Kyushu University Academic Staff Educational and Research Activities Database
Researcher information
Naoki Kimura Last modified date:2013.5.17

Assistant Professor / Industrial Process Engineering
Department of Chemical Engineering
Faculty of Engineering


Graduate School
Undergraduate School


E-Mail
Homepage
[URL]
Laboratory 7, Dept. of Chemical Engineering.
Phone
092-802-2777
Fax
092-802-2767
Academic Degree
Doctor of Engineering
Field of Specialization
Process Systems Engineering and Information Processing in Chemical Processes
Outline Activities
I have experiment/exercise classes below:
Experiment class for 3rd grade undergraduates, Exercise class for 3rd grade undergraduates, Core seminar for 1st grade undergraduates.
Research
Research Interests
  • Plant Alarm Management
    keyword : alarm system
    2008.04.
  • Multiagent system for energy-saving chemical process design
    keyword : energy-saving process design, multiagent
    2006.08.
  • Process design and management system for micro chemical processes using multiagent framework
    keyword : multiagent, micro chemical processes, collaboration mechanism, process design system
    2002.04~2006.03.
Academic Activities
Papers
1. Naoki Kimura , Kizuki Yasue, Tekishi Kou, and Yoshifumi Tsuge,A Multiagent Approach for Sustainable Design of Heat Exchanger Networks,Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence,Vol.6277,pp.409-416,2010.09.
2. A Method of Performance Evaluation for Plant Alarm System on Basis of Cause-Effect Model.
3. Naoki KIMURA, Hideyuki MATSUMOTO and Chiaki KURODA: "Collaborative Dynamic Acquisition of Simulation Models for Micro Chemical Plant" Transactions of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence.
Membership in Academic Society
  • The Society of Chemical Engineers, Japan
  • The Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence
Educational
Educational Activities
-Process dynamics and stability of control system in Experiment class for 3rd grade undergraduates
-Distillation column control in Exercise class for 3rd grade undergraduates
-Core seminar for 1st grade undergraduates