Publications by authors named "Gukhwa Hwang"

The effects of metal oxides and clays on the transport of zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO-NPs) in saturated porous media were investigated under different ionic strength (IS) conditions. We studied the transport and retention behavior of ZnO-NPs for different types of porous media (untreated, acid treated, and acid-salt treated sand). The selected untreated sand was used as a representative sand, coated with both metal oxide and clay.

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Unlabelled: Previous studies reported that specially designed ventilation systems provide good air quality and safe environment by removing airborne droplets that contain viruses expelled by infected people. These water droplets can be stable in the environment and remain suspended in air for prolonged periods. Encounters between droplets may occur and droplet interactions should be considered.

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Bimetallic (Ag-Pd/α-AlO) catalysts are essentially applied to naptha-cracking process with a controlled CO emission. After losing the catalytic properties in long run, the landfilling disposal of spent catalysts poses severe stress to the environment and deprivation of precious metals. Therefore, an innovative solvo-chemical recycling approach that involving the solid-liquid and liquid-liquid mass transfer phenomena was studied.

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In this study, the influences of physical and chemical factors [e.g., ionic strength (IS), pH, and flow rate] on the fate and transport of citrate-coated silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) were investigated through experiments using saturated columns.

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The transport, retention, and long-term release of zinc oxide nanoparticle aggregates (denoted below as ZnO-NPs) were investigated in saturated, bare and biofilm (Pseudomonas putida) coated sand packed columns. Almost complete retention of ZnO-NPs occurred in bare and biofilm coated sand when the influent solution pH was 9 and the ionic strength (IS) was 0.1 or 10 mM NaCl, and the retention profiles were always hyper-exponential.

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In this study, a porous calcium-based sorbent was prepared for simultaneous removal of SO2, particulate matter (PM), and heavy metals generated during incineration of sewage sludge. The prepared sorbent was confirmed to have a 3-dimensional-network pore structure, a high specific surface area of 68.5m(2)/g, and gas permeability of 1.

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