Hidehiko Hiramatsu
Denso
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Featured researches published by Hidehiko Hiramatsu.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014
Gulin Vardar; Alice Sleightholme; Junichi Naruse; Hidehiko Hiramatsu; Donald J. Siegel; Charles W. Monroe
The electrochemistry of Mg salts in room-temperature ionic liquids (ILs) was studied using plating/stripping voltammetry to assess the viability of IL solvents for applications in secondary Mg batteries. Borohydride (BH4(-)), trifluoromethanesulfonate (TfO(-)), and bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (Tf2N(-)) salts of Mg were investigated. Three ILs were considered: l-n-butyl-3-methylimidazolium (BMIM)-Tf2N, N-methyl-N-propylpiperidinium (PP13)-Tf2N, and N,N-diethyl-N-methyl(2-methoxyethyl)ammonium (DEME(+)) tetrafluoroborate (BF4(-)). Salts and ILs were combined to produce binary solutions in which the anions were structurally similar or identical, if possible. Contrary to some prior reports, no salt/IL combination appeared to facilitate reversible Mg plating. In solutions containing BMIM(+), oxidative activity near 0.8 V vs Mg/Mg(2+) is likely associated with the BMIM cation, rather than Mg stripping. The absence of voltammetric signatures of Mg plating from ILs with Tf2N(-) and BF4(-) suggests that strong Mg/anion Coulombic attraction inhibits electrodeposition. Cosolvent additions to Mg(Tf2N)2/PP13-Tf2N were explored but did not result in enhanced plating/stripping activity. The results highlight the need for IL solvents or cosolvent systems that promote Mg(2+) dissociation.
Materials Science Forum | 2008
Yasuo Kitou; Emi Makino; Kenji Inaba; Norikazu Hosokawa; Hidehiko Hiramatsu; Jun Hasegawa; Shoichi Onda; Hideyuki Tsuboi; Hiromitsu Takaba; Akira Miyamoto
A simulation study for high temperature chemical vapor deposition (HTCVD) of silicon carbide (SiC) is presented. Thermodynamic properties of the species were derived from the first-principles calculations in order to evaluate the activation energy (Ea) in the gas phase reaction. Pathways producing SiC2 and Si2C from SiCl4-C3H8-H2 system were proposed to investigate the effect of chlorinated species on HTCVD. A thermo-fluid analysis was carried out to estimate the partial pressures of the species. It was found that the main sublimed species of Si, SiC2, Si2C decreased in the SiCl4-C3H8-H2 system compared to the SiH4-C3H8-H2 system. This suggests that the growth rate would decrease in the atmosphere of chlorinated species at around 2500°C.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Devon Samuel; Carl Steinhauser; Jeffrey G. Smith; Aaron Kaufman; Maxwell D. Radin; Junichi Naruse; Hidehiko Hiramatsu; Donald J. Siegel
One obstacle to realizing a practical, rechargeable magnesium-ion battery is the development of efficient Mg electrolytes. Electrolytes based on simple Mg(BH4)2 salts suffer from poor salt solubility and/or low conductivity, presumably due to strong ion pairing. Understanding the molecular-scale processes occurring in these electrolytes would aid in overcoming these performance limitations. Toward this goal, the present study examines the solvation, agglomeration, and transport properties of a family of Mg electrolytes based on the Mg(BH4)2 salt using classical molecular dynamics. These properties were examined across five different solvents (tetrahydrofuran and the glymes G1-G4) and at four salt concentrations ranging from the dilute limit up to 0.4 M. Significant and irreversible salt agglomeration was observed in all solvents at all nondilute Mg(BH4)2 concentrations. The degree of clustering observed in these divalent Mg systems is much larger than that reported for electrolytes containing monovalent cations, such as Li. The salt agglomeration rate and diffusivity of Mg2+ were both observed to correlate with solvent self-diffusivity: electrolytes using longer- (shorter-) chain solvents had the lowest (highest) Mg2+ diffusivity and agglomeration rates. Incorporation of Mg2+ into Mg2+-BH4- clusters significantly reduces the diffusivity of Mg2+ by restricting displacements to localized motion within largely immobile agglomerates. Consequently, diffusion is increasingly impeded with increasing Mg(BH4)2 concentration. These data are consistent with the solubility limitations observed experimentally for Mg(BH4)2-based electrolytes and highlight the need for strategies that minimize salt agglomeration in electrolytes containing divalent cations.
Chemistry of Materials | 2015
Gulin Vardar; Emily G. Nelson; Jeffrey G. Smith; Junichi Naruse; Hidehiko Hiramatsu; Bart M. Bartlett; Alice Sleightholme; Donald J. Siegel; Charles W. Monroe
Archive | 2001
Hisayoshi Oshima; Hidehiko Hiramatsu
Chemistry of Materials | 2016
Jeffrey G. Smith; Junichi Naruse; Hidehiko Hiramatsu; Donald J. Siegel
Archive | 2004
Hidehiko Hiramatsu; Takeshi Yamamoto; Shingo Morishima
Archive | 2003
Shingo Morishima; Hidehiko Hiramatsu
Archive | 2001
Hisayoshi Oshima; Hidehiko Hiramatsu
Chemistry of Materials | 2017
Jeffrey G. Smith; Junichi Naruse; Hidehiko Hiramatsu; Donald J. Siegel