|
The
2nd AIST International Workshop on Chemical Sensors
|
|
Nagoya
Japan,16 July 2004
|
| <<Program>> |
| 10:30 |
Welcome
speech
Shuzo Kanzaki
|
|
10:35 |
Introductory
Norimitsu Murayama (Workshop coordinator) |
| 10:40 |
Novel
Exhaust Gas Sensors
Ralf Moos (University
of Bayreuth) |
| 11:20 |
Advanced
Gas Sensors for an Intelligent Air Quality Monitoring Network
Marie-Isabelle Baraton (University of Limoges) |
| 13:00 |
PTCR-CO Gas Sensor
Zhi-Gang Zhou (Tsinghua
University) |
| Nanotechnorogy
for Gas Sensors |
| 13:40 |
Processing and Characterization of Nanostructured Metal Oxides and Nanocomposites
for Use in Chemical Sensing Applications
Pelagia-Irene Gouma (State
University of New York) |
| 14:20 |
Meso-
to Macro-Porous Oxides as Semiconductor Gas Sensors
Yasuhiro Shimizu (Nagasaki
University) |
| 15:00 |
Research
Activities of Sensor Integration Group, AIST
Norimitsu Murayama (AIST) |
| 15:10
-15:30 |
Coffee Break |
| Poster
Session and Open Discussion with Speakers
(15・30 - 17・00)
|
|
1.
|
Micromechanical
Fabrication of Low Power Thermoelectric Hydrogen Sensor
Kazuki Tajima, Woosuch Shin, Noriya Izu, Ichiro Matsubara, and Norimitsu
Murayama |
|
2.
|
Planar
Catalytic Combustor Film for Thermoelectric Hydrogen Sensor
Yeongsoo Choi, Woosuch Shin, Noriya Izu, Ichiro Matsubara, and Norimitsu
Murayama |
|
3.
|
Effect
of Humidity on the Sensing Properties of Thermoelectric Hydrogen
Sensors
Naoya Sawaguchi, Woosuch Shin, Noriya Izu, Ichiro Matsubara, and
Norimitsu Murayama |
|
4.
|
Response
Evaluation of Resistive Oxygen Sensors Using Ceria Thick Film
Woosuck Shin, Noriya Izu, Ichiro Matsubara, and Norimitsu Murayama |
|
5.
|
Temperature
Independent Resistive Oxygen Sensors Using Oxide-ion Conductor as
a New Temperature Compensating Material
Noriya Izu, Woosuck Shin, Ichiro Matsubara, and Norimitsu Murayama |
|
6.
|
Intercalative
Polypyrrole/MoO3 Hybrid Materials for VOC Gas Sensors
Ichiro Matsubara, Noriya Izu, Woosuck Shin, and Norimitsu Murayama |
|
7.
|
Organically
Hybridized SnO2 thin film sensors
Ichiro Matsubara, Noriya Izu, Woosuck Shin, and Norimitsu Murayama |
| <<Resistration>> |
The dedline
is 7th Jul. 2004.
The
registration fee is free.
A
lunch (1000 yen) would be prepared with your order.
|
| <<Venue>>
|
AIST
chubu MAP
|
| <<Inquiry>> |
Dr.
Ichiro Matsubara
Advanced Manufacturing Research Institute
Shimo-Shidami Moriyama-ku Nagoya 463-8560 Japan
|
| <<Vitae
of Invited Lectures>> |
| Dr.
Ralf Moos received
his PhD from the University of Karlsruhe, Germany, in electrical
engineering. In 1995, he joined Daimler Chrysler in Stuttgart and
worked for the serial development of exhaust gas sensors. Since
1998, he has been responsible for several projects in the field
of gas sensors. Now he is with the University of Bayreuth, Bayreuth,
Germany. |
| Dr.
Marie-Isabelle Baraton
is
an eminent senior scientist in the Department of Ceramics (SPCTS,
UMR CNRS) at the University of Limoges, France. Her current research
interests include the physical-chemistry of nanomaterial surfaces
as well as theoretical and experimental studies of chemical reactions
at gas-nanomaterials interfaces. A recipient of many distinctions,
Baraton has had to clear a number of obstacles on her way to an
outstanding scientific career. |
| Dr.
Zhi-Gang Zhou is
a prestige professor, fellow of the IEEE and CIE, with the State
Key Lab of New Ceramics and Fine Processing of Tsinghua University.
He has chaired the Seventh International Meeting on Chemical Sensors
(IMCS-7) in Beijing, China on 27-30 July 1998. He will chair the
Sixth East Asia Conference on Chemical Sensors (EACCS-6) in Guilin,
China in 9-12 November 2003. Also he was a seniority director of
Inorganic Nonmetallic Materials Division in the National Natural
Science Foundation of China (NSFC) and an expert/consultant of the
United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO). He holds
four patents on ceramic sensors, one from the United States of America,
one from the Europe and two from China since 1985. His field of
interest was and is the ceramic sensors with emphasis on the sensing
mechanism, defect chemistry and physics, defect engineering of perovskite-type
chemical sensors. |
| Dr.
Pelagia-Irene (Perena) Gouma received
her PhD degree from the University of Birmingham, UK in 1996. She
holds a MS degree in Engineering Materials, and a MPhil in Organization
Management from the University of Liverpool, UK, and a BS in Applied
Physics from the Aristotelio University of Thessaloniki, Greece.
Dr. Gouma has been an Assistant Professor at State University of
New York at Stony Brook since 2000. Her research work focuses on
the electron microscopy characterization of advanced materials and
on the development of chemical sensors using semiconductor oxides.
She has published over 30 peer-reviewed articles in journals and
conference proceedings. |
| Dr.
Yasuhiro Shimizu received
his B. Eng. degree in applied chemistry in 1980 and doctorate in
engineering degree in 1987 from Kyushu University. He has been an
associate professor at Nagasaki University since 1987. His current
research concentrates on the modification of varistor-type gas sensors,
design of intelligent sensors by controlling gas diffusivity and
reactivity and application of microwave-induced plasma for environmental
technology. |
|