The sterilization of medical equipment was performed using low-pressure RF discharge plasma. Oxygen radicals as oxidizing materials for sterilization were produced from oxygen or water vapor. The generation of atomic oxygen and OH radicals was confirmed using the light emission spectra of the plasma. The pressure in the discharge region was varied periodically during inactivation in order to produce radicals effectively and to penetrate the produced radicals into tiny gaps. Medium sheets for microbial detection indicated that the decimal reduction value of active bacillus was 5 and 8 min using oxygen plasma and water vapor plasma with n
e=109 cm-3, respectively. Biological indicators clarified that the sterilization of bacilli spores was successful for a treatment time of 90 min.
Cyclohexane was oxidized under visible light in a titanium dioxide suspension containing hydrogen peroxide. Cyclohexanol and cyclohexanone were detected as products. Under similar experimental conditions, nonyl aldehyde was oxidized to nonylic acid. The reaction rate for the oxidation on rutile particles was faster than that on anatase particles. When hydrogen peroxide was added to suspensions of these particles, both rutile and anatase particles became yellow-colored due to the formation of peroxide complexes on their surfaces. The difference between the reaction rates for rutile and anatase particles suggests that the properties of the peroxide complexes formed on these particles are different. The properties of these complexes were studied by UV-vis spectroscopy.
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