化工学院第七届国际交流月系列讲座 邀请人:王文俊 化学工程与生物工程学院 化学工程联合国家重点实验室(浙江大学)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Transport phenomena in chemical processes part II Michał Araszkiewicz PhD.
Advertisements

MULTISCALE SIMULATION OF FUNCTIONALIZATION OF SURFACES USING ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE DISCHARGES * Ananth N. Bhoj a) and Mark J. Kushner b) a) Department of.
Chemistry in Extreme Environments Chris Bennett, Xibin Gu, Brant Jones, Pavlo Maksyutenko, Fangtong Zhang, Ralf I. Kaiser Department of Chemistry, University.
METO 621 Lesson 24. The Troposphere In the Stratosphere we had high energy photons so that oxygen atoms and ozone dominated the chemistry. In the troposphere.
PLASMA DISCHARGE SIMULATIONS IN WATER WITH PRE-EXISTING BUBBLES AND ELECTRIC FIELD RAREFACTION Wei Tian and Mark J. Kushner University of Michigan, Ann.
Tsung-Chan “Cliff” Tsai Dr. David Staack  4 th state of matter: ionized gas  Most abundant in the cosmos  Made of electrons and ions  Electrically.
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
Plasma diagnostics using spectroscopic techniques
Department of Chemistry Seminar Announcement Date/Time/VenueTitle/Speaker 14 Mar (Mon) 11am – S8 Level 3 Executive Classroom Structure and Dynamics.
Reminders Quiz#2 and meet Alissa and Mine on Wednesday –Quiz covers Bonding, 0-D, 1-D, 2-D, Lab #2 –Multiple choice, short answer, long answer (graphical.
Department of Chemistry Seminar Announcement Date/Time/VenueTitle/Speaker 17 Feb (Thu) 11am – S8 Level 3 Executive Classroom Developing New Materials.
Experimental study of gas-liquid mass transfer coupled with chemical reactions by digital holographic interferometry C. Wylock, S. Dehaeck, T. Cartage,
Chemistry of Life Chapter 2 Table of Contents Section 1 Composition of Matter Section 2 Energy Section 3 Water and Solutions.
METO 621 CHEM Lesson 4. Total Ozone Field March 11, 1990 Nimbus 7 TOMS (Hudson et al., 2003)
Tuesday, October 20, :10p.m. Featheringill Hall Room 138 “Virtual Surgery” PROFESSOR SUVRANU DE, SC.D. J Erik Jonsson ‘22 Distinguished Professor.
TF15 A Quantum Chemical Investigation of the Stability and Chemistry of the Anions of CO and H 2 CO in Astrophysical Ices (& the Mystery of OH – ) Lina.
Chapter 2 - Chemistry of Life
How to Use This Presentation
ChE 551 Lecture 29 Catalysis By Metals.
An understanding of chemistry is fundamental to biology.
Ching-Rong “Ada” Chung Mentor: Dr. Jing Zhou Department of Chemistry
Chapter 2: Chemistry 2-1 Composition of Matter 2-2 Energy
School for PhD June 8-12, 2015 Luigi PASQUA
Saurabh J. Ullal, Anna R. Godfrey, Eray S. Aydil
Presentation by Greg Brown ( )
DOE Plasma Science Center Control of Plasma Kinetics
TOPIC 0A: Chemistry, Scientific Method and Chemical & Physical Change
DOE Plasma Science Center Control of Plasma Kinetics
PLASMA-WATER: SOLVATED ELECTRONS
ENERGY LOADING AND DECAY OF N2 VIBRATION
REACTOR CHEMISTRY AND CORROSION Section 1: Introduction to Corrosion
University of Michigan 8th Annual Graduate Student Symposium (MIPSE)
SEMINAR 1. Title : Non-volatile memory device and application
ELECTRIC FIELD MEASUREMENTS IN ns ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE AIR PLASMA
Electrochemistry The study of chemical reactions that produce electrical current or are driven to occur by applying an electrical current. galvanic cell.
PIC SIMULATIONS of ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE He/H2O DISCHARGES
Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering
PLASMA DIAGNOSTICS IN AIR PLASMAS CONTAINING WATER DROPLETS
Recombination (surface)
The Sheldon K. Friedlander Award
Atomistic simulations of contact physics Alejandro Strachan Materials Engineering PRISM, Fall 2007.
Atomistic materials simulations at The DoE NNSA/PSAAP PRISM Center
American Association for Aerosol Research
DOE Plasma Science Center Control of Plasma Kinetics
Testbed for Plasma-Wall and Etch Product Studies
PULSED DUSTY PLASMA FOR CONTROL OF NANOPARTICLE FLUXES TO A SUBSTRATE
New Diagnostic for Electric Field
OH KINETICS IN A SHIELDED ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE PLASMA JET
New insights into turbulence dynamics under stabilizing
Sheldon K. Friedlander Award
CONTROL OF PLASMA-BIOINTERACTIONS BY TUNING PLASMA CHEMISTRY
TGA and DSC. Thermal analysis ○Thermal analysis is a branch of materials science where the properties of materials are studied as they change with temperature.
Energy (2-4).
DOE Plasma Science Center Control of Plasma Kinetics
Amanda M. Lietz, Seth A. Norberg, and Mark J. Kushner
INTERACTION OF SLOW IONS
DOE Plasma Science Center Control of Plasma Kinetics
化工学院第七届国际交流月系列讲座 邀请人:王文俊 化学工程与生物工程学院 化学工程联合国家重点实验室(浙江大学)
化工学院第七届国际交流月系列讲座 邀请人:王文俊 化学工程与生物工程学院 化学工程联合国家重点实验室(浙江大学)
Table of Contents – Review of General Properties of Chemistry
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
CONTROLLING REACTIVE OXYGEN AND NITROGEN SPECIES (RONS) PRODUCTION BY ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE PLASMA JETS USING GAS SHIELDS* Seth A. Norberga), Ansgar Schmidt-Blekerb),
a)Department of Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Science
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life
Cecil and Ida Green Distinguished Professor
PLASMA-SURFACE INTERACTION (PSI) AT
化工学院第七届国际交流月系列讲座 邀请人:王文俊 化学工程与生物工程学院 化学工程联合国家重点实验室(浙江大学)
Matter Chapter 2 Section 1.
LEQ: Why is understanding the chemistry of atoms important to biology?
Novica S. Rados - graduate student -
Presentation transcript:

化工学院第七届国际交流月系列讲座 邀请人:王文俊 化学工程与生物工程学院 化学工程联合国家重点实验室(浙江大学) Prof. David Barry Graves Department of Chemical Engineering University of California - Berkeley David B. Graves joined the University of California at Berkeley in 1986 after receiving his PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Minnesota. He is currently Full Professor and Acting Chairman of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. His group studies the physics and chemistry of chemically active low temperature plasmas, including modeling and simulation, experimental studies of plasma using various gas phase and surface spectroscopies, dusty plasmas, plasma stability, plasmaelectromagnetic interactions, plasma-organic materials interactions, and plasma-liquid interactions. He has given over 100 invited international conference presentations and numerous invited seminars. He is author or co-author of over 200 peer-reviewed publications, 20 of which have at least 100 citations. David Graves is a fellow of the American Vacuum Society and the Institute of Physics and was the recipient of the Electrochemical Society Young Author Award, the NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, the Tegal Plasma Thinker Award, and the 3rd annual Plasma Prize of the Plasma Science and Technology Division of the AVS. He was named the Lam Research Distinguished Chair in Semiconductor Processing at UC Berkeley for 2011-16. He received the Allis Prize for the Study of Ionized Gases from the American Physical Society in 2014. Lecture 1: June 13th, 2016 10:00 am - 12:00 pm Room 502 - Building 7 When Low Temperature Plasma Meet Surfaces Low temperature plasmas (LTPs) are virtually always bounded by surfaces. Charged particles from the plasma recombine and are emitted at walls; plasma species exchange mass, momentum and energy with walls; the plasma electrostatic potential is referenced to wall potential; energetic and often chemically reactive charged and neutral species from the plasma impact surfaces and reflect, embed, diffuse and desorb back into the plasma; dust particle nuclei may originate at surfaces; and surface erosion and re-deposition often dramatically alter plasma neutral composition and temperature. In this talk, I will present an overview of low temperature plasma-surface interactions with an emphasis on what the LTP community has learned during the last several decades. Lecture 2: June 14th, 2016 10:00 am - 12:00 pm Room 602 - Building 7 Atmospheric Plasma-Liquid Interactions Cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) interactions with liquids are common to many applications involving CAP-living system interactions. The fundamental principles governing interactions at the ionized gas - liquid electrolyte phase boundary are poorly understood at present. In this talk, I will address several key questions, especially about the phase boundary, and present experimental and modeling results that address these issues. One important question regards charge-transfer dynamics at the interface. Modeling results coupling plasma with liquid electrolyte highlight the role of electrons as they enter the liquid from the plasma to become hydrated in solution. Calculations suggest that there are at least three spatial scales involved with reactive species entering the liquid from the plasma: charged species like hydrated electrons are lost within a few tens of nm; highly reactive neutrals like OH are lost within microns; and more stable neutrals like H2O2 and NO2- survive mm to cm into the liquid. Experimental studies of liquid dye reacting with air plasma-generated species support the idea that near-surface reactions can dominate the effects of CAP interaction with liquids. Implications of these processes on plasma-biological interactions will be discussed. Lecture 3: June 15th, 2016 10:00 am - 12:00 pm Room 602 - Building 7 Cold Atmospheric Plasma Biomedicine In this seminar, I will address the newest area of low temperature ionized gas plasmas, in this case operating under atmospheric pressure conditions, in which the temperature-sensitive material is living tissue. We sometimes use the term cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) to describe near-room temperature, atmospheric pressure partially ionized gas plasmas. CAP research directed towards biomedical applications such as sterilization, surgery, wound healing and anti-cancer therapy has seen remarkable growth in the last 3-5 years, but the mechanisms responsible for the biomedical effects have remained mysterious. It is known that CAP readily create reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS). ROS and RNS (or RONS), in addition to a suite of other radical and non-radical reactive species, are essential actors in an important sub-field of aerobic biology termed ‘redox’ (or oxidation-reduction) biology. I will review the evidence suggesting that RONS generated by plasmas are responsible for their observed therapeutic effects. Finally, I will review recent research results from our group and from other groups around the world, and suggest some of the more promising intellectual challenges and biomedical applications from our current perspective. 邀请人:王文俊 化学工程与生物工程学院 化学工程联合国家重点实验室(浙江大学)