Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Prof. Makoto Fujita. Profile. 1980: B.S. Faculty of Engineering, Chiba University. 1982: M.S. Graduate School of Engineering, Chiba University. 1987: Ph.D.Tokyo Institute of Technology. 1982-1987: Research Fellow at Sagami Chemical Research Center. 1988-1991: Assistant Professor at Faculty of Engineering, Chiba University.

  2. Makoto Fujita (藤田 誠, Fujita Makoto) is a Japanese chemist who specializes in supramolecular coordination chemistry.

  3. fujitalab.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp › home_eThe Fujita Laboratory

    The Japan Academy has decided to give the Imperial Prize and the Japan Academy Prize to Prof. M. Fujita for crystalline sponge method: innovation of X-ray crystallography and its development into molecular science and technology.

  4. Makoto Fujita (藤田まこと, Fujita Makoto), born Makoto Harada (April 13, 1933 – February 17, 2010), was a Japanese actor. He was born in Ikebukuro, Tokyo, the son of silent-film actor Rintarō Fujima, and started his career as a comedian in 1952.

  5. Sep 30, 2009 · Fujita is now forging ahead to examine more unusual structures, such as the intermediates formed during organometallic transformations or enzymatic reactions with transition-metal ions, some of...

  6. Mar 28, 2013 · “Some crystallize easily, some crystallize hardly and some are impossible to crystallize, if they are liquid compounds,” says Makoto Fujita, a chemist at the University of Tokyo who led the work...

  7. Oct 2, 2021 · Eisuke Tsunekawa, Yusuke Otsubo, Yusuke Yamada, Akihito Ikeda, Naruhiko Adachi, Masato Kawasaki, Akira Takasu, Shinji Aramaki, Toshiya Senda, Sota Sato, Satoshi Yoshida, Makoto Fujita, Tomohisa Sawada. X-ray and Electron Diffraction Observations of Steric Zipper Interactions in Metal-Induced Peptide Cross-β Nanostructures.

  8. Apr 23, 2019 · In 2018, Prof. Makoto Fujita and Prof. Omar M. Yaghi were honored by the Wolf Prize in Chemistry “for conceiving metal-directed assembly principles leading to large highly porous complexes” and “for pioneering Reticular Chemistry via Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs) and Covalent Organic Frameworks (COFs)”, respectively.

  9. Feb 19, 2018 · Makoto Fujita. Fujita, a professor of applied chemistry at the University of Tokyo, is being honored for his work on metal-directed self-assembly, which has yielded large, highly porous complexes used in applications such as structure determination in X-ray crystallography.

  10. Feb 8, 2023 · The latest 2022 prize will be shared between Professor Makoto Fujita from the Department of Applied Chemistry at the University of Tokyo and Professor Klaus Müllen from the Max Planck Institute in Germany. The award ceremony takes place on Feb. 8, 2023, in Paris.