Shiro Kobayashi
Tohoku University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Shiro Kobayashi.
Journal of Polymer Science Part A | 1996
Kazuhiko Takahashi; Shigeo Miyamori; Hiroshi Uyama; Shiro Kobayashi
Dispersion polymerization of 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate using four categories of polymeric stabilizers in a mixture of good and poor solvents was performed to produce polymeric particles. The stabilizers employed were methyl methacrylate and styrene homopolymers, methacryloyl-terminated poly(methyl methacrylate) and polystyrene macromonomers, an amphiphilic poly(methyl methacrylate-co-methacrylic acid-graft-styrene), and polybutadiene derivatives containing reactive vinyl groups. Dispersion copolymerization with a small amount of the macromonomer gave micron-size particles with relatively narrow size distribution. The amphiphilic graft copolymer and the polybutadiene derivatives also afforded monodisperse particles. The mixed ratio between good and poor solvents greatly affected the particle size and size distribution.
Population Ecology | 1973
Shiro Kobayashi
A simple mathematical model describing the species-area relation was developed. This paper dealt with the case that discrete random samples are combined. Modelling was made on the assumption that the occurrence probability of a species in a quadrat has a continuous density distribution. The model, given by the equation (6), holds only for a particular size of quadrat (i.e. the characteristic area). More general form applicable to the quadrats the size of which is near to the characteristic area was represented by the equation (9). Validity of the model was examined for the data of plant and insect communities, and it was concluded that the observation can be predicted by the model unless the size of sampling unit considerably differs from the characteristic area. The uniformity of specific density (i. e. the number of species per quadrat) and the size of characteristic area were discussed as being important in an understanding of community structure.
Carbohydrate Research | 1993
Shin-ichiro Shoda; Tatsuya Kawasaki; Kei Obata; Shiro Kobayashi
A convenient method for the preparation of cellooligosaccharide derivatives has been developed that uses beta-lactosyl fluoride as the glycosyl donor. The reaction consists of the following enzymatic processes; (1) a cellulase-catalyzed regio- and stereo-selective lactosylation of a beta-cellobioside as the glycosyl acceptor, utilizing the transglycosylating ability of an enzyme-substrate complex formed from beta-lactosyl fluoride and cellulase; (2) beta-D-galactosidase-catalyzed regioselective cleavage of the terminal D-galactose unit from the lactosylated product, giving rise to a beta-cellotrioside derivative. A cellotetraoside derivative has successfully been prepared in a stereo- and regio-selective manner by repeating these enzymatic reactions and using the resulting beta-cellotrioside as starting material.
Tetrahedron Letters | 1997
Shiro Kobayashi; Toshitsugu Kiyosada; Shin-ichiro Shoda
Abstract A convenient method for synthesis of N,N′-diacetylchitobiose, an important building block for oligo and polysaccharide synthesis, has been developed by using a 1,2-oxazoline derivative of N-acetylglucosamine as new glycosyl donor for chitinase.
Journal of Polymer Science Part A | 1996
Kolio Troev; R. Tsevi; T. Bourova; Shiro Kobayashi; H. Uayama; D.M. Roundhill
Phosphorus-containing polyurethanes were synthesized by reacting phosphonic acid diesters (RO)2P(O)X (X = H, CH3, Ph) with hydroxycarbamates. These phosphorus-containing polyurethanes were characterized by a combination of molecular-weight determination (GPC) and NMR spectroscopy. The thermal stability of the polymers was evaluated by a combination of TGA and DTA techniques. These polymers are readily soluble in highly polar solvents like DMF and DMSO. The phosphorus-containing polyurethanes are water soluble.
Tetrahedron | 1997
Shin-ichiro Shoda; Satoru Iwata; Kazuo Yajima; Katsuhiko Yagi; Yasuharu Ohnishi; Shiro Kobayashi
Abstract A novel germanium containing polymer, poly(germanium enolate), has been synthesized by the reaction of a divalent germanium compound, germylene, with a cyclic α,β-unsaturated ketone in the presence of a catalytic amount of a lithium compound. The germylene was also copolymerized with a cyclic α,β-unsaturated lactone, affording an unstable polymer having a ketene acetal structure in the main chain. The resulting polymers are the first example having a metal enolate structure as repeating unit.
Population Ecology | 1965
Shiro Kobayashi
To investigate the relation between the distribution pattern of eggs and the parental density in the common cabbage butterfly,Pieris rapae crucivora, the countings of egg number per plant were made on both cabbage plants cultivated in the farm and planted in the net house in which the female butterflies were released at various densities. The frequency distribution of eggs fits well to the negative binomial excepting the cases where they agree withPoisson series, and the degree of aggregation expressed as the reciprocal of the parameter, 1/k, tends to decrease as the egg or parental density increases. At the same parental density, however, the distribution of eggs can be described by the negative binomial with a common parameter,k c, regardless of the difference in the density of laid eggs. In the case where a single female butterfly lays eggs, the spatial pattern of egg distribution is always lean, while its frequencies conform toPoisson or the negative binomial series. This lean changes toward patchy with increasing the parental density. From these results, it is concluded that the degree of aggregation in the distribution of eggs decreases with the increase of the parental density.
Population Ecology | 1966
Shiro Kobayashi
The process generating the negative binomial in the distribution pattern of eggs of the common cabbage butterfly,Pieris rapae crucivora, was investigated by releasing the female adults in a net house where cabbages were planted. The distribution of butterflies visited and laid an egg or more per plant followed thePoisson series under the uniform light condition, while that of eggs laid per visit conformed to the logarithmic distribution. From these results, it may be concluded that the negative binomial arises from compounding of thePoisson and the logarithmic distribution. The observed frequency of eggs found per plant fitted to the negative binomial with parameter thus computed theoretically. The change in the degree of aggregation with the increase of the parental density was considered in connection with the above results.
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 1995
Shiro Kobayashi; Shin-ichiro Shoda
Regio- and stereo-selective synthesis of polysaccharides and oligosaccharides has been achieved by using glycosyl fluorides as substrates for cellulases. This methodology has successfully been applied to the first synthesis of cellulose via a non-biosynthetic pathway as well as to a selective preparation of cello-oligosaccharides and unnatural oligosaccharides. Using the enzymatic polymerization, it is possible to control the relative direction (parallel or anti-parallel) of each glucan chain in the synthetic cellulose in vitro. Based on these results, a new concept of allos-selectivity in polymer synthesis has been proposed.
Population Ecology | 1968
Shiro Kobayashi
A method for estimating the number entering each development stage from data obtained by regular sampling through one generation of an insect population was described. This method is consisted of the following two procedures: The provisional estimates are calculated on the assumption that each stage has a common mortality in a sampling interval. Then these estimates are corrected on another assumption that the mortality is different in each stage but constant during a stage. The result of testing its validity with two laboratory populations of the common cabbage butterfly,Pieris rapae crucivora, showed the availability of the present method.