Publications by authors named "Y Soneda"

Enteric viruses are widely spread in water environments, some being harmful for human communities. Regular epidemics highlight the usefulness of analysing such viruses in wastewaters as a tool for epidemiologists to monitor the extent of their dissemination among populations. In this context, CNovel™ Powdered Activated Carbon (PAC) was chosen for its high porosity and high adsorption capacity to investigate sorbent ability to be used as part of of virus detection probes.

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The emergence of various types of commercial cameras (compact, high resolution, high angle of view, high speed, and high dynamic range, etc.) has contributed significantly to the understanding of human activities. By taking advantage of the characteristic of a high angle of view, this paper demonstrates a system that recognizes micro-behaviors and a small group discussion with a single 360 degree camera towards quantified meeting analysis.

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The phase behavior of ions in porous electrodes is qualitatively different from that in the bulk because of the confinement effect and the interaction between the electrode surface and the electrolyte ions. We found that porous electrodes of which the pore size is close to the size of the electrolyte ions can show ferroelectric phase behaviors in some conditions by Monte Carlo simulations of simple models. The phase behavior of the porous electrodes dramatically changes as a function of the pore size of the porous electrode and that is compared to the phase behavior of typical ferroelectric materials, for which the phase behavior changes as a function of the temperature or the composition.

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The electrochemical thermodynamics of electrolytes in porous electrodes is qualitatively different from that in the bulk with planar electrodes when the pore size is comparable to the size of the electrolyte ions. In this paper, we discuss the thermodynamics of a two component electrolyte in a porous electrode by using Monte Carlo simulation. We show that electrolyte ions are selectively adsorbed in porous electrodes and the relative concentration of the two components significantly changes as a function of the applied voltage and the pore size.

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Hydrogen-sorption isotherms of alkali metal-doped carbons at 77 K were determined for promoting application of these materials as hydrogen-recovery and isotope-separation agent. The hydrogen-sorption behavior of rubidium-doped Grafoil, with composition of RbC24, showed high sorption ability against hydrogen at low pressure. Taking into account the fact that sorption-desorption was fast and reversible, and the equilibrium pressure at half coverage was very low, i.

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