International Journal of Applied Research on Information Technology and Computing
  • Year: 2014
  • Volume: 5
  • Issue: 3

An Informatics Technical Note on Interaction of DNA–Graphene Chemical Sensor System as Reaction–Diffusion Wave-Based Computing System in Ionised Gaseous environments and their Applications Using Theoretical Studies and Scientific Computation Overview

  • Author:
  • Nirmal Tej Kumar1,, Andre H. Rosa2, Li Yonggui3,4, Gagik Shmavonyan5
  • Total Page Count: -191
  • Published Online: Dec 1, 2014
  • Page Number: 214 to 22

1Senior Researcher, GEA-UNESP, Department of Environmental Engineering UNESP, Sorocaba, SP, Brazil

2Director, GEA-UNESP, Department of Environmental Engineering UNESP, Sorocaba, SP, Brazil

3Professor Jiangnan University, Wuxi, Jiangsu Province, PR China

4Professor (visiting), Fukui University, Fukui, Japan

5 Professor, Department of Physics, SEUA, Yerevan, Armenia

*Corresponding author Email id: hmfg2014@gmail.com

Abstract

The physics of plasmas encompasses basic problems from the universe and has assured us of promises in diverse applications to be implemented in a wider range of scientific and engineering domains, linked to most of the evolved and evolving fundamental problems. Substantial part of this domain could be described by R–D mechanisms involving two or more species (reaction–diffusion mechanisms). These could further account for the simultaneous non-linear effects of heating, diffusion and other related losses. We mention here that in laboratory scale experiments, a suitable combination of these processes is of vital importance and very much decisive to investigate and compute the net behaviour of plasmas under consideration. Plasmas are being used in the revolution of information processing, so we considered in this technical note a simple framework to discuss and pave the way for better formalisms and Informatics, dealing with diverse domains of science and technologies. The challenging and fascinating aspects of plasma physics is that it requires a great deal of insight in formulating the relevant design problems, which in turn require ingenuity and flexibility in choosing a particular set of mathematical (and/or experimental) tools to implement them.

Keywords

R–D problems, Nanotechnology, DNA, Graphene, Sensing and information processing, Modelling, Mathematics, Wave-based computing systems