Reacting chemistry at the air-water interface
ORAL
Abstract
Plasma interaction with gas-liquid interfaces is becoming increasingly important in biological applications, chemical analysis and medicine. It introduces electrons, new ionic species and reactive species and contributes to chemical and electrical self-organization at the interface. To provide insight into the associated physics and chemistry at work in the evolution of the plasma in the air-water interface (AWI), a time-dependent one-dimensional modelling has been developed. The numerical simulation is used to solve the kinetic equations and help identify the important reaction mechanisms and describe the phenomena associated with hundreds of reacting pathways in gas-phase and liquid-phase AWI chemistry.
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Authors
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Tomoyuki Murakami
Seikei University
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Thomas Morgan
Wesleyan University
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Lutz Huwel
Wesleyan University
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Bill Graham
Centre for Plasma Physics, Queen's University Belfast, Queen’s University Belfast, Centre for Plasma Physics