Iwao Mogi
Tohoku University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Iwao Mogi.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Iwao Mogi; Ryoichi Morimoto; Ryoichi Aogaki; Kazuo Watanabe
The surfaces of minerals could serve important catalytic roles in the prebiotic syntheses of organic molecules, such as amino acids. Thus, the surface chirality is responsible for the asymmetric syntheses of biomolecules. Here, we show induction of the surface chirality of copper metal film by electrodeposition via electrochemical cell rotation in magnetic fields. Such copper film electrodes exhibit chiral behaviour in the electrochemical reaction of alanine enantiomers, and the rotating direction allows control of the chiral sign. These findings are discussed in connection with the asymmetric influence of the system rotation on the magnetohydrodynamic micro-vortices around the electrode surfaces.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Atsushi Sugiyama; Ryoichi Morimoto; Tetsuya Osaka; Iwao Mogi; Miki Asanuma; Makoto Miura; Yoshinobu Oshikiri; Yusuke Yamauchi; Ryoichi Aogaki
The lifetimes of ionic vacancies created in ferricyanide-ferrocyanide redox reaction have been first measured by means of cyclotron magnetohydrodynamic electrode, which is composed of coaxial cylinders partly exposed as electrodes and placed vertically in an electrolytic solution under a vertical magnetic field, so that induced Lorentz force makes ionic vacancies circulate together with the solution along the circumferences. At low magnetic fields, due to low velocities, ionic vacancies once created become extinct on the way of returning, whereas at high magnetic fields, in enhanced velocities, they can come back to their initial birthplaces. Detecting the difference between these two states, we can measure the lifetime of ionic vacancy. As a result, the lifetimes of ionic vacancies created in the oxidation and reduction are the same, and the intrinsic lifetime is 1.25 s, and the formation time of nanobubble from the collision of ionic vacancies is 6.5 ms.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Makoto Miura; Yoshinobu Oshikiri; Atsushi Sugiyama; Ryoichi Morimoto; Iwao Mogi; Miki Miura; Satoshi Takagi; Yusuke Yamauchi; Ryoichi Aogaki
Ionic vacancy is a by-product in electrochemical reaction, composed of polarized free space of the order of 0.1 nm with a 1 s lifetime, and playing key roles in nano-electrochemical processes. However, its chemical nature has not yet been clarified. In copper electrodeposition under a high magnetic field of 15 T, using a new electrode system called cyclotron magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) electrode (CMHDE) composed of a pair of concentric cylindrical electrodes, we have found an extraordinary dendritic growth with a drastic positive potential shift from hydrogen-gas evolution potential. Dendritic deposition is characterized by the co-deposition of hydrogen molecule, but such a positive potential shift makes hydrogen-gas evolution impossible. However, in the high magnetic field, instead of flat deposit, remarkable dendritic growth emerged. By examining the chemical nature of ionic vacancy, it was concluded that ionic vacancy works on the dendrite formation with the extraordinary potential shift.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Ryoichi Aogaki; Atsushi Sugiyama; Makoto Miura; Yoshinobu Oshikiri; Miki Miura; Ryoichi Morimoto; Satoshi Takagi; Iwao Mogi; Yusuke Yamauchi
As a process complementing conventional electrode reactions, ionic vacancy production in electrode reaction was theoretically examined; whether reaction is anodic or cathodic, based on the momentum conservation by Newton’s second law of motion, electron transfer necessarily leads to the emission of original embryo vacancies, and dielectric polarization endows to them the same electric charge as trans- ferred in the reaction. Then, the emitted embryo vacancies immediately receive the thermal relaxation of solution particles to develop steady-state vacancies. After the vacancy production, nanobubbles are created by the collision of the vacancies in a vertical magnetic field.
Molecules | 2017
Iwao Mogi; Ryoichi Aogaki; Kohki Takahashi
Magnetoelectrolysis (electrolysis under magnetic fields) produces chiral surfaces on metal thin films, which can recognize the enantiomers of amino acids. Here, the chiral surface formation on copper films is reported in magnetoelectrochemical etching (MEE) at 5T with chloride additives. In the absence of additives, the surface chirality signs of MEE films depended on the magnetic field polarity. On the contrary, the MEE films prepared with the additives exhibited only d-activity in both magnetic field polarities. This result implies that the specific adsorption of chloride additives induces the chiral symmetry breaking for the magnetic field polarity.
Japanese Journal of Applied Physics | 2016
Naoyuki Kitamura; Kohki Takahashi; Iwao Mogi; Satoshi Awaji; Kazuo Watanabe
We have developed an apparatus that allows the observation of the transient rotational motion of fine particles under a high magnetic field in order to determine anisotropic magnetic susceptibility. The anisotropic susceptibilities of spherical nanoparticles of bismuth and commercially available carbon nanofibers were determined. The estimated Δχ = 3.9 × 10−5 of spherical bismuth nanoparticles with a diameter of 370 nm was fairly consistent with the value determined previously by the magnetic field dependence of diffraction peak intensity in the X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern, but was slightly smaller than the value for the bulk crystal. In contrast, the transient behavior of carbon nanofibers did not obey the theoretical motion of a single crystal. The wide distribution of fiber lengths, the irregularity of the structure in the fiber, and the connections between the fibers are suggested for the anomalous behavior.
Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan | 2015
Iwao Mogi; Ryoichi Aogaki; Kazuo Watanabe
Meeting Abstracts | 2013
Iwao Mogi; Ryoichi Aogaki; Ryoichi Morimoto; Kzuo Watanabe
Electrochemistry | 2015
Yoshinobu Oshikiri; Ryoichi Aogaki; Makoto Miura; Atsushi Sugiyama; Ryoichi Morimoto; Miki Miura; Iwao Mogi; Yusuke Yamauchi
Electrochemistry | 2013
Atsushi Sugiyama; Ryoichi Aogaki; Ryoichi Morimoto; Makoto Miura; Yoshinobu Oshikiri; Miki Miura; Iwao Mogi; Yusuke Yamauchi; Tetsuya Osaka