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Takashi Nakanishi

Researcher at National Institute for Materials Science

Publications -  174
Citations -  6618

Takashi Nakanishi is an academic researcher from National Institute for Materials Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Alkyl & Fullerene. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 164 publications receiving 6009 citations. Previous affiliations of Takashi Nakanishi include Hokkaido University & Nara Institute of Science and Technology.

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Preparation and Characterization of Well‐Ordered Hexagonal Mesoporous Carbon Nitride

TL;DR: In this paper, the synthesis and characteristic properties of a highly ordered mesoporous carbon nitride material (MCN-1) were analyzed by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) and nitrogen gas adsorption measurements.
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Recent progress in morphology control of supramolecular fullerene assemblies and its applications

TL;DR: A summary of the very recent reports regarding the organisation of pristine C(60), its coassembly with other hosts, unique polymorphs of fullerene derivatives, functional liquid crystalline assemblies, donor/acceptor heterojunctions and its applications will be presented in this tutorial review.
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Aryl-substituted C3-bridged oligopyrroles as anion receptors for formation of supramolecular organogels.

TL;DR: Boron complexes of 1,3-dipyrrolyl-1,2-propanediones with aryl-substituents with a new class of acyclic anion receptors have shown efficient binding due to the interacting o-CH units and, in the case of the derivative with long aliphatic chains, afforded the emissive supramolecular organogels using stacking of core pi-planes controlled by external chemical stimuli.
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Solvent‐Free Luminescent Organic Liquids

TL;DR: A solvent-free, stable, white-light emitting ink/paint, which can be applied onto various surfaces and even onto LEDs, was made by blending of liquid OPVs with emissive solid dopants.
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Mechanical Control of Enantioselectivity of Amino Acid Recognition by Cholesterol-Armed Cyclen Monolayer at the Air-Water Interface

TL;DR: Monolayers of the cholesterol-armed cyclen Na+ complex at the air-water interface display a remarkable, surface pressure dependent enantioselectivity of amino acid recognition.