Institution
Nagoya Institute of Technology
Education•Nagoya, Japan•
About: Nagoya Institute of Technology is a education organization based out in Nagoya, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Thin film & Catalysis. The organization has 10766 authors who have published 19140 publications receiving 255696 citations. The organization is also known as: Nagoya Kōgyō Daigaku & Nitech.
Topics: Thin film, Catalysis, Dielectric, Enantioselective synthesis, Turbulence
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A transition-metal-free direct oxidative trifluoromethylation of unsymmetrical biaryls has been achieved by the simple combination of trifLUorometHanesulfinate and phenyliodine bis(trifluoroacetate).
88 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the pseudo-orthogonal property of the eigenfunction expansion form is proved to be valid for the case of an antiplane interface V-notch and the corresponding path-independent integral is derived.
88 citations
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TL;DR: The products of this Mannich reaction provide direct access to β-trifluoromethyl-β-alanine of either (R) or (S) absolute configuration.
88 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a series of conductor-polymer composites were prepared from metal, graphite and conducting ceramics as filler materials, and epoxy, silicone rubber, polyethylene and polypropylene as polymer matrix.
Abstract: Several series of conductor-polymer composites were prepared from metal, graphite and conducting ceramics as filler materials, and epoxy, silicone rubber, polyethylene and polypropylene as polymer matrix. Their percolation curves, pressure dependence of resistivity, and Young's modulus were examined for applications such as a pressure sensor.
88 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, an advanced CT (computerized tomography) reconstruction technique for measuring an instantaneous three-dimensional distribution of chemiluminescence of a turbulent premixed flame is accomplished.
Abstract: The advanced CT (computerized tomography) reconstruction technique for measuring an instantaneous three-dimensional distribution of chemiluminescence of a turbulent premixed flame is accomplished. In the technique, first, instantaneous two-dimensional images (‘projection’ images) of an objective flame are simultaneously taken from forty horizontal directions with a forty-lens camera. Next four hundred horizontal CT images, which are reconstructed from the ‘projection’ images by MLEM (maximum likelihood expectation maximization) algorithm, are vertically accumulated, resulting in an instantaneous three-dimensional distribution of flame-chemiluminescence. Results for a propane-air fuel-rich-premixed turbulent flame are as follows. The flame front is observed to be a thin wrinkled luminous region of 0.6mm in thickness. The three-dimensional result clearly shows that the cusps observed in horizontal cross-sections correspond to ridges of the three-dimensional flame front. The luminosity is quenched at the ridges by Lewis number effect. Finally, various types of display of three-dimensional distribution are performed to demonstrate the three-dimensionality of data acquisition.
88 citations
Authors
Showing all 10804 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Luis M. Liz-Marzán | 132 | 616 | 61684 |
Hideo Hosono | 128 | 1549 | 100279 |
Shunichi Fukuzumi | 111 | 1256 | 52764 |
Andrzej Cichocki | 97 | 952 | 41471 |
Kwok-Hung Chan | 91 | 406 | 44315 |
Kimoon Kim | 90 | 412 | 35394 |
Alex Martin | 88 | 406 | 36063 |
Manijeh Razeghi | 82 | 1040 | 25574 |
Yuichi Ikuhara | 75 | 974 | 24224 |
Richard J. Cogdell | 73 | 480 | 23866 |
Masaaki Tanaka | 71 | 860 | 22443 |
Kiyotomi Kaneda | 65 | 378 | 13337 |
Yulin Deng | 64 | 641 | 16148 |
Motoo Shiro | 64 | 720 | 17786 |
Norio Shibata | 63 | 574 | 14469 |