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Chiori Mochizuki

Researcher at Canon Inc.

Publications -  144
Citations -  1747

Chiori Mochizuki is an academic researcher from Canon Inc.. The author has contributed to research in topics: Layer (electronics) & Electrode. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 144 publications receiving 1747 citations.

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Patent

Liquid crystal optical modulator

TL;DR: A liquid crystal optical modulator has a liquid crystal held between two substrates each having a light-transmissive electrode on the surface, in which at least one substrate has minute alignment-treated region having two or more kinds of liquid crystal aligning abilities different from each other formed and arranged on the same substrate as mentioned in this paper.
Patent

Photoelectric conversion device having thermal conductive member

TL;DR: In this article, a photoelectric conversion device including peripheral ICs is presented, in which the peripheral IC is in thermal contact with a substrate having photo-electric conversion elements and a chassis, which covers the peripherals and has high thermal conductivity, via a thermal conductive member.
Patent

Radiation image pickup device

TL;DR: In this article, a thin-film transistor with a top gate structure was used to improve the stability of the TFT image pickup device, where a channel portion of the transistor is protected by a gate electrode, thereby providing stable TFT characteristics without undesirable turning ON any of the other TFT elements due to the back gate effect by the fluctuation in electric potentials corresponding to outputs from the sensor electrodes.
Patent

Method of manufacturing non-single crystal film and non-single crystal semiconductor device

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between the distance d (cm) between electrodes and the frequency f (MHz) of the high frequency power source satisfies f(HMz)/d ( cm) < 30 HMz/cm.
Patent

Imaging apparatus and radiation imaging system

TL;DR: In this paper, an imaging apparatus includes a plurality of pixels disposed on an insulation substrate, each of which consists of thin-film transistors, a conversion element disposed above the TFTs, and an insulating layer disposed between the conversion element and the plurality of TFLs.