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Heroes [Solved] Vietnamese Inventions

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  • Pho
  • Bún chả
  • Banh mi

Game

  • Flappy Bird by Dong Nguyen in 2014. [1]
  • Axie Infinity, NFT-based online video game co-created by Nguyen Thanh Trung by Sky Mavis [2]
  • Tam cúc is a multi-trick card game popular in North Vietnam. [3] [4]
  • Tò he is a traditional toy for children in Vietnam which is made from glutinous rice powder in form of edible figurine such as animals, flowers or characters in folk stories. [5]
  • Tổ tôm [6]
  • 7554: Glorious Memories Revived is a first-person shooter video game developed by Vietnamese video game developer Emobi Games for Windows. It was released for Vietnamese markets on December 16, 2011.
  • Shadow Era is a free online digital collectible card game

    A digital collectible card game (DCCG) or online collectible card game (OCCG) is a computer or video game that emulates collectible card games (CCG) and is typically played online or occasionally as a standalone video game. Many DCCGs are types of digital tabletop games and follow traditional card game-style rules, while some DCCGs use alternatives for cards and gameboards, such as icons, dice and avatars. Originally, DCCGs started out as replications of a CCG's physical counterpart, but many DCCGs have foregone a physical version and exclusively release as a video game, such as with Hearthstone.

     created by Vietnamese developer Wulven Studios. Cross platform gameplay is central to the digital version’s design and it is supported on PC, Mac, iOS, and Android. It was released on February 24, 2011. [7]

  • Garena Free Fire battle royale made by 111 Dots Studio and published by Garena. 
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Vietnamese scientist invents face mask to help wearers breathe easier


 
 
 
  • VIETNAM 
  • Wednesday, 07 Jul 2021

    6:51 PM MYT

The first version of the mask is for normal people in daily use. — Photo courtesy of Metran

HANOI (Vietnam News/ANN): Face masks have become an inseparable part of our daily life amid the Covid-19 pandemic, but many wearers wish they didn't feel so stuffy while protecting their health.

A Vietnamese scientist living in Japan has invented an air-purifying face mask that kills bacteria and viruses, while creating a flow of cool, fresh air for wearers.

 

At the age of 74, Trần Ngọc Phúc, founder and chairman of Japanese medical equipment firm Metran, is still researching and inventing practical products.

His latest invention is the air filtration face mask, which makes it easy to breathe in hot weather and is suitable for frontline medical forces, workers in toxic environments and airline staff.

 

Phúc is widely known as the inventor of respiratory ventilators (MV20) ordered by the Japanese Government last year to assist patients amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

As many as 2, 000 MV20 ventilators were handed over to Vietnamm last April to help local patients.

Phúc’s latest invention is made from silicon so that the mask can filter out bacteria and viruses and have a high level of air resistance.

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The transparent medical plastic sheet covering the mouth helps prevent droplets.

The mask can create positive pressure to ensure that the unfiltered air cannot penetrate into the respiratory system.

With three versions designed for specific groups of people in different living and working conditions, the masks will debut in August, according to the scientist.

The first version of the mask, which is for normal people in daily use, can protect everyone from infection by limiting the spread of bacteria and viruses from the outside environment. “It helps wearers protect themselves and people around them, ” Phúc said.

People can breathe easily when wearing the masks while playing sports, running and being in hot weather thanks to the air filtration layer. They can also wear that version with other types of face masks like the ones made from fabric or N95 masks, he said.

The second version, of a higher level, is connected to a medical grade air pump via a one-metre long pipe. The pump uses built-in ultraviolet rays to kill viruses on surfaces. It can connect wirelessly with smartphones.

The mask itself has a two-way, high-efficiency particulate air filter on two cheeks so that the air released into the environment is purified, protecting the environment and the wearers’ health. This mask is suitable for elderly people or those on airplanes or at hospitals.

“The mask can filter 99.9 per cent of viruses, even the tiny viruses measuring only 0.12 micrometres in size, ” he said, while affirming that there is no mask able to filter 100 per cent of viruses.

The premium version, jointly studied by Metran and Tokyo Medical and Dental University, has the same features as version two. It has a shielding layer which looks like a helmet covering the head and the mouth.

The mask is a best fit for miners working in toxic environments, those at hospitals where Covid-19 patients are treated and other healthcare facilities treating patients with respiratory diseases and airborne infections.

Masks used in pandemic areas and toxic environments are equipped with more filters or a zeolite layer to increase protection, Phúc said.

The inventor said he would add sensors that measure air pressure, air pollution, or even the user's body temperature.

This future mask, as it is called by Phúc, is not only suitable for filtering bacteria and viruses including SARS-CoV-2, it can also filter out fine dust PM2.5, pollen and other elements that cause allergies.

In particular, the mask can be useful for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), a topic that Phúc has researched for many years.

“In China, there is research showing that 13 per cent of people from the age of 40 will suffer from COPD. I think the figure is not only true in China but also in Vietnam. We have been exposed to pollution and diseases. We have to protect ourselves by breathing safe air.”

“Our lungs are like radiators releasing the heat. The mask creates a cool fresh flow of air for the lungs so the wearers do not need air conditioners while in cars or buses. It is also a way to help save energy, ” he said.

Phúc said at first when he wore the air purifier mask [which has two round-shaped filters and is connected with a long pipe], other people thought he was infected with some disease.

“Then they started to be curious about its function. Now people realise its health benefits. Unless face masks have health benefits, they can not survive in society.”

“I hope that masks will soon become a lifestyle so that wearing masks will become more popular among everyone. In the future, I think wearing face masks will become a fashion trend like women’s jewellery.”

Metran is open to bringing face mask solutions to the public and welcome ideas to make the masks more suitable for wearers, for example, how to make the masks more fashionable, Phúc said. — Vietnam News Network

 

 

 
 
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Cleaning The Air As You Go: Vietnamese Students Invent Filter Bikes

Jul 9, 2019 | GREEN, NEWS, TECH, Vietnam

 

Vietnam – Patrik M. Loeff

 

Who would have thought that a humble bicycle could still be further improved to make it a more efficient ecological transport which does not only protect the rider’s health but also help improve air quality in the streets?

 

Ingenious Air Filtration Device

Three friends from Thang Long Institute are among those who brave the heavily-polluted streets of Da Lat City, in the Province of Lam Dong in southern Vietnam, when going to and from school in their bicycles.

Tung Bao Khanh, Cao Thi Khanh Hoa and Tran Hoang Phi Bao, who are all 17, thought of a simple way to prevent themselves from breathing the toxic fumes coming out of motorcycles and cars.

As part of their science school project, the three students invented a device which can be easily installed on the handlebar of a bike. It’s a simple contraption that sucks in incoming air, filter it, and funnel its purified form into the rider, a report said.

The filtration system, which is basically the heart of the device, is made up of three layers of cotton and activated carbon fabric which captures dust and impurities from the air.

Powering the filtration device are six small fans that are installed on both sides of a specially-made bicycle fork. Aside from charging up the filter, the fans also help blow clean air to the rider’s face.

The entire setup only costs around USD$13.40 but the results taken from the tests are rather very promising. According to the data, the device is capable of filtering up to 86% of the dust in the surrounding air and 63% of nitrogen dioxide.

 

Further Applications

The trio, who won a major prize for their invention in a local science fair competition, is looking to further improve their creation so that it can be adapted into other transport vehicles.

“The version we have made is for bicycles, but it can be adapted very easily to a motorbike or an electric bike. It would be even smaller because you can take advantage of the motorbike’s battery. We hope to reach the largest number of vehicles and help clean the air,” Hoa said in an interview.

Pressing Concerns

This clever invention couldn’t be more perfect as a potential solution to the nation’s ever-growing problems in pollution.

According to Green Innovation and Development Centre (GreenID), a local non-profit environmental organization, air pollution in Hanoi, for example, is already at the same level to that in Beijing, China.

“The average level of air pollution in Hanoi last year was four times higher than what is deemed acceptable by the World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines. I would say that the city is on an air pollution red alert,” Nguy Thi Khanh, GreenID’s founder, said in an interview.

Aside from industrial emissions coming from heavily-industrialized centers in the country, the increasing number of motor vehicles which use fossil fuels to run, is considered to be one of the main causes of air pollution in Vietnam.

Professor Le Thanh Hai of Thang Long Institute believes there is great potential in the students’ invention which can be used to help solve the air pollution problem in the national level.

Similar Projects

Attaching an air filtration system on bikes isn’t entirely a new idea. One has been made by Dutch artist and ecological activist Daan Roosegaarde which he calls the Smog Free Bicycle.

It is part of a much larger project which includes infrastructures like the Smog Free Tower and the Smog Free Ring. The program was co-developed by a major bike sharing firm in China, ofo.

Cleaning The Air As You Go: Vietnamese Students Invent Filter Bikes | Breaking Asia

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Vietnamese scientist invents bulletproof paint using rice husk

TN News

 

Nguyen Thi Hoe (L) introduces her bulletproof paint at a conference on May 16

A senior Vietnamese chemist announced Thursday she had successfully made a new bulletproof paint with rice husk that allows for much thinner and lighter vests than the current ones.

Nguyen Thi Hoe, chairman of Kova Paint Corporation, also introduced three more paints made with rice husk that are flame resistant, bacteria resistant and rustproof.  

More than 250 scientists and business representatives from different countries, including the US, Germany, Switzerland, Singapore and Malaysia attended the event at Ho Chi Minh City's New World Hotel where Hoe announced her findings.

She said the major material used to make the four paints is nano silica taken from rice husk.

The bulletproof paint improves the proofing property of the vest that is lighter thanks to fewer fabric layers.

Hoe said she had tested the bulletproof vest made with her new paint in Cambodia.

A bullet shot from a 2-meter distance was obstructed by a vest with 6 fabric layers covered with the new paint, while common bulletproof vests have to have between 20-40 layers to be able to stop that bullet, she said.

The flame resistant paint can protect wood, steel and concrete surfaces for 2-6 hours under fire of up to 1,000 degrees Celsius, while the anti-bacteria paint can destroy up to 99 percent of bacteria on the painted surface, she said.

Objects painted with her rustproof paint can stay intact under the sea for up to 10 years, Hoe told visitors.  

She said she is seeking to register her inventions in the US and transferring the technology to bulletproof vest makers around the world.

In 1992, Prof. Dr. Nguyen Thi Hoe was granted the Sofia Kovalevskaia Award, given to outstanding female scientists in the world, and the recognition prompted her to name her company company Kova Paint.

Vietnamese scientist invents bulletproof paint using rice husk | Education/Youth | Thanh Nien Daily (thanhniennews.com)

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