Publications by authors named "Haruyuki Nakanishi"

The capacitances of porous carbon anodes were determined using a Ni(OH) cathode. We found that the capacitances were 300-700 F g and above 3 times those of the carbon anodes prepared by electrical double layer formation, revealing the large capacitances based on protium H adsorption in the presence of highly concentrated KOH solution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

For the development of a rechargeable metal-air battery, which is expected to become one of the most widely used batteries in the future, slow kinetics of discharging and charging reactions at the air electrode, i.e., oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER), respectively, are the most critical problems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The prohibitive cost and scarcity of the noble-metal catalysts needed for catalysing the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in fuel cells and metal-air batteries limit the commercialization of these clean-energy technologies. Identifying a catalyst design principle that links material properties to the catalytic activity can accelerate the search for highly active and abundant transition-metal-oxide catalysts to replace platinum. Here, we demonstrate that the ORR activity for oxide catalysts primarily correlates to σ-orbital (e(g)) occupation and the extent of B-site transition-metal-oxygen covalency, which serves as a secondary activity descriptor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A molybdenum-dinitrogen complex bearing two ancillary ferrocenyldiphosphine ligands, trans-[Mo(N(2))(2)(depf)(2)] (depf = 1,1'-bis(diethylphosphino)ferrocene), catalyzes the conversion of molecular dinitrogen (N(2)) into silylamine (N(SiMe(3))(3)), which can be readily converted into NH(3) by acid treatment. The conversion has been achieved in the presence of Me(3)SiCl and Na at room temperature with a turnover number (TON) of 226 for the N(SiMe(3))(3) generation for 200 h. This TON is significantly improved relative to those ever reported by Hidai's group for mononuclear molybdenum complexes having monophosphine coligands [J.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Temperature control on the nanometer scale is a challenging task in many physical, chemical, and material science applications where small experimental volumes with high temperature gradients are used. The crucial difficulty is reducing the size of temperature sensors while keeping their sensitivity, working temperature range, and, most importantly, their simplicity and accuracy of temperature reading. In this work, we demonstrate the ultimate miniaturization of the classic thermometer using an expanding column of liquid gallium inside a multi-walled C nanotube for precise temperature measurements.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is impossible to fabricate isolated gallium nanomaterials due to the low melting point of Ga (29.8 degrees C) and its high reactivity. We report the bulk synthesis of uniform liquid Ga columns encapsulated into carbon nanotubes through high-temperature chemical reaction between Ga and CH4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF