Stephanos Konstantinidis was born in Athens in 1978. He is currently Research Director at the National Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS, Belgium) and professor at the University of Mons in Belgium. During his doctoral thesis (UMONS 2004), Stephanos contributed to the fundamental understanding of ionized magnetron sputter deposition technology, in particular towards the development of High-Power Impulse Magnetron Sputtering (HiPIMS) processes.
At ChIPS lab, he studies plasma-surface interactions and thin film deposition by combining both advanced plasma analysis and surface characterization methods. He’s also developing sputtering-based processes for the synthesis of nanomaterials.
Tony Murphy was born in Sydney, Australia, too many years ago. He received a PhD in Physics from the University of Sydney and subsequently completed a postdoc at Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik in Munich. Since 1989, he has worked at CSIRO, Australia’s leading government research organisation, where he is now a Chief Research Scientist. (A prize will be awarded to all who can say what CSIRO stands for.) Tony’s main research area is thermal plasma processes, including arc welding, metallurgical applications, waste treatment, and plasma property calculation. In the past few years, he has also been active in plasma catalysis. He was a member of the team that developed the PLASCON waste destruction process and has led plasma modelling projects with several companies, including General Motors, Boeing, and China Rail and Rolling Stock Corporation. He has published over 300 refereed journal papers and has been awarded research medals and prizes by the International Plasma Chemistry Society, European Physical Society, Association of Asia-Pacific Physical Societies, Institute of Physics (UK), Australian Academy of Science, Australian Institute of Physics, NSW Government and Royal Society of NSW. He is Editor-in-Chief of Plasma Chemistry and Plasma Processing, an Associate Editor of Journal of Manufacturing Processes, and a member of the Editorial Boards of Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, Reviews of Modern Plasma Physics, Welding in the World and Plasma Science and Technology; you are encouraged to submit your best work to these journals.
Key publications:- Foundations of high-pressure thermal plasmas. A B Murphy, D Uhrlandt, Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 27 063001 (2018).
- A perspective on arc welding research: the importance of the arc, unresolved questions and future directions. A B Murphy, Plasma Chem. Plasma Process. 35 471–489 (2015).
- Thermodynamic properties and transport coefficients of arc lamp plasmas: argon, krypton and xenon. A B Murphy, E. Tam, J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 47 295202 (2014).
Marina Prenzel (Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany)
Marina Prenzel is Science Manager of the Research Department 'Plasmas with Complex Interactions' at Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RD Plasma). She received her Ph.D. in physics in 2013 on a study of reactive magnetron sputtering. For three years she worked as a Potdoc at the Max-Planck-Institute for Chemical Energy Conversion in Mülheim (Germany) and moved at the beginning of 2017 back again to RUB, where she is responsible for the scientific organisation of the RD Plasma.
Key publications:- Investigation of different pre-treated multi-walled carbon nanotubes by Raman spectroscopy. P Düngen, M Prenzel, C Van Stappen, N Pfänder, S Heumann, R Schlögl, Materials Sciences and Applications 8 (8), 628-641 (2017)
- Formation of crystalline gamma-Al2O3 induced by variable substrate biasing during reactive magnetron sputtering. M Prenzel, A Kortmann, A von Keudell, F Nahif, J M Schneider, M Shihab, R P Brinkmann, J. Phys. D.: Appl. Phys. 46 (8), (2013) 084004
- Ion-induced secondary electron emission of oxidized nickel and copper studied in beam experiments. R Buschhaus et al 2022 Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 31 025017
Nevena Puač (Institute of Physics Belgrade, Serbia)
Dr. Nevena Puač is a principal research fellow at the Institute of Physics Belgrade working in the low temperature plasma physics field - low and atmospheric pressure plasmas, expert in numerous diagnostics methods and application of plasmas in biology, medicine and agriculture. She obtained her PhD at the University of Belgrade with a part of the thesis completed at the Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon, Portugal. She was a PI of national technological project (TD 23016, Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, 2008-2010), multidisciplinary project (III41011, Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, 2011-2019) and PI at several bilateral projects. Currently she is the Action Chair and coordinator of the multidisciplinary COST Action, PlAgri-CA19110, “Plasma Agriculture for smart and sustainable agriculture” and was a leader of Marie Sklodowska Curie ITN project (Nowelties 812880) at the Institute of Physics. She has published more than 70 articles in international journals and publications. Her h-index is 24 with more than 1300 citations. Most of the highly cited papers that she has published are in the field of applications of plasma in biology and medicine. Until now she has supervised several PhD and Master and Diploma theses. She was co-chair and organizer of several conferences and workshops.
Key publications:- N Puač, M Gherardi, M Shiratani, Plasma agriculture: A rapidly emerging field, Plasma processes and polymers 15 (2), 1700174 (2108)
- C Bradu, K Kutasi, M Magureanu, N Puač, S Živković, Reactive nitrogen species in plasma-activated water: Generation, chemistry and application in agriculture, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics 53 (22), 223001 (2020)
- S Tomić, A Petrović, N Puač, N Škoro, M Bekić, ZL Petrović, M Čolić, Plasma-activated medium potentiates the immunogenicity of tumor cell lysates for dendritic cell-based cancer vaccines, Cancers 13 (7), 1626 (2021)
Rony Snyders (University of Mons, Belgium)
Rony Snyders received his PhD in Science from UMONS, Belgium in 2004. and carried out two post-doctoral stays at Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, Canada (2004-2006) and RWTH Aachen University, Germany (2006-2007). He is now full professor at Faculty of Sciences of UMONS where he is head of the Plasma-Surface Interaction Chemistry (ChIPS) group since 2007. He is one of the Scientific Director of Materia Nova R&D, Mons, Belgium and since 2017, guest Professor at the Technical University of Tianjin, Tianjin, China. He is past-president of the Belgian Vacuum Society (2018-2021) and members of several boards: IONICS, IVT, INISMA, Materia Nova and EUNICE University. His interests are on the utilization of low pressure plasmas for the processing of materials and for the conversion of gases with a special attention to the characterization of the plasma phase during these processes. He has been promoting 24 PhD thesis and co-authored more than 250 peer-reviewed papers (H-index: 48; overall citations: 8150). At UMONS, he has been member of the Rectoral College as advisor for interregional matters (2019-2022) and is now member of the Rectoral board as coordinator of the European University EUNICE at UMONS.
Key publications:- Foundations of plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition of functional coatings
R Snyders, D Hegemann, D Thiry, O Zabeida, J Klemberg-Sapieha, ...
Plasma Sources Science and Technology 32 (7), 074001, 2023
- CO2 conversion using catalyst-free and catalyst-assisted plasma-processes: Recent progress and understanding
G Chen, R Snyders, N Britun,
Journal of CO2 Utilization 49, 101557, 2021
- Recent advances in the development of nano-sculpted films by magnetron sputtering for energy-related applications
A Panepinto, R Snyders
Nanomaterials 10 (10), 2039, 2020
Achim von Keudell (Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany)
Achim von Keudell is professor for experimental physics at Ruhr-University Bochum since 2003. Before, he was staff scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics in Munich.
A. von Keudell specialised in plasma and surfaces physics. His experience encompasses in-situ ellipsometry, infrared spectroscopy and treatment of surfaces with plasma discharges. His group has been the first to quantify elementary surface processes in plasma surface interactions involving hydrocarbon radicals and hydrogen atoms. These serve as model experiments for the understanding of thin film growth in glow discharges.
The projects until 2010 focussed on plasma technology particularly with regard to clusters in plasmas and plasma sterilisation. Since a few years, the research on reactive microplasmas developed with the emphasis on the fundamental understanding of the reaction chemistry as well as on on reactive magnetron sputtering and HPPMS discharges.
Key publications:- Direct insertion of SiH3 radicals into strained Si-Si surface bonds during plasma deposition of hydrogenated amorphous silicon films. A von Keudell, J R Abelson, Phys. Rev. B. 59, 5791 (1999)
- Elementary processes in plasma-surface interaction:H-atom and ion-induced chemisorption of methyl on hydrocarbon film surfaces (review). A von Keudell, W Jacob, Progress in Surface Science 26, 21-54 (2004)