J
Jungmi Hong
Researcher at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
Publications - 30
Citations - 1038
Jungmi Hong is an academic researcher from Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Atmospheric pressure & Atmospheric-pressure plasma. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 30 publications receiving 634 citations. Previous affiliations of Jungmi Hong include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign & University of Melbourne.
Papers
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Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria differ in their sensitivity to cold plasma.
TL;DR: It is reported that CAP efficacy is directly correlated to bacterial cell wall thickness in several species, and cell membranes and biofilm matrix are also likely to play a role.
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Plasma Catalysis as an Alternative Route for Ammonia Production: Status, Mechanisms, and Prospects for Progress
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss possible benefits and synergies of the combination of plasma and catalysts in ammonia synthesis and introduce different regimes of plasma discharges and plasma reactor configurations.
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Kinetic modelling of NH3 production in N2–H2 non-equilibrium atmospheric-pressure plasma catalysis
Jungmi Hong,Jungmi Hong,Sergey Pancheshnyi,Eugene Tam,John J. Lowke,Steven Prawer,Anthony B. Murphy +6 more
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Plasma Catalytic Synthesis of Ammonia Using Functionalized-Carbon Coatings in an Atmospheric-Pressure Non-equilibrium Discharge
Jungmi Hong,Jungmi Hong,Morteza Aramesh,Morteza Aramesh,Olga Shimoni,Dong Han Seo,Samuel Yick,Amelia Greig,Christine Charles,Steven Prawer,Anthony B. Murphy +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the synthesis of ammonia in a non-equilibrium atmospheric-pressure plasma using functionalized-nanodiamond and diamond-like-carbon coatings on α-Al2O3 spheres as catalysts was investigated.
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Identifying Surface Reaction Intermediates in Plasma Catalytic Ammonia Synthesis
Lea R. Winter,Bryony Ashford,Jungmi Hong,Anthony B. Murphy,Jingguang G. Chen,Jingguang G. Chen +5 more
TL;DR: Ammonia synthesis by plasma catalysis has emerged as an alternative process for decoupling nitrogen fixation from fossil fuels as discussed by the authors, and plasma activation can potentially circumvent the limitations of convexity.