prof. Dr. Ji-Huan He (College of Science,
Shanghai Donghua University)
Prof. He

.
2545
( 10 )
( 20 )

Applied Physics Letters, Acta Materialia, Crystal
Growth & Design, Scripta Materialia, Journal of
Physics: Condensed Matters, Journal of Colloid and
Interface Sciences
2007 Journal of Physics:
Condensed Matters (19 (2007) 236208)

CaCu3Ti 4O 12

CaCu3Ti4O12


2 Applied

Physics Letters (90 (2007) 202908/1-3)

(> 105)
CaCu3Ti4O12/(Li,Ti)-doped NiO

(90
(2007) 162506/1-3)

La0.5Sr0.5TiO3 Co
Ti





.
(reviewer)

Applied Physics Letters, Crystal Growth &


Design, Chemistry Letters, Journal of Solid State
Chemistry, Powder Technology, Materials Chemistry
and Physics Journal of Materials Processing
and Technology
International Journal of Electrospun
Nanofibers and Applications
. Science and Technology
Research Grants in Physics ( Carbon
Nanofibres Synthesized by Electrospinning)
.. 2548
()
2549
(.) (


.

Assist. Prof. Dr. Santi Maensiri was born


on January 31, 1973 in Naklang District, Udonthani
Province (now Nongbualamphu Province). He is the
youngest son of Mr. Subin and Mrs. Thonglaun
Maensiri, having four brothers and a sister. He is
married to Assist. Prof. Dr. Daungkamol Maensiri.
He finished primary school from Kokkor-Kokphor
school, high school from Khumsaenwittayason, and
received B.Sc. degree in Physics in 1995 from Khon
Kaen University. His senior research project was on
Preparation of YBaCuO superconducting thin films
by spin coating under the supervision of Assist. Prof.
Dr. Ekapan Swatsitang. During his undergraduate
study, he received a scholarship under the university
lecturer development programme from the Ministry
of University Affairs (now the Commission of Higher
Education). He was allocated as a lecturer at the
Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Khon
Kaen University after his first degree. In 1996, Dr.
Maensiri received a scholarship from the Ministry of
Science and Technology to do further degrees in
Materials Science in the United Kingdom. He
obtained his M.Sc. in Materials Science (Ceramic
Processing) in 1997 from the University of Leeds.
His M.Sc. thesis entitled Surface mechanical
properties of alumina-silicon carbide nanocomposites
was under the supervision of Dr. Paul D. Warren. In
1997, Dr. Maensiri moved to Oxford where he joined
St. Cross College, the University of Oxford. Prof.
Dr. Steve G. Roberts was his supervisor then. His
doctoral thesis was entitled Thermal shock
resistance of pressureless-sintered alumina-silicon
carbide nanocomposites. He received D.Phil. in

Materials Science (Ceramic Nanocomposites)


in August 2001. After graduation, Dr. Maensiri
returned to Khon Kaen where along with teaching
Physics he started his research on Fabrication
of mechanical properties of alumina-carbon nanofiber
nanocomposites which was supported by The
Thailand Research Fund and the Commission
on Higher Education. This research was
under the supervision of Assist. Prof. Dr. Vittaya
Amornkitbamrung. Currently, Dr. Maensiri is a leader
of the Small & Strong Materials Group (SSMG),
Solid State Physics Laboratory, Department of
Physics, Faculty of Science, and is one of the main
researchers of the Integrated Nanotechnology
Research Center (INRC), Khon Kaen University. His
researches of interest that have been carrying out
since 2003 are in the filed of Materials Physics and
Nanomaterials, which focus mainly on the
fabrication, synthesis, physical and biological
properties, and applications of materials either in
the forms of nanoparticle, nanofiber and thin film.
The materials of interest include: 1) functional
nanostructured materials of ceramic compounds,
metal oxides and nanocomposites, 2) diluted
magnetic semiconductors and magnetic nanoparticles
for medical applications, 3) giant dielectric ceramics
and nancomposites, and 4) electrospun nanofibers
of ceramics, polymers, and nanocomposites for
electronic device, environmental, energy, and
medical and pharmaceutical applications. These
researches have been funded by various main
Thailand funding agencies including the National
Research Council of Thailand (NRCT), The Thailand

61

62

Research Fund (TRF), the National Metal and


Materials Technology Center (MTEC), the National
Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC), the Reverse
Brain Drain (RBD) of the National Science and
Technology Development Agency (NSTDA), and the
Integrated Nanotechnology Research Center (INRC).
Some part of these research grants are used to
support students by employing them as the research
assistants. Some of these students are supported
by the Commission on Higher Education and TGIST/
THAISTs Pilot Project of Technology Management
Center (TMC), NSTDA.
Dr. Maensiri has developed research
collaboration with many Thai research groups both
inside and outside of Khon Kaen University. Within
Khon Kaen University, he is carrying out research to
develop electrospun nanofiber scaffolds for wound
dressing, artificial tissue/skin, and drug delivery in
collaboration with Assist. Prof. Dr. Sineenart Siri
(Faculty of Science), Assist. Prof. Dr. Jintanaporn
Wattanathorn (Faculty of Medicine), Assoc. Prof. Dr.
Aroonsri Preprem (Faculty of Pharmaceutical Science),
and Assist. Prof. Dr. Theerasak Dhamrongrungraung
(Faculty of Dentistry). He is also working with
Dr. Chunpen Thomas, Mr. Ian Thomas, Assist.
Prof. Dr. Ekaphan Swatsitang, and Assist.

Prof. Dr. Vittaya Amornkitbamrung to develop


magnetic nanoparticles for hyperthermia and MRI
contrast agent applications. Outside Khon Kaen
University, Dr. Maensiri teams up with Dr. Teerapon
Yamwong (MTEC) and Assist. Prof. Dr. Rattikorn
Yimnirun (Chiang Mai University) to study giant
dielectric ceramics and composites. He also works
with Assist. Prof. Dr. Puangrat Kajitvichyanukul
(King Mongkuts University of Technology Thonburi
(KMUTT)) to develop metal oxide and magnetic
materials for environmental applications. Not only
working with the Thai researchers, Dr. Maensiri has
good links with researchers outside Thailand as
well. He has been working with Prof. Dr. Supapan
Seraphin, University of Arizona since 2004.
Prof. Supapan kindly provides support with her
excellent transmission electron microscopy (TEM)
facilities for characterization of micro/nano structures
of materials, and she also agreed to be a cosupervisor for Dr. Maensiris Ph.D. students Dr.
Maensiri has established the link for his research on
diluted magnetic semiconductors with the most
respected physicist in this field, Prof. Dr. Michael
Coey of the Center for Research on Adaptive
Nanostructures and Nanodevices (CRANN) and
Department of Physics, Trinity College, the University
of Dublin, Ireland. Prof. Coey accepted to be a

co-supervisors for Dr. Maensiris Ph.D. students. Most


recently, Dr. Maensiri built research collaboration
with Prof. Dr. Ji-Huan He of the College of Science,
Shanghai Donghua University for the development
of the research in the field of electrospinning and
nanofibers.
Since 2003, Dr. Maensiri has published more
than 10 scientific papers of his research work in the
national scientific journals, and more than 20
peer-reviewed papers internationally. Some of these
papers were published in the leading journals of
applied Physics, Materials Sciences or Nanosciences
such as Applied Physics Letters, Acta Materialia,
Crystal Growth & Design, Scripta Materialia, Journal
of Physics: Condensed Matters and Journal
of Colloid and Interface Sciences. In 2007, he
published remarkable results in one Journal of
Physics: Condensed Matters (JPCM) article, and two
Applied Physics Letters (APL) articles. The article
published in JPCM (19 (2007) 236208) reports for
the first time the giant dielectric properties of
CaCu3Ti4O12 ceramics under uniaxial stress. The
paper shows that the stress strongly affects
dielectric response in CaCu3Ti4O12 ceramics, and
the results would be useful for design this class of
materials to meet the industrial standard. His article
in Applied Physics Letters (90 (2007) 202908/1-3)
reports for the first time the fabrication and giant
dielectric properties of CaCu3Ti4O12/(Li,Ti)-doped NiO
nanocomposite. This work explains the origin of giant dielectric response in this interesting
nanocomposite. Another APL paper (90 (2007)
162506/1-3) is the first to report about the room
temperature ferromagnetism observed in La0.5Sr0.5TiO3
nanoparticles by substituting Ti with Co ions. The
new finding of ferromagnetism in Co-doped

La0.5Sr0.5TiO3 nanoparticles would stimulate further


interest in the area of diluted magnetic oxides both
in terms of basic science and flexible applications.
Apart from teaching and doing research,
Dr. Maensiri has served as a referee for leading
journals including Applied Physics Letters, Crystal
Growth & Design, Chemistry Letters, Journal of Solid
State Chemistry, Powder Technology, Materials
Chemistry and Physics and Journal of Materials
Processing and Technology. Moreover, he has served
as an editorial board of a new journal, International
Journal of Electrospun Nanofibers and Applications,
since January 2007.
Dr. Maensiri received the Science and Technology
Research Grants 2004 in Physics (under the
project entitled Carbon Nanofibres Synthesized by
Electrospinning) from the Thailand Toray Science
Foundation and he, as a team leader, also won the
NRCT Invention Awards 2006 from The National
Research Council of Thailand for the work on
Computer-controlled Electrospinning System for
Nanofibre Fabrication. Dr. Maensiri is currently a
Thailand Research Fund Research Scholar.

63

62

Research Fund (TRF), the National Metal and


Materials Technology Center (MTEC), the National
Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC), the Reverse
Brain Drain (RBD) of the National Science and
Technology Development Agency (NSTDA), and the
Integrated Nanotechnology Research Center (INRC).
Some part of these research grants are used to
support students by employing them as the research
assistants. Some of these students are supported
by the Commission on Higher Education and TGIST/
THAISTs Pilot Project of Technology Management
Center (TMC), NSTDA.
Dr. Maensiri has developed research
collaboration with many Thai research groups both
inside and outside of Khon Kaen University. Within
Khon Kaen University, he is carrying out research to
develop electrospun nanofiber scaffolds for wound
dressing, artificial tissue/skin, and drug delivery in
collaboration with Assist. Prof. Dr. Sineenart Siri
(Faculty of Science), Assist. Prof. Dr. Jintanaporn
Wattanathorn (Faculty of Medicine), Assoc. Prof. Dr.
Aroonsri Preprem (Faculty of Pharmaceutical Science),
and Assist. Prof. Dr. Theerasak Dhamrongrungraung
(Faculty of Dentistry). He is also working with
Dr. Chunpen Thomas, Mr. Ian Thomas, Assist.
Prof. Dr. Ekaphan Swatsitang, and Assist.

Prof. Dr. Vittaya Amornkitbamrung to develop


magnetic nanoparticles for hyperthermia and MRI
contrast agent applications. Outside Khon Kaen
University, Dr. Maensiri teams up with Dr. Teerapon
Yamwong (MTEC) and Assist. Prof. Dr. Rattikorn
Yimnirun (Chiang Mai University) to study giant
dielectric ceramics and composites. He also works
with Assist. Prof. Dr. Puangrat Kajitvichyanukul
(King Mongkuts University of Technology Thonburi
(KMUTT)) to develop metal oxide and magnetic
materials for environmental applications. Not only
working with the Thai researchers, Dr. Maensiri has
good links with researchers outside Thailand as
well. He has been working with Prof. Dr. Supapan
Seraphin, University of Arizona since 2004.
Prof. Supapan kindly provides support with her
excellent transmission electron microscopy (TEM)
facilities for characterization of micro/nano structures
of materials, and she also agreed to be a cosupervisor for Dr. Maensiris Ph.D. students Dr.
Maensiri has established the link for his research on
diluted magnetic semiconductors with the most
respected physicist in this field, Prof. Dr. Michael
Coey of the Center for Research on Adaptive
Nanostructures and Nanodevices (CRANN) and
Department of Physics, Trinity College, the University
of Dublin, Ireland. Prof. Coey accepted to be a

co-supervisors for Dr. Maensiris Ph.D. students. Most


recently, Dr. Maensiri built research collaboration
with Prof. Dr. Ji-Huan He of the College of Science,
Shanghai Donghua University for the development
of the research in the field of electrospinning and
nanofibers.
Since 2003, Dr. Maensiri has published more
than 10 scientific papers of his research work in the
national scientific journals, and more than 20
peer-reviewed papers internationally. Some of these
papers were published in the leading journals of
applied Physics, Materials Sciences or Nanosciences
such as Applied Physics Letters, Acta Materialia,
Crystal Growth & Design, Scripta Materialia, Journal
of Physics: Condensed Matters and Journal
of Colloid and Interface Sciences. In 2007, he
published remarkable results in one Journal of
Physics: Condensed Matters (JPCM) article, and two
Applied Physics Letters (APL) articles. The article
published in JPCM (19 (2007) 236208) reports for
the first time the giant dielectric properties of
CaCu3Ti4O12 ceramics under uniaxial stress. The
paper shows that the stress strongly affects
dielectric response in CaCu3Ti4O12 ceramics, and
the results would be useful for design this class of
materials to meet the industrial standard. His article
in Applied Physics Letters (90 (2007) 202908/1-3)
reports for the first time the fabrication and giant
dielectric properties of CaCu3Ti4O12/(Li,Ti)-doped NiO
nanocomposite. This work explains the origin of giant dielectric response in this interesting
nanocomposite. Another APL paper (90 (2007)
162506/1-3) is the first to report about the room
temperature ferromagnetism observed in La0.5Sr0.5TiO3
nanoparticles by substituting Ti with Co ions. The
new finding of ferromagnetism in Co-doped

La0.5Sr0.5TiO3 nanoparticles would stimulate further


interest in the area of diluted magnetic oxides both
in terms of basic science and flexible applications.
Apart from teaching and doing research,
Dr. Maensiri has served as a referee for leading
journals including Applied Physics Letters, Crystal
Growth & Design, Chemistry Letters, Journal of Solid
State Chemistry, Powder Technology, Materials
Chemistry and Physics and Journal of Materials
Processing and Technology. Moreover, he has served
as an editorial board of a new journal, International
Journal of Electrospun Nanofibers and Applications,
since January 2007.
Dr. Maensiri received the Science and Technology
Research Grants 2004 in Physics (under the
project entitled Carbon Nanofibres Synthesized by
Electrospinning) from the Thailand Toray Science
Foundation and he, as a team leader, also won the
NRCT Invention Awards 2006 from The National
Research Council of Thailand for the work on
Computer-controlled Electrospinning System for
Nanofibre Fabrication. Dr. Maensiri is currently a
Thailand Research Fund Research Scholar.

63

64

.. 2550
Atitaya Siripinyanond, Ph.D.
.
23 2516

.
.


.
5


.. 2537

.



(.)

Direct Electrothermal Atomic Absorption


Spectrometric Determination of Cadmium in Solid
Samples by Slurry Introduction ..

1
.. 2539
(
) .



2
.. 2540
(
)

.. 2545
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Massachusetts

Professor Ramon M. Barnes


Flow Field-Flow FractionationInductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry
8
Advances in Atomic Spectroscopy

.. 2545
.
Asia-Pacific Winter Conference on
Plasma Spectrochemistry
Professor Ramon M. Barnes 2 ..
2548 2549
Analytical Atomic Spectrometry
JAAS International Advisory Board
Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry (Royal
Society of Chemistry) JAAS
Young Analytical Scientists
Special Issue .. 2549
.

(field-flow fractionation)



(inductively coupled plasma
spectroscopy)





(.)
(.) 2546-2548

2549-2551 ..


(PERCH-CIC)

9
(corresponding author) 6

65

64

.. 2550
Atitaya Siripinyanond, Ph.D.
.
23 2516

.
.


.
5


.. 2537

.



(.)

Direct Electrothermal Atomic Absorption


Spectrometric Determination of Cadmium in Solid
Samples by Slurry Introduction ..

1
.. 2539
(
) .



2
.. 2540
(
)

.. 2545
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Massachusetts

Professor Ramon M. Barnes


Flow Field-Flow FractionationInductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry
8
Advances in Atomic Spectroscopy

.. 2545
.
Asia-Pacific Winter Conference on
Plasma Spectrochemistry
Professor Ramon M. Barnes 2 ..
2548 2549
Analytical Atomic Spectrometry
JAAS International Advisory Board
Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry (Royal
Society of Chemistry) JAAS
Young Analytical Scientists
Special Issue .. 2549
.

(field-flow fractionation)



(inductively coupled plasma
spectroscopy)





(.)
(.) 2546-2548

2549-2551 ..


(PERCH-CIC)

9
(corresponding author) 6

65

66

Assistant Professor Dr. Atitaya Siripinyanond


was born on September 23, 1973. She is the only
daughter of Mr. Chaovalit and Mrs. Piyaratana
Siripinyanond. As her father passed away when she
was very young, she was raised with good care of
her mother together with her aunts, Miss Pismai
and Miss Pissri Siripinyanond. She completed her
high school education from Assumption Convent
School and received her B.Sc. degree in Chemistry
from the Department of Chemistry, Faculty of
Science, Mahidol University in 1994. With the good
advice from Professor Dr. Juwadee Shiowatana and
by seeing her as a good role model, Dr. Siripinyanond
decided to pursue higher education in the Master
Degree Program in Applied Analytical and Inorganic
Chemistry with the scholarship from the National
Science and Technology Development Agency funded
through the Institutional Strengthening Program. Her
thesis was entitled Direct Electrothermal Atomic
Absorption Spectrometric Determination of Cadmium
in Solid Samples by Slurry Introduction. She
graduated with one publication in 1996 and was

given an outstanding graduate award from Professor


Dr. Tab Nilaniti Foundation. Then, she joined the
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Mahidol
University as a lecturer. She continued working on
research and received a research grant from the
National Science and Technology Development
Agency and co-authored two research articles. With
the scholarship from the Royal Thai Government,
she left from the Department of Chemistry, Mahidol
University in 1997 to pursue her Ph.D. study at the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA in U.S.A.
under the supervision of Professor Ramon M. Barnes.
Her dissertation was entitled Flow Field-Flow
Fractionation-Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass
Spectrometry. She obtained her Ph.D. degree in
2002 with eight publications, and one of which is a
book chapter in Advances in Atomic Spectrometry.
She then returned to the Department of Chemistry,
Mahidol University in September 2002.
Dr. Siripinyanond co-chaired two international
conferences Asia-Pacific Winter Conference on
Plasma Spectrochemistry in 2005 and 2006 with

her former supervisor, Professor Dr. Ramon Barnes.


These gave her good opportunities to meet with
many world experts in the field of Analytical Atomic
Spectrometry. She was invited by Journal of
Analytical Atomic Spectrometry to join the JAAS
International Advisory Board and subsequently was
invited to submit research papers to be published in
the Young Analytical Scientists Special Issue in 2006.
Her research interest is in the area of
analytical method development for size separation
and characterization in the nanometer and micrometer
size ranges using field-flow fractionation technique.
Elemental size characterization using a combined
technique of field-flow fractionation and element
detection systems such as an inductively coupled
plasma spectrometer is also emphasized. Further,

Dr. Siripinyanond is enthusiastic to develop efficient


ways to perform elemental speciation in order to
access the toxicity and bioavailability of elements in
samples which are of biological and environmental
importance. She received research grants from The
Thailand Research Fund in 2003-2005 and 20062008 having Professor Dr. Juwadee Shiowatana as
a mentor. Also, she was given a partial research
funding as well as a grant to purchase research
equipment from the Center of Innovation in
Chemistry-Postgraduate Education and Research
Program in Chemistry (PERCH-CIC). All of these
funds allowed her to start up her research work in
an efficient way. After graduation, she has
published nine research articles, six of which as a
corresponding author.

67

66

Assistant Professor Dr. Atitaya Siripinyanond


was born on September 23, 1973. She is the only
daughter of Mr. Chaovalit and Mrs. Piyaratana
Siripinyanond. As her father passed away when she
was very young, she was raised with good care of
her mother together with her aunts, Miss Pismai
and Miss Pissri Siripinyanond. She completed her
high school education from Assumption Convent
School and received her B.Sc. degree in Chemistry
from the Department of Chemistry, Faculty of
Science, Mahidol University in 1994. With the good
advice from Professor Dr. Juwadee Shiowatana and
by seeing her as a good role model, Dr. Siripinyanond
decided to pursue higher education in the Master
Degree Program in Applied Analytical and Inorganic
Chemistry with the scholarship from the National
Science and Technology Development Agency funded
through the Institutional Strengthening Program. Her
thesis was entitled Direct Electrothermal Atomic
Absorption Spectrometric Determination of Cadmium
in Solid Samples by Slurry Introduction. She
graduated with one publication in 1996 and was

given an outstanding graduate award from Professor


Dr. Tab Nilaniti Foundation. Then, she joined the
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Mahidol
University as a lecturer. She continued working on
research and received a research grant from the
National Science and Technology Development
Agency and co-authored two research articles. With
the scholarship from the Royal Thai Government,
she left from the Department of Chemistry, Mahidol
University in 1997 to pursue her Ph.D. study at the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA in U.S.A.
under the supervision of Professor Ramon M. Barnes.
Her dissertation was entitled Flow Field-Flow
Fractionation-Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass
Spectrometry. She obtained her Ph.D. degree in
2002 with eight publications, and one of which is a
book chapter in Advances in Atomic Spectrometry.
She then returned to the Department of Chemistry,
Mahidol University in September 2002.
Dr. Siripinyanond co-chaired two international
conferences Asia-Pacific Winter Conference on
Plasma Spectrochemistry in 2005 and 2006 with

her former supervisor, Professor Dr. Ramon Barnes.


These gave her good opportunities to meet with
many world experts in the field of Analytical Atomic
Spectrometry. She was invited by Journal of
Analytical Atomic Spectrometry to join the JAAS
International Advisory Board and subsequently was
invited to submit research papers to be published in
the Young Analytical Scientists Special Issue in 2006.
Her research interest is in the area of
analytical method development for size separation
and characterization in the nanometer and micrometer
size ranges using field-flow fractionation technique.
Elemental size characterization using a combined
technique of field-flow fractionation and element
detection systems such as an inductively coupled
plasma spectrometer is also emphasized. Further,

Dr. Siripinyanond is enthusiastic to develop efficient


ways to perform elemental speciation in order to
access the toxicity and bioavailability of elements in
samples which are of biological and environmental
importance. She received research grants from The
Thailand Research Fund in 2003-2005 and 20062008 having Professor Dr. Juwadee Shiowatana as
a mentor. Also, she was given a partial research
funding as well as a grant to purchase research
equipment from the Center of Innovation in
Chemistry-Postgraduate Education and Research
Program in Chemistry (PERCH-CIC). All of these
funds allowed her to start up her research work in
an efficient way. After graduation, she has
published nine research articles, six of which as a
corresponding author.

67

68

.. 2550
Arnon Chaipanich, Ph.D.
. 21
.. 2515
.
. - 2
.. ..
.

12 .
Bembridge School Isle of Wight
.
Eccles College
Manchester
University of Salford .
(
) Concrete Technology Unit, Department
of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Science and
Engineering, University of Dundee

Professor Ravindra
Dhir
Professor Mukesh Limbachiya.

. Post-doctoral research
fellow School of Technology, University of
Glamorgan Development of a
low-cost low-energy cement from waste
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council (EPSRC)
.
Professor Stan Wild,
Professor Bahir Sabir, Dr. Jiping Bai, Dr. John Kinuthia
and Dr. Martin Ofarrell
.
()

.. 2545

() .
ferroelectric materials
.

.
.
.
(.)
(.)
The Effect of Particle Size Distribution on the
Perovskite Phase Production in Lead Magnesium
Niobate Powder .. 2545 - 2547
Development of New Composite
Materials for Use in Structural Applications
.. 2548 - 2550

(.)
(.)
Development of New Piezoelectric-Cement
Composites

.
10
Materials Letters, Applied
Physics A, Current Applied Physics, Cement and
Concrete Research Materials and Structures
.
expert commentary Nova
science Ceramic Materials Research
Trends .
(reviewer)
The Journal of the American Ceramic Society,
Indian Journal of Pure and Applied Physics
Materials Letters
.

69

68

.. 2550
Arnon Chaipanich, Ph.D.
. 21
.. 2515
.
. - 2
.. ..
.

12 .
Bembridge School Isle of Wight
.
Eccles College
Manchester
University of Salford .
(
) Concrete Technology Unit, Department
of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Science and
Engineering, University of Dundee

Professor Ravindra
Dhir
Professor Mukesh Limbachiya.

. Post-doctoral research
fellow School of Technology, University of
Glamorgan Development of a
low-cost low-energy cement from waste
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council (EPSRC)
.
Professor Stan Wild,
Professor Bahir Sabir, Dr. Jiping Bai, Dr. John Kinuthia
and Dr. Martin Ofarrell
.
()

.. 2545

() .
ferroelectric materials
.

.
.
.
(.)
(.)
The Effect of Particle Size Distribution on the
Perovskite Phase Production in Lead Magnesium
Niobate Powder .. 2545 - 2547
Development of New Composite
Materials for Use in Structural Applications
.. 2548 - 2550

(.)
(.)
Development of New Piezoelectric-Cement
Composites

.
10
Materials Letters, Applied
Physics A, Current Applied Physics, Cement and
Concrete Research Materials and Structures
.
expert commentary Nova
science Ceramic Materials Research
Trends .
(reviewer)
The Journal of the American Ceramic Society,
Indian Journal of Pure and Applied Physics
Materials Letters
.

69

70

(Smart
Structures)

Dr. Arnon Chaipanich was born on 21st


November 1972. He is the third son of Mr. Vinit and
Assistant Professor Preeya Chaipanich. He is
married to Dr. Liwa Pardthaisong-Chaipanich and
has two daughters, Alisa and Anita Chaipanich.
Dr. Chaipanich studied at Assumption

(Piezoelectric-Cement Composites) St. Louise School in Bangkok before commencing


his studies in the United Kingdom at the age of
(acoustic impedance) twelve. He attended Bembridge School on the Isle
of Wight where he also received the best student
award. He then went to Eccles College in Manchester,
and then onto study civil engineering at the University

71

of Salford. After his Bachelor degree he went on to


study concrete technology at the Department
of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Science and
Engineering at the University of Dundee, Scotland.
He then continued to do his Ph.D. in the same field
where he was awarded a scholarship by the
Concrete Technology Unit and was supervised by
Professor Ravindra Dhir, the director of Concrete
Technology Unit and Professor Mukesh Limbachiya.
After his Ph.D., Dr. Chaipanich worked as a
Post-doctoral research fellow at the School of
Technology, University of Glamorgan, Wales, on the
project entitled Development of a low-cost low-energy
cement from waste funded by Engineering and
Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), United
Kingdom. This was where he worked with colleagues
in the field of sustainable materials such as Professor
Stan Wild, the late Professor Bahir Sabir, Dr. Jiping
Bai, Dr. John Kinuthia and Dr. Martin Ofarrell.

Dr. Chaipanich returned to Thailand and


began his career at the Department of Physics,
Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University, since
2002. As a member of the Materials Science
Research Laboratory, he had a chance to work with
Professor Dr. Tawee Tunkasiri in the field of
ferroelectric materials. He also works with other
researchers in the department. Dr. Chaipanich has
recently set up a small research unit (Construction
Material Research Unit) within the Faculty of
Science, Chiang Mai University, with Dr. Kedsarin
Pimraksa and Dr. Datchanee Chotpattananont.
Dr. Chaipanich received New Researcher
Grant from The Thailand Research Fund and the
Commission on Higher Education to carry out project
entitled The Effect of Particle Size Distribution on
the Perovskite Phase Production in Lead Magnesium
Niobate Powder between 2002-2004, and a project
on Development of New Composite Materials for

70

(Smart
Structures)

Dr. Arnon Chaipanich was born on 21st


November 1972. He is the third son of Mr. Vinit and
Assistant Professor Preeya Chaipanich. He is
married to Dr. Liwa Pardthaisong-Chaipanich and
has two daughters, Alisa and Anita Chaipanich.
Dr. Chaipanich studied at Assumption

(Piezoelectric-Cement Composites) St. Louise School in Bangkok before commencing


his studies in the United Kingdom at the age of
(acoustic impedance) twelve. He attended Bembridge School on the Isle
of Wight where he also received the best student
award. He then went to Eccles College in Manchester,
and then onto study civil engineering at the University

71

of Salford. After his Bachelor degree he went on to


study concrete technology at the Department
of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Science and
Engineering at the University of Dundee, Scotland.
He then continued to do his Ph.D. in the same field
where he was awarded a scholarship by the
Concrete Technology Unit and was supervised by
Professor Ravindra Dhir, the director of Concrete
Technology Unit and Professor Mukesh Limbachiya.
After his Ph.D., Dr. Chaipanich worked as a
Post-doctoral research fellow at the School of
Technology, University of Glamorgan, Wales, on the
project entitled Development of a low-cost low-energy
cement from waste funded by Engineering and
Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), United
Kingdom. This was where he worked with colleagues
in the field of sustainable materials such as Professor
Stan Wild, the late Professor Bahir Sabir, Dr. Jiping
Bai, Dr. John Kinuthia and Dr. Martin Ofarrell.

Dr. Chaipanich returned to Thailand and


began his career at the Department of Physics,
Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University, since
2002. As a member of the Materials Science
Research Laboratory, he had a chance to work with
Professor Dr. Tawee Tunkasiri in the field of
ferroelectric materials. He also works with other
researchers in the department. Dr. Chaipanich has
recently set up a small research unit (Construction
Material Research Unit) within the Faculty of
Science, Chiang Mai University, with Dr. Kedsarin
Pimraksa and Dr. Datchanee Chotpattananont.
Dr. Chaipanich received New Researcher
Grant from The Thailand Research Fund and the
Commission on Higher Education to carry out project
entitled The Effect of Particle Size Distribution on
the Perovskite Phase Production in Lead Magnesium
Niobate Powder between 2002-2004, and a project
on Development of New Composite Materials for

72

Use in Structural Applications between 2005-2007.


Currently, he receives the Research Career
Development Grant from The Thailand Research Fund
and the Commission of Higher Education to
carry out research on The Development of New
Piezoelectric-Cement Composites.
Dr. Chaipanichs research findings have been
published in more than 10 academic journals,
including a number of international journals such as
Materials Letters, Applied Physics A, Current
Applied Physics, Cement and Concrete Research,
and Materials and Structures. Furthermore,
Dr. Chaipanich was invited as an expert to write an

expert commentary by Nova science Publishers


for the book Ceramic Materials Research Trends.
He is also currently serving as reviewers for
reputable journals such as The Journal of the
American Ceramic Society, Indian Journal of Pure
and Applied Physics and Materials Letters.
Overall, his main research interests can be
separated into two areas: sustainable construction
materials such as cement replacement materials;
and composite materials such as PiezoelectricCement Composites which are very new to research
and have recently attracted many international
interests.

73

.. 2525
18



15 2526 3
2528
3 2545


35 2534

2544 (19 )


(
) ()

(SCG)
(.) (.)
.

/

(.)

. .

74

75

74

75

76

481

77

76

481

77

78

1

1. ... Foundation
for the Promotion of Science and Technology F.P.S.T.
2.

8.
8.1
8.2
8.3 7
8.4

9.
3.
10500

10.

11.

4.
4.1
4.2

4.3
4.4

12.
13.

3

5. 334,000 ()
6.
6.1

6.2
6.3
4

7.
7.1 20
7.2
7.3

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15.
16.

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4

2 ()

17.

17.1
17.2
17.3 -
17.4
17.5
17.6

17.7
17.8

79

78

1

1. ... Foundation
for the Promotion of Science and Technology F.P.S.T.
2.

8.
8.1
8.2
8.3 7
8.4

9.
3.
10500

10.

11.

4.
4.1
4.2

4.3
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12.
13.

3

5. 334,000 ()
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6.1

6.2
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7.1 20
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15.
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9 15





4

2 ()

17.

17.1
17.2
17.3 -
17.4
17.5
17.6

17.7
17.8

79

80

18.

19.
20.
21.

22.
23.
24.

17.9
17.10 17.7, 17.8 17.9
17.9

18.1
18.2
18.3

2
18.4

25.


26.


26.1
26.2
8

27.

28. 2

29.

27
30.





31.

32.

33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.

39.


5,000

2,000

81

80

18.

19.
20.
21.

22.
23.
24.

17.9
17.10 17.7, 17.8 17.9
17.9

18.1
18.2
18.3

2
18.4

25.


26.


26.1
26.2
8

27.

28. 2

29.

27
30.





31.

32.

33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.

39.


5,000

2,000

81

82

10

40.

.. 2549

2 2549 12.30 .

11

41.

42.
42.1
42.2
42.3
42.4

1. .
2.
( )
3. .
4. .
5. .
6. .
7. .

12

43.

44.
45.

8. .
9.
10. .
11. .
12. .
13. .

( )


1. .
2. .
3.
4. .
5.
6. .
7. .
8. .
9.
10.

83

82

10

40.

.. 2549

2 2549 12.30 .

11

41.

42.
42.1
42.2
42.3
42.4

1. .
2.
( )
3. .
4. .
5. .
6. .
7. .

12

43.

44.
45.

8. .
9.
10. .
11. .
12. .
13. .

( )


1. .
2. .
3.
4. .
5.
6. .
7. .
8. .
9.
10.

83


84

1.
2.
3.
4.

12.30 .
.
1
2
2.1 (. )

. 16
2549 . 1
.
.
. .

2.2
37-2/2548 29 2548 .
. .
.
.
.
.

2.3 2548
2548
1. .. 2548 2
3 2548
2. 2548 1 1 3
1 2548

2.4 Research King The Great Award


. Research King The Great Award

2

2.5 60
37-2/2548
60 -
60 lecture series
2549

2.6 .. 2549

.. 2549 11 2549 9.30 .


2.7 . 2549
.
. 2549 10-11 2549

85


84

1.
2.
3.
4.

12.30 .
.
1
2
2.1 (. )

. 16
2549 . 1
.
.
. .

2.2
37-2/2548 29 2548 .
. .
.
.
.
.

2.3 2548
2548
1. .. 2548 2
3 2548
2. 2548 1 1 3
1 2548

2.4 Research King The Great Award


. Research King The Great Award

2

2.5 60
37-2/2548
60 -
60 lecture series
2549

2.6 .. 2549

.. 2549 11 2549 9.30 .


2.7 . 2549
.
. 2549 10-11 2549

85

86

3
3.1 .. 2549
.. 2549
2
1. .

2. .

.. 2549 5
1. .

2. .

3. .

4. .

5. .



3.2
.
.
3.3
1 .


15
.
2550

4 .. 2548
.. 2548
30 2549
- 6,996,907.87 ( )
- 1 .. 2548 30 2549 3,523,415.70 (
)
- 1 .. 2548 30 2549 3,476,583.83 (
)
- 46,831.87 ()
.. 2549
5

5,000 () 4,000 ()

6
6.1
3,425 (
)

6.2 The Nation


.
The Nation 30 - 31 .. 1-3 .. 49
.

14.00 .

87

86

3
3.1 .. 2549
.. 2549
2
1. .

2. .

.. 2549 5
1. .

2. .

3. .

4. .

5. .



3.2
.
.
3.3
1 .


15
.
2550

4 .. 2548
.. 2548
30 2549
- 6,996,907.87 ( )
- 1 .. 2548 30 2549 3,523,415.70 (
)
- 1 .. 2548 30 2549 3,476,583.83 (
)
- 46,831.87 ()
.. 2549
5

5,000 () 4,000 ()

6
6.1
3,425 (
)

6.2 The Nation


.
The Nation 30 - 31 .. 1-3 .. 49
.

14.00 .

87

88

2548/2549 30 2549

- 2548/2549
1 2548 - 30 2549

89

117
() 0
() 4,181,472
() 1,542,306

174,251

737,298
() 11,461

( 46/47)

6,950,076
46,831

50
49
72
34
75
07

87

6,646,907 87
350,000 6,996,907 87

6,996,907 87
6,996,907 87

30 2549

( )
2575

2548
2548
48/49
2548
2548
2548
48/49

47/48

2,999,425
53,064
470,926

50
20

43,576

83

400,000
300,000
565,630
400,000
600,000
200,000
30,000
89,000
30,000
782,619
4,000
11,700
10,058
10,000

3,523,415

70

3,476,583
46,831

83
87

88

2548/2549 30 2549

- 2548/2549
1 2548 - 30 2549

89

117
() 0
() 4,181,472
() 1,542,306

174,251

737,298
() 11,461

( 46/47)

6,950,076
46,831

50
49
72
34
75
07

87

6,646,907 87
350,000 6,996,907 87

6,996,907 87
6,996,907 87

30 2549

( )
2575

2548
2548
48/49
2548
2548
2548
48/49

47/48

2,999,425
53,064
470,926

50
20

43,576

83

400,000
300,000
565,630
400,000
600,000
200,000
30,000
89,000
30,000
782,619
4,000
11,700
10,058
10,000

3,523,415

70

3,476,583
46,831

83
87

90

400,000







/


5
/





5







Impact factor Publication credit ( impact factor
) (Gross
Net publication credits)
(Major contributor)

.
35



3





Impact factor

Publication credit
Gross publication credit
Net publication credit


91

90

400,000







/


5
/





5







Impact factor Publication credit ( impact factor
) (Gross
Net publication credits)
(Major contributor)

.
35



3





Impact factor

Publication credit
Gross publication credit
Net publication credit


91

92

..
Year

Name

List of Outstanding Scientists

Field

..
Year

Name

93

Field

2525

2540

1982

Professor Dr. Virulh Sa-yakanit B.Sc.(Hons., Chulalongkorn), Ph.D.(Gothenberg)

Physics

1997

Associate Professor Dr. Prapon Wilairat B.Sc.(Hons., A.N.U.), Ph.D.(Oregon)

Biochemistry

2526

Professor Dr. Yong Poovorawan M.D.(Chulalongkorn)

Medical Science

2541

1998

Associate Professor Dr. Apichart Suksamrarn

Organic Chemistry

1983

Professor Dr. Prawase Wasi M.D.(Siriraj), Ph.D.(Colorado)

Genetics

2527

. ...

1984

Professor Dr. Puttiponge Varavudhi B.Sc.(Chulalongkorn), Ph.D.(Weizmann Institute) Biology

B.Sc.(Hons., Mahidol), Ph.D.(Cambridge)

Professor Dr. Yongyuth Yuthavong B.Sc.(Hons., London), D.Phil.(Oxford)

Biochemistry

2528

1985

Associate Professor Dr. Sakol Panyim B.S.(Berkeley), Ph.D.(Iowa)

Biochemistry

2529

1986

Associate Professor Dr. Yodhathai Thebtaranonth


B.Sc.(Medical Science), Ph.D.(Sheffield)

Chemistry

2530

1987

Professor Dr. Suthat Yoksan B.Sc.(Hons., London), Ph.D.(California)

Theoretical Physics

2531

1988

Professor Dr. Stitaya Sirisinha B.S.(Hons., Jacksonville State), Ph.D.(Rochester)

Microbiology

2532

1989

Professor Dr. Thavorn Vajrabhaya B.S.(Cornell), Ph.D.(Cornell)

Botany

2533

()

1990

Assistant Professor Dr. Skorn Mongkolsuk B.Sc.(Hons., London), Ph.D.(Maryland)

Biotechnology

2542

1999

Professor Dr. Wanpen Chaicumpa D.V.M.(Hons., Kasetsart), Ph.D.(Adelaide)

Immunology

2543

2000

Professor Dr. Chongrak Polprasert B.Sc.(Chulalongkorn), Ph.D.(Washington)

Environmental
Engineering

Professor Dr. Somchart Soponronnarit B.Eng.(Hons., Khon Kaen), Dr.-Ing.(ENSAT)

Energy Technology

2544

2001

Associate Professor Dr. Kate Grudpan B.S.(Chiang Mai),


Ph.D.(Liverpool John Moores)

Analytical Chemistry

2545

. ...

2002

Professor Dr. M.R. Jisnuson Svasti B.A.(Hons, Cambridge), Ph.D.(Cambridge)

Biochemistry

Associate Professor Sodsri Thaithong B.Sc .(Hons., Chulalongkorn), M.Sc.(Mahidol) Biology (Zoology)

()

Professor Dr. Suthat Fucharoen M.D.(Chiang Mai)

Medical Science

Professor Dr. Visut Baimai B.Sc.(Hons., Queensland), Ph.D.(Queensland)

Biology (Genetics)

2546

2003

Associate Professor Dr. Jumras Limtrakul B.Sc.(Khon Kaen), Ph.D.(Insbruck)

Chemistry

Associate Professor Dr. Supot Hannongbua B.Sc.(Khon Kaen), Ph.D.(Insbruck)

Chemistry

2547

2004

Professor Dr. Thiravat Hemachudha M.D.(Chulalongkorn)

Medical Science

2548

2005

Professor Dr. Rajata Rajatanavin M.D.(Mahidol)

Medical Science

Professor Dr. Boonsong Ongphiphadhanakul M.D.(Hons., Mahidol)

Medical Science

2549

2006

Professor Dr. Piyasan Praserthdam Dr.-Ing.(Toulouse)

Chemical Engineering

2534

1991

Professor Dr. Pairash Thajchayapong


B.Sc.(Hons., London), Ph.D.(Cambridge)

Computer Science

2535

1992

Professor Dr. Amaret Bhumiratana


B.Sc.(Hons., U.C. at Devis), Ph.D.(Michigan State)

Biotechnology

2536

1993

Professor Dr. Natth Bhamarapravati M.D.(Siriraj), D.Sc.(Pennsylvania)

Medical Science

2537

1994

Professor Dr. Visith Sitprija M.D.(Medical Science), Ph.D.(Colorado)

Medical Science

Professor Dr. Aree Valyasevi M.D.(Siriraj), D.Sc.(Pennsylvania)

Medical Science

2538

1995

Professor Dr. Prasert Sobhon B.Sc.(Western Australia), Ph.D.(Wisconsin)

Cell Biology

Professor Dr. Somchai Wongwises Dr.-Ing.(Hannover)

Mechanical Engineering

2550

2539

2007

Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury

Mathematics

1996

Professor Dr. Wanlop Surakampontorn


B.Eng.(KMITL), Ph.D.(Kent at Canterbury)

Mathematical Physics

2550
2007

Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa

Mathematics

92

..
Year

Name

List of Outstanding Scientists

Field

..
Year

Name

93

Field

2525

2540

1982

Professor Dr. Virulh Sa-yakanit B.Sc.(Hons., Chulalongkorn), Ph.D.(Gothenberg)

Physics

1997

Associate Professor Dr. Prapon Wilairat B.Sc.(Hons., A.N.U.), Ph.D.(Oregon)

Biochemistry

2526

Professor Dr. Yong Poovorawan M.D.(Chulalongkorn)

Medical Science

2541

1998

Associate Professor Dr. Apichart Suksamrarn

Organic Chemistry

1983

Professor Dr. Prawase Wasi M.D.(Siriraj), Ph.D.(Colorado)

Genetics

2527

. ...

1984

Professor Dr. Puttiponge Varavudhi B.Sc.(Chulalongkorn), Ph.D.(Weizmann Institute) Biology

B.Sc.(Hons., Mahidol), Ph.D.(Cambridge)

Professor Dr. Yongyuth Yuthavong B.Sc.(Hons., London), D.Phil.(Oxford)

Biochemistry

2528

1985

Associate Professor Dr. Sakol Panyim B.S.(Berkeley), Ph.D.(Iowa)

Biochemistry

2529

1986

Associate Professor Dr. Yodhathai Thebtaranonth


B.Sc.(Medical Science), Ph.D.(Sheffield)

Chemistry

2530

1987

Professor Dr. Suthat Yoksan B.Sc.(Hons., London), Ph.D.(California)

Theoretical Physics

2531

1988

Professor Dr. Stitaya Sirisinha B.S.(Hons., Jacksonville State), Ph.D.(Rochester)

Microbiology

2532

1989

Professor Dr. Thavorn Vajrabhaya B.S.(Cornell), Ph.D.(Cornell)

Botany

2533

()

1990

Assistant Professor Dr. Skorn Mongkolsuk B.Sc.(Hons., London), Ph.D.(Maryland)

Biotechnology

2542

1999

Professor Dr. Wanpen Chaicumpa D.V.M.(Hons., Kasetsart), Ph.D.(Adelaide)

Immunology

2543

2000

Professor Dr. Chongrak Polprasert B.Sc.(Chulalongkorn), Ph.D.(Washington)

Environmental
Engineering

Professor Dr. Somchart Soponronnarit B.Eng.(Hons., Khon Kaen), Dr.-Ing.(ENSAT)

Energy Technology

2544

2001

Associate Professor Dr. Kate Grudpan B.S.(Chiang Mai),


Ph.D.(Liverpool John Moores)

Analytical Chemistry

2545

. ...

2002

Professor Dr. M.R. Jisnuson Svasti B.A.(Hons, Cambridge), Ph.D.(Cambridge)

Biochemistry

Associate Professor Sodsri Thaithong B.Sc .(Hons., Chulalongkorn), M.Sc.(Mahidol) Biology (Zoology)

()

Professor Dr. Suthat Fucharoen M.D.(Chiang Mai)

Medical Science

Professor Dr. Visut Baimai B.Sc.(Hons., Queensland), Ph.D.(Queensland)

Biology (Genetics)

2546

2003

Associate Professor Dr. Jumras Limtrakul B.Sc.(Khon Kaen), Ph.D.(Insbruck)

Chemistry

Associate Professor Dr. Supot Hannongbua B.Sc.(Khon Kaen), Ph.D.(Insbruck)

Chemistry

2547

2004

Professor Dr. Thiravat Hemachudha M.D.(Chulalongkorn)

Medical Science

2548

2005

Professor Dr. Rajata Rajatanavin M.D.(Mahidol)

Medical Science

Professor Dr. Boonsong Ongphiphadhanakul M.D.(Hons., Mahidol)

Medical Science

2549

2006

Professor Dr. Piyasan Praserthdam Dr.-Ing.(Toulouse)

Chemical Engineering

2534

1991

Professor Dr. Pairash Thajchayapong


B.Sc.(Hons., London), Ph.D.(Cambridge)

Computer Science

2535

1992

Professor Dr. Amaret Bhumiratana


B.Sc.(Hons., U.C. at Devis), Ph.D.(Michigan State)

Biotechnology

2536

1993

Professor Dr. Natth Bhamarapravati M.D.(Siriraj), D.Sc.(Pennsylvania)

Medical Science

2537

1994

Professor Dr. Visith Sitprija M.D.(Medical Science), Ph.D.(Colorado)

Medical Science

Professor Dr. Aree Valyasevi M.D.(Siriraj), D.Sc.(Pennsylvania)

Medical Science

2538

1995

Professor Dr. Prasert Sobhon B.Sc.(Western Australia), Ph.D.(Wisconsin)

Cell Biology

Professor Dr. Somchai Wongwises Dr.-Ing.(Hannover)

Mechanical Engineering

2550

2539

2007

Professor Dr. Yongwimon Lenbury

Mathematics

1996

Professor Dr. Wanlop Surakampontorn


B.Eng.(KMITL), Ph.D.(Kent at Canterbury)

Mathematical Physics

2550
2007

Professor Dr. Sompong Dhompongsa

Mathematics

94

..
2534

2540

1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.

2541
2542

2. ..
1. ..
1. .

2535

2536
2537

2538
2539

..
.
..
..
..
.
..
..
.
.
..
.
..
.
..
..
..
.
.

2. .
2543

List of Young Scientists

()

()

1. ..
2. ..
3. ..

4. .
5. ..
6. .

..
2544

2545

2546

2547

2548

2549

2550

1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.

..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.
..
.
..
.

5.
6.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

..
..
.
.
..
..
.

6.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1.
2.

..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.
..
..
..

3.
4.
5.
6.

..
..
..
.

95

94

..
2534

2540

1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.

2541
2542

2. ..
1. ..
1. .

2535

2536
2537

2538
2539

..
.
..
..
..
.
..
..
.
.
..
.
..
.
..
..
..
.
.

2. .
2543

List of Young Scientists

()

()

1. ..
2. ..
3. ..

4. .
5. ..
6. .

..
2544

2545

2546

2547

2548

2549

2550

1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
4.

..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.
..
.
..
.

5.
6.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

..
..
.
.
..
..
.

6.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1.
2.

..
..
..
..
..
..
..
.
..
..
..

3.
4.
5.
6.

..
..
..
.

95

96

97

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.

1.
(.. )
2.
3. .
4. .
5. .

..
..
..
..
..
.
..

..

..

..



..

10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.

1. ..
2. .

3.

1.
3. .

2526 - 2538
.. 2549 -

2. ..

2539 - .. 2549

2. .
4. ..

2536 - 2538
2543 - 2546

2. ..

2549 -

1. ..
2525 - 2535
3. ..
2539 - 2542
5. .. 2547 -

1. .

2544 - 2548

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