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Dive into the research topics where Takamasa Makino is active.

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Featured researches published by Takamasa Makino.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2017

DFT and TPD study of the role of steps in the adsorption of CO on copper: Cu(4 1 0) versus Cu(1 0 0)

Anton Kokalj; Takamasa Makino; Michio Okada

Adsorption of carbon monoxide (CO) was studied on stepped Cu(4 1 0) by temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and density-functional-theory (DFT) calculations. For comparison, the adsorption of CO was characterized also on Cu(1 0 0) by DFT calculations. On Cu(4 1 0) TPD reveals two desorption peaks: a high temperature peak (∼210 K) is attributed to the desorption of CO from step-edge sites and low temperature peak (∼170 K) to desorption from terrace sites. According to DFT calculations, CO prefers to adsorb at step-edges of Cu(4 1 0), although the step-edge versus terrace site preference is rather small at low coverage of 1/16 ML, about 0.05 eV; the respective DFT predicted CO binding energies are  -0.89 and  -0.84 eV at the step-edge and terrace top sites, whereas the value calculated at top sites of Cu(1 0 0) is  -0.86 eV. Although this small step-edge over terrace site preference of 0.05 eV cannot explain the temperature difference of 40 K between the two TPD peaks, when the lateral intermolecular interactions are neglected, it is sufficient that the CO adsorbs almost exclusively at step-edges at low coverage (at 200 K the 0.05 eV corresponds to 3 kT). The emergence of the two TPD peaks on Cu(4 1 0) is therefore attributed to a combination of step-edge preference and lateral repulsion between CO molecules, which increases with increasing coverages and diminishes the net desorption energy of CO. DFT calculations further reveal that the reason for the significant increase of saturation coverage on Cu(4 1 0) compared to Cu(1 0 0) is related to the geometry of the step-edge that allows the CO molecules adsorbed thereon to tilt away from the nearest neighboring CO molecules adsorbed at the terrace and therefore to effectively reduce the lateral repulsion.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Adsorption of C2H4 on Stepped Cu(410) Surface: A Combined TPD, FTIR, and DFT Study

Takamasa Makino; Michio Okada; Anton Kokalj


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

Initial stages of Cu3Au(111) oxidation: oxygen induced Cu segregation and the protective Au layer profile

Yasutaka Tsuda; Kohei Oka; Takamasa Makino; Michio Okada; Wilson Agerico Diño; Michihiro Hashinokuchi; Akitaka Yoshigoe; Yuden Teraoka; Hideaki Kasai


Surface Science | 2014

CO adsorption on regularly stepped Cu(410) surface

Takamasa Makino; Michio Okada


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

The effects of alloying and segregation for the reactivity and diffusion of oxygen on Cu3Au(111)

Kohei Oka; Yasutaka Tsuda; Takamasa Makino; Michio Okada; Michihiro Hashinokuchi; Akitaka Yoshigoe; Yuden Teraoka; Hideaki Kasai


The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2018

Oxide formation on copper alloy surfaces

Yasutaka Tsuda; Takamasa Makino; Hikaru Yoshida; Akitaka Yoshigoe; Tetsuya Fukuyama; Michio Okada


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2018

CH3Cl/Cu(410): Interaction and Adsorption Geometry

Takamasa Makino; Siti Zulaehah; Jessiel Siaron Gueriba; Wilson Agerico Diño; Michio Okada


The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017

Surface temperature dependence of oxide formation on Cu 3 Pt(111)

Yasutaka Tsuda; Takamasa Makino; Hikaru Yoshida; Akitaka Yoshigoe; Tetsuya Fukuyama; Michio Okada


The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017

Surface reaction of supersonic C 2 H 4 on Cu (410)

Takamasa Makino; Yasutaka Tsuda; Hikaru Yoshida; Akitaka Yoshigoe; Michio Okada


The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017

Oxidation of Cu 3 Pt(111) surface with hyperthermal oxygen molecule

Yasutaka Tsuda; Takamasa Makino; Chie Tsukada; Akitaka Yoshigoe; Tetsuya Fukuyama; Michio Okada

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Akitaka Yoshigoe

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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Hikaru Yoshida

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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Chie Tsukada

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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Yuden Teraoka

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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