2 results match your criteria: "Kansai Center (Nanotechnology Research Institute)[Affiliation]"
Langmuir
May 2010
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Kansai Center (Nanotechnology Research Institute), 1-8-31 Midorigaoka, Ikeda, Osaka 563-8577, Japan.
Silica microcapsules (silica hollow particles) are readily prepared by a single step of the interfacial reaction method, where a W/O/W emulsion is employed effectively. This is a simple (one-step process), inexpensive approach (silica source is sodium silicate) to producing hollow silicas. The addition of NaCl to the sodium silicate solution as the inner water phase of the W/O/W emulsion plainly influenced the shell structure of the silica hollow particles.
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August 2008
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Kansai Center (Nanotechnology Research Institute), Ikeda, Osaka 563-8577, Japan.
The switching of a molecular length of azobenzene between its trans and cis forms by photoirradiation originates various photoresponsive systems in the molecular level and/or nanolevel. Recently, we and another group separately reported that some azobenzene-modified mesoporous silicas remarkably promote the release of molecules from the inside of the mesopore to the outside, when the lights, both UV and visible lights, were irradiated simultaneously. In these cases, the release rates of molecules were enhanced by the impeller-like effect of molecular motion of azobenzene moiety attributed to the continuous photoisomerization between the trans and cis isomers.
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