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Dive into the research topics where Kenichi Osuka is active.

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Featured researches published by Kenichi Osuka.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Molecular beam study of the scattering behavior of water molecules from a graphite surface.

Nobuya Miyoshi; Kenichi Osuka; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto

Gas flow in nanospaces is greatly affected by the scattering behavior of gas molecules on solid surfaces, resulting in unique mass transport properties. In this paper, the molecular beam scattering experiment of water molecules on a graphite surface was conducted to understand their scattering dynamics in an incident energy range that corresponds to their thermal velocity distribution at room temperature (35-130 meV). Because of the large adsorption energy (∼100 meV), the scattering behavior is quite sensitive to the incident energy even within this narrow energy range. For relatively large incident energies, the direct-inelastic and trapping-desorption channels have comparable contributions to the scattering process on the surface at 300 K. In contrast, when the incident energy decreases well below the adsorption energy on the surface, the trapping-desorption channel becomes dominant, changing the scattering pattern from directional to diffusive scattering. As a result, the tangential momentum accommodation coefficient (TMAC), which significantly impacts the mass transport in nanospaces, largely depends on the incident energy. A decrease in the incident energy from 130 to 35 meV doubles the TMAC (0.42 to 0.86). In addition to the incident energy, the TMAC shows a strong dependence on the surface temperature. With increasing the surface temperature from 300 to 500 K, the scattering becomes more directional because of the increasing contribution of the direct-inelastic channel, which reduces the TMAC for the incident beam energy of 35 meV to 0.48.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

A non-diaphragm type small shock tube for application to a molecular beam source.

Yuta Yoshimoto; Kenichi Osuka; Nobuya Miyoshi; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto

A non-diaphragm type small shock tube was developed for application to a molecular beam source, which can generate beams in the energy range from 1 to several electron volts and beams containing dissociated species such as atomic oxygen. Since repetitive high-frequency operation is indispensable for rapid signal acquisition in beam scattering experiments, the dimensions of the shock tube were miniaturized to reduce the evacuation time between shots. The designed shock tube is 2-4 mm in diameter and can operate at 0.5 Hz. Moreover, a high shock Mach number at the tube end is required for high-energy molecular beam generation. To reduce the shock attenuation caused by the wall boundary layer, which becomes significant in small-diameter tubes, we developed a high-speed response valve employing the current-loop mechanism. The response time of this mechanism is about 100 μs, which is shorter than the rupture time of conventional diaphragms. We show that the current-loop valve generates shock waves with shorter formation distances (about 200-300 mm) than those of conventional shock tubes. In addition, the converging geometry efficiently accelerates shock wave in the small-diameter tubes. The optimal geometry of the shock tube yields shock Mach number around 7, which indicates that the translation energy of molecular beams can exceed 1 eV even in the presence of the real gas effect.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Hyperthermal molecular beam source using a non-diaphragm-type small shock tube

Yuta Yoshimoto; Kenichi Osuka; Nobuya Miyoshi; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto

We have developed a hyperthermal molecular beam source employing a non-diaphragm-type small shock tube for gas-surface interaction studies. Unlike conventional shock-heated beam sources, the capability of repetitive beam generation without the need for replacing a diaphragm makes our beam source suitable for scattering experiments, which require signal accumulation for a large number of beam pulses. The short duration of shock heating alleviates the usual temperature limit due to the nozzle material, enabling the generation of a molecular beam with higher translational energy or that containing dissociated species. The shock-heated beam is substantially free from surface-contaminating impurities that are pronounced in arc-heated beams. We characterize the properties of nitrogen and oxygen molecular beams using the time-of-flight method. When both the timing of beam extraction and the supply quantity of nitrogen gas are appropriately regulated, our beam source can generate a nitrogen molecular beam with translational energy of approximately 1 eV, which corresponds to the typical activation energy of surface reactions. Furthermore, our beam source can generate an oxygen molecular beam containing dissociated oxygen atoms, which can be a useful probe for surface oxidation. The dissociation fraction along with the translational energy can be adjusted through the supply quantity of oxygen gas.


28TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON RAREFIED GAS DYNAMICS 2012 | 2012

Measurements of time-of-flight distributions of shock-heated molecular beams

Kenichi Osuka; Yuta Yoshimoto; Nobuya Miyoshi; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yosuke Matsumoto

Molecular beam source employing a shock tube is an attractive choice for the translational energy of around 1 eV, which corresponds to the typical activation energy of surface reactions. We developed a non-diaphragm type small shock tube as the molecular beam source generating high energy and dissociated molecular beams. The drastic reduction of the tube volume enables the repetitive operation of the shock tube at the frequency of 0.5 Hz. Installing the shock tube into the molecular beam setup, we measured the time-of-flight distributions of nitrogen and oxygen beams, and demonstrated the performance on controllability of the beam energy and the dissociation rate of molecules.


Microfluidics and Nanofluidics | 2017

Incident energy dependence of the scattering dynamics of water molecules on silicon and graphite surfaces: the effect on tangential momentum accommodation

Ikuya Kinefuchi; Yusuke Kotsubo; Kenichi Osuka; Yuta Yoshimoto; Nobuya Miyoshi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto


The Proceedings of Mechanical Engineering Congress, Japan | 2014

J0550102 The incidental energy dependence of the scattering of water molecules on silicon surface

Yusuke Kotsubo; Kenichi Osuka; Ikuya Kinebuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto


Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers. B | 2013

Development of High-Energy Molecular Beam Source Using Small Shock Tube

Nobuya Miyoshi; Kenichi Osuka; Yuta Yoshimoto; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto


The Proceedings of Mechanical Engineering Congress, Japan | 2013

J053033 Scattering Behavior of Water Molecules on Graphite Surface

Shohei Hodota; Kenichi Osuka; Nobuya Miyoshi; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Investigation of water-graphite interaction using molecular beam technique.

Nobuya Miyoshi; Shohei Hodota; Kenichi Osuka; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto


The Proceedings of Mechanical Engineering Congress, Japan | 2012

J053012 Measurements of Time-of-Flight Distributions of Shock-heated Molecular Beams

Kenichi Osuka; Yuta Yoshimoto; Nobuya Miyoshi; Ikuya Kinefuchi; Shu Takagi; Yoichiro Matsumoto

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