Member of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts
Jonathan W.C. Wong mainly focuses on Waste management, Compost, Sludge, Amendment and Environmental chemistry. His study in Waste management is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Decomposition and Lime. He has included themes like Organic matter, Ammonium, Zeolite, Manure and Sawdust in his Compost study.
His study explores the link between Sludge and topics such as Sewage that cross with problems in Sewage treatment and Pollutant. His study in Amendment intersects with areas of studies such as Pulp and paper industry, Fly ash, Agronomy and Environmental engineering. His research in Environmental chemistry intersects with topics in Loam, Soil contamination, Trace element and Pesticide.
Jonathan W.C. Wong focuses on Waste management, Sludge, Food waste, Pulp and paper industry and Compost. Filtration is closely connected to Flocculation in his research, which is encompassed under the umbrella topic of Waste management. Jonathan W.C. Wong integrates Sludge and Amendment in his studies.
His Food waste study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Food science, Leachate and Acidogenesis, Methane, Anaerobic digestion. His Compost research includes themes of Organic matter, Germination, Manure, Sawdust and Animal science. His Environmental chemistry research includes elements of Bioremediation, Soil water, Soil contamination and Environmental engineering.
His primary areas of investigation include Food waste, Waste management, Anaerobic digestion, Pulp and paper industry and Food science. The various areas that he examines in his Food waste study include Compost, Leachate, Hydrolysis, Methane and Sewage treatment. His Waste management research incorporates themes from Raw material and Bioconversion.
The study incorporates disciplines such as Sludge, Dry basis, Phosphorus, Digestion and Digestion in addition to Pulp and paper industry. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Organic matter, Thermal hydrolysis, Methanogenesis, Manure and Thermal treatment. His Food science research incorporates elements of Thermophile, Germination, Incubation, Dry weight and Bacterial strain.
His main research concerns Food waste, Food science, Waste management, Anaerobic digestion and Pulp and paper industry. His Food waste study incorporates themes from Sludge, Decomposition, Leachate, Brevibacillus borstelensis and Bacillus licheniformis. His Sludge research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Biodegradable waste, Sewage treatment and Sewage.
The concepts of his Waste management study are interwoven with issues in Thermophile, Acidogenesis, Metabolic pathway, Sawdust and Lime. The Anaerobic digestion study combines topics in areas such as Biogas and Phenanthrene. His work in Dry weight covers topics such as Compost which are related to areas like Aerobic bacteria.
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Effect of C/N on composting of pig manure with sawdust
G.F. Huang;J.W.C. Wong;Q.T. Wu;B.B. Nagar.
Waste Management (2004)
Assessment of trace metal distribution and contamination in surface soils of Hong Kong.
T. B. Chen;Jonathan W C Wong;H. Y. Zhou;Ming Hung Wong.
Environmental Pollution (1997)
Transformation of organic matter during co-composting of pig manure with sawdust.
G.F. Huang;Q.T. Wu;J.W.C. Wong;B.B. Nagar.
Bioresource Technology (2006)
Silicon-mediated enhancement of cadmium tolerance in maize (Zea mays L.) grown in cadmium contaminated soil.
Yongchao Liang;J.W.C. Wong;Long Wei.
Chemosphere (2005)
Effects of lime amendment on availability of heavy metals and maturation in sewage sludge composting
M Fang;J.W.C Wong.
Environmental Pollution (1999)
Fluoride contents in tea and soil from tea plantations and the release of fluoride into tea liquor during infusion
K. F. Fung;Z. Q. Zhang;J. W. C. Wong;Ming Hung Wong.
Environmental Pollution (1999)
Co-composting of soybean residues and leaves in Hong Kong
J.W.C Wong;K.F Mak;N.W Chan;A Lam.
Bioresource Technology (2001)
Utilization of a manure compost for organic farming in Hong Kong
J.W.C. Wong;K.K. Ma;K.M. Fang;C. Cheung.
Bioresource Technology (1999)
Chemical speciation and phytoavailability of Zn, Cu, Ni and Cd in soil amended with fly ash-stabilized sewage sludge.
D.C. Su;J.W.C. Wong.
Environment International (2004)
Co-composting of sewage sludge and coal fly ash: nutrient transformations
M. Fang;J.W.C. Wong;K.K. Ma;M.H. Wong.
Bioresource Technology (1999)
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