The study of electricity and how it affects chemical reactions is known as electrochemistry. Electricity is generated in electrochemistry by the passage of electrons from one element to another in a redox or oxidation-reduction reaction. The study of chemical reactions that cause electrons to move is known as electrochemistry. The movement of electrons is known as electricity, and it can be generated by moving electrons from one element to another in an oxidation-reduction ("redox") reaction. Electrochemistry is a truly multidisciplinary discipline with applications in a wide range of physical, chemical, and biological fields. Electrochemistry is a discipline and an industry based on physicochemical phenomena that occur when electrical and chemical energy exchanges collide in a reactive scheme.
Title : Advances in plasma-based waste treatment for sustainable communities
Hossam A Gabbar, Ontario Tech University, Canada
Title : Nanostructured biodevices based on carbon nanotubes and glyconanoparticles for bioelectrocatalytic applications
Serge Cosnier, Silesian University of Technology, Poland
Title : Carbon capture and storage: The impact of impurities in CO2 streams
Andy Brown, Progressive Energy Ltd, United Kingdom
Title : Supramolecular nano chemistries: Fighting viruses, inhibiting bacteria and growing tissues
Thomas J Webster, Hebei University of Technology, China
Title : Chemical engineering of vanadium and tantalum zeolites for application in environmental catalysis
Stanislaw Dzwigaj, Sorbonne Universite, France
Title : Disrupting TNF-α and TNFR1 interaction: Computational insights into the potential of D-Pinitol as an anti-inflammatory therapeutic
Ferran Acuna Pares, Universidad Internacional de la Rioja (UNIR), Spain