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International Workshop on Plasma Science and Applications
(October 25-26.
2010, in Xiamen, China)

deadline of abstract
submission is delayed to 31st
August, 2010 (new)
second announcement
Welcome to IWPSA 2010
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Scope of the IWPSA Conference:
Recent Progress in Plasma Science and its Industrial
Application
The
International workshop on Plasma Science and Application will be held in
Xiamen, Fujian
Province, China,
from Monday, October 25 to Tuesday, October 26, 2010.
The Plasma
Workshop series is organized by the Institute
of Physics, Chinese
Academy of Sciences and Fujian Key
Laboratory for Plasma and Magnetic Resonance, School
of Physics and Mechanical &
Electrical Engineering, Xiamen
University.
With a
continuously growing interest in the preceding IWPSA events, with more than
200 participants from all over the world in 2008, IWPSA is a
well-established forum in the field of plasma.
IWPSA
provides an opportunity to present recent progress in research and
development and industrial applications. Its topics span a wide range from
fundamentals such as e.g. process modelling and simulation or thin physics,
through empirical studies which e.g. establish the relationships between
process parameters and the structural and functional properties of modified
surfaces and/or thin films, towards the application in industrial
production.
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Main
Sponsors:




XIAMEN, traditionally known in the West as Amoy, is
smaller and much prettier than the provincial capital Fuzhou, and offers a lot more to see, its
streets and buildings, attractive shopping arcades and bustling seafront
boasting a nineteenth-century European flavour. One of China's most
tourist-friendly cities, Xiamen is in addition the cleanest and, perhaps,
most tastefully renovated city you'll see anywhere in the country, giving it
the feel of a holiday resort, despite the occasional seedy, fishy backstreet.
Compounding the resort atmosphere is the wonderful little island of Gulangyu,
a ten-minute ferry ride to the southwest, the old colonial home of Europeans
and Japanese whose mansions still line the island's traffic-free streets –
staying here is highly recommended.

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