Publications by authors named "Yahachi Saito"

A facile synthetic method for doped conjugated molecules by a heating process is demonstrated. Br-terminated terthiophene precursors are encapsulated in single-walled carbon nanotubes by a vapor-phase reaction, and additional heat treatment promotes the thermal condensation of the precursors. Transmission electron microscopy observations and optical measurements show the successful synthesis of sexithiophenes and their doping (oxidation) by Br dopants generated by the condensation reaction.

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Glioma of infiltrative nature is challenging for surgeons to achieve tumor-specific and maximal resection. Raman spectroscopy provides structural information on the targeted materials as vibrational shifts. We utilized Raman spectroscopy to distinguish invasive tumors from normal tissues.

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Environmental transmission electron microscopy and ultra-high resolution electron microscopic observation using aberration correctors have recently emerged as topics of great interest. The former method is an extension of the so-called in situ electron microscopy that has been performed since the 1970s. Current research in this area has been focusing on dynamic observation with atomic resolution under gaseous atmospheres and in liquids.

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Excitation energy transfer has long been an intriguing subject in the fields of photoscience and materials science. Along with the recent progress of photovoltaics, photocatalysis, and photosensors using nanoscale materials, excitation energy transfer between a donor and an acceptor at a short distance (≤1-10 nm) is of growing importance in both fundamental research and technological applications. This Perspective highlights our recent studies on exciton energy transfer between carbon nanotubes with interwall (surface-to-surface) distances of less than ∼1 nm, which are equivalent to or shorter than the size of one-dimensional excitons in carbon nanotubes.

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Electron field emission properties of a nanotube film are influenced not only by a field enhancement factor of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) beta(CNT) but also by that of film morphology beta(P). A simple method to separate beta(P), and beta(CNT) is proposed by using their different dependences on the cathode-anode distance. Analyses conducted for CNT emitters with rough surface exhibit that beta(P) ranges from 1 to approximately 4.

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The influence of surface roughness on emission site density (ESD) is investigated for nanotube film emitters. An empirical expression for film emitters, [Formula: see text], where B is the intercept in the modified Fowler-Nordheim (FN) plots, A(CNT) the emission area of one site, and C related to the work function, is derived from the FN theory and experimentally proved. This expression effectively excludes the influence of electric field strength, being different from the conventional method of counting site numbers from emission patterns.

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Electron energy-loss spectra of single double-walled carbon nanotubes (DWCNTs) were compared with calculated joint density of states (jDOSs) obtained by a simple tight-binding (STB) and an extended tight-binding (ETB) method. From the comparisons, interband transition energies of ETB calculations show better agreement with peak positions of the experimental spectra than those of STB results. From a further comparison among calculated jDOS, real and imaginary parts of a dielectric function and a loss function Im[-1/epsilon], it was confirmed that the peak energies in a spectrum of single DWCNTs are almost equal to those of the optical absorption spectrum epsilon(2).

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Electron energy-loss spectra were obtained from two double-walled carbon nanotubes (DWCNTs) with an energy resolution of 85 meV. The spectra showed multiple peak structures between 2 and 3 eV. However, peak positions are different for these two DWCNTs.

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Carbon nanotube field emitter.

J Nanosci Nanotechnol

September 2003

Recently, carbon nanotubes (CNTs), possessing excellent properties as field emitters, are attracting considerable attention as electron emitters of a cold cathode. In this review article, field emission phenomena of carbon nanotubes with various morphologies and surfaces (clean surface or adsorbed molecules on it) revealed by field emission microscopy are first described. Then, the main subject of this article, application of CNTs as electron sources in display devices is reviewed.

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Field emission energy distributions of electrons from one of the six pentagons located at the end of a multi-wall carbon nanotube have been measured by means of a high-resolution cylindrical energy analyzer. In a clean pentagon, the sub-peak was obtained at about 500 meV below the main peak, exhibiting a shift with increasing applied voltage. For electrons emitted from an adsorbate onto the pentagon, no fine structure was observed in the spectra.

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Adsorption and desorption on clean pentagons at a tip of multiwall carbon nanotube (MWNT) have been investigated by field emission microscopy (FEM) in an atmosphere of various gases, i.e., hydrogen, carbon monoxide, nitrogen and oxygen.

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