Bulletin of the American Physical Society
75th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 67, Number 9
Monday–Friday, October 3–7, 2022;
Sendai International Center, Sendai, Japan
The session times in this program are intended for Japan Standard Time zone in Tokyo, Japan (GMT+9)
Session DM2: Workshop I: Industrial Plasma Technologies
10:30 AM–5:00 PM,
Monday, October 3, 2022
Sendai International Center
Room: Tachibana
Chair: Hajime Sakakita, National Institute of Adv Industrial Science and Technology; Taisei Motomura, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
Abstract: DM2.00008 : Plasma for a clean and carbon-neutral world
4:15 PM–5:00 PM
Presenter:
Dae Hoon Lee
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Authors:
Dae Hoon Lee
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Hongjae Kang
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Youna Kim
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Heesoo Lee
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Hohyun Song
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Jeongan Choi
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Kwan-Tae Kim
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
Young-Hoon Song
(Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials)
From this point of view, the role of plasma is expanding for carbon neutrality. Utilization of plasma produced using electric energy has been limited in that it was based on expensive electric energy, but this limitation disappeared as the use of renewable energy for carbon neutrality expanded because electricity is the final product of all of the renewable energy sources.
Plasma can be the most effective means to produce 'heat' instead of the combustion process. Higher temperature conditions can be made faster than conventional combustion processes or electrothermal heating devices, and this characteristic will be usefully utilized in various industries.
In particular, one of the biggest differences between ordinary heating devices and plasma is that rapid heating and rapid cooling are possible. It can be used to create new pathways for various chemical processes, either through plasma-only reactions or plasma-catalyzed reactions. In this presentation, we would like to introduce a representative example of an electrochemical reaction using plasma and its characteristics
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