Institution
Osaka Institute of Technology
Education•Osaka, Japan•
About: Osaka Institute of Technology is a education organization based out in Osaka, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Thin film & Laser. The organization has 2457 authors who have published 4247 publications receiving 49872 citations. The organization is also known as: Ōsaka kōgyō daigaku.
Topics: Thin film, Laser, Casting (metalworking), Molecular beam epitaxy, Robot
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Saint Mary's University1, Osaka University2, KEK3, University of Tennessee4, Osaka Institute of Technology5, Nihon University6, Simon Fraser University7, TRIUMF8, McMaster University9, University of Guelph10, Oak Ridge National Laboratory11, University of British Columbia12, University of Tokyo13, Centre national de la recherche scientifique14, University of Edinburgh15, Beihang University16, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory17
TL;DR: The first conclusive evidence of a dipole resonance in Li having isoscalar character observed from inelastic scattering with a novel solid deuteron target is reported, showing the first signature that the monopole tensor interaction is important in ^{11}Li.
Abstract: The first conclusive evidence of a dipole resonance in 11Li having isoscalar character observed from inelastic scattering with a novel solid deuteron target is reported. The experiment was performed at the newly commissioned IRIS facility at TRIUMF. The results show a resonance peak at an excitation energy of 1.03±0.03 MeV with a width of 0.51±0.11 MeV (FWHM). The angular distribution is consistent with a dipole excitation in the distorted-wave Born approximation framework. The observed resonance energy together with shell model calculations show the first signature that the monopole tensor interaction is important in 11Li. The first ab initio calculations in the coupled cluster framework are also included.
50 citations
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TL;DR: More than a dozen typical resampling methods are compared via simulations in terms of sample size variation, sampling variance, computing speed, and estimation accuracy, providing solid guidelines for either selection of existing resamplings methods or new implementations.
Abstract: Resampling is a critical procedure that is of both theoretical and practical significance for efficient implementation of the particle filter. To gain an insight of the resampling process and the filter, this paper contributes in three further respects as a sequel to the tutorial (Li et al., 2015). First, identical distribution (ID) is established as a general principle for the resampling design, which requires the distribution of particles before and after resampling to be statistically identical. Three consistent metrics including the (symmetrical) Kullback-Leibler divergence, Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistic, and the sampling variance are introduced for assessment of the ID attribute of resampling, and a corresponding, qualitative ID analysis of representative resampling methods is given. Second, a novel resampling scheme that obtains the optimal ID attribute in the sense of minimum sampling variance is proposed. Third, more than a dozen typical resampling methods are compared via simulations in terms of sample size variation, sampling variance, computing speed, and estimation accuracy. These form a more comprehensive understanding of the algorithm, providing solid guidelines for either selection of existing resampling methods or new implementations.
50 citations
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TL;DR: “Pickering-type” emulsions were prepared using polydopamine particles as a particulate emulsifier and n-dodecane, methyl myristate, toluene or dichloromethane as an oil phase and an increase of PDA particle concentration decreased oil droplet diameter.
Abstract: “Pickering-type” emulsions were prepared using polydopamine (PDA) particles as a particulate emulsifier and n-dodecane, methyl myristate, toluene or dichloromethane as an oil phase. All the emulsions prepared were oil-in-water type and an increase of PDA particle concentration decreased oil droplet diameter. The PDA particles adsorbed to oil–water interface can be crosslinked using poly(ethylene imine) as a crosslinker, and the PDA particle-based colloidosomes were successfully fabricated. Scanning electron microscopy studies of the colloidosomes after removal of inner oil phase revealed a capsule morphology, which is strong evidence for the attachment of PDA particles at the oil–water interface thereby stabilizing the emulsion. The colloidosomes after removal of inner oil phase could retain their capsule morphology, even after sonication. On the other hand, the residues obtained after oil phase removal from the PDA particle-stabilized emulsion prepared in the absence of any crosslinker were broken into small fragments of PDA particle flocs after sonication.
50 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the reaction mechanism behind the visible light induced photocatalytic reaction and showed that the α-deprotonation from benzyl alcohol is the rate determining step (RDS), assisted by the terminal OH groups of TiO2.
Abstract: This paper deals with the oxidation of benzyl alcohol by O2 on pure TiO2 under visible light irradiation, and it was found that the benzyl alcohol is converted into benzaldehyde with high selectivity (>99%). In order to understand the origins of the visible light induced photocatalysis, surface characterizations of the charge transfer complex formed by the interaction of benzyl alcohol with the TiO2 was extensively performed by investigating the effect of heat-treatment on TiO2 or its chemical modification with hydrofluoric acid. Moreover, the study of the kinetic isotope effect (KIE) for the oxidation of benzyl alcohol showed that the α-deprotonation from benzyl alcohol is the rate determining step (RDS), the process of which is assisted by the terminal OH groups of TiO2. Photo-electrochemical investigations were also incorporated to demonstrate the reaction mechanism behind the visible light induced photocatalytic reaction.
50 citations
Authors
Showing all 2467 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Yuri S. Kivshar | 126 | 1845 | 79415 |
Qiang Xu | 117 | 585 | 50151 |
Steven P. Armes | 112 | 618 | 42536 |
Anthony J. Ryan | 78 | 340 | 22014 |
Kouhei Ohnishi | 60 | 911 | 17300 |
Juan M. Corchado | 57 | 665 | 12250 |
Seiji Ito | 52 | 240 | 8626 |
Hirokazu Tamamura | 51 | 328 | 10234 |
Eric M. Vogel | 50 | 232 | 10408 |
Kenji Kamada | 47 | 212 | 7044 |
Syuji Fujii | 45 | 246 | 6379 |
Keiichi Kaneto | 44 | 249 | 6678 |
Kazuyuki Tanabe | 43 | 156 | 5545 |
Yoshihiro Ohmiya | 43 | 206 | 5822 |
Kiyoshi Matsumura | 42 | 118 | 6377 |