Could innovation reshape sustainable wastewater treatment approaches soon?
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Eri Yoshida earned her Ph.D. in Polymer Engineering from the Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan. She joined the Kyoto Institute of Technology as an Assistant Professor and conducted research on supercritical CO₂ technology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She moved to Toyohashi University of Technology as an Associate Professor and later participated in a faculty exchange program at the City University of New York, Queens College. Yoshida’s contributions to Sustainable Chemistry have been globally recognized. Her research interests include CO₂ capture technologies, chemical recycling of waste plastics, and artificial biomembrane models based on synthetic polymers.

Eri Yoshida earned her Ph.D. in Polymer Engineering from the Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan. She joined the Kyoto Institute of Technology as an Assistant Professor and conducted research on supercritical CO₂ technology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She moved to Toyohashi University of Technology as an Associate Professor and later participated in a faculty exchange program at the City University of New York, Queens College. Yoshida’s contributions to Sustainable Chemistry have been globally recognized. Her research interests include CO₂ capture technologies, chemical recycling of waste plastics, and artificial biomembrane models based on synthetic polymers.
Could innovation reshape sustainable wastewater treatment approaches soon?