Curriculum Vitaes

Kaito Fujitani

  (藤谷 海斗)

Profile Information

Affiliation
School of Engineering Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of Hyogo

Researcher number
00915069
J-GLOBAL ID
202401008305190116
researchmap Member ID
R000069527

Education

 3

Committee Memberships

 1

Papers

 15
  • Kaito Fujitani, Hiroshi Nakamura, Taki Watanabe, Mitsuyoshi Kishihara, Yoshiaki Ukita, Kazuhiro Kanda, Yuichi Utsumi
    Microfluidics and Nanofluidics, 30(1), Dec 5, 2025  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • Kaito Fujitani, Koji Iwasaki, Shuhei Hashimoto, Ryosuke Takagi, Yasushi Hotta
    2025 International Conference on Solid State Devices and Materials, Sep 18, 2025  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • Kaito Fujitani, Mitsuyoshi Kishihara, Munehiro Sugiyama, Yuichi Utsumi
    IEEJ Transactions on Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 19(12) 2072-2080, Jul 18, 2024  Peer-reviewedLead authorCorresponding author
    Microfluidics made of dimethylpolysiloxane were developed for chemical synthesis using microwave heating at 24.125 GHz, and microwave efficiency was enhanced by the microwave resonance effect. In addition, the device was fabricated using a mold created using a 3D printer to reduce production costs. The microchip structure comprised a post‐wall waveguide and a microchannel that passed through the waveguide. This post‐wall waveguide also comprises metal columns (post‐wall) instead of a conductor side wall, and easily introduces microchannels through the gaps between the metal columns. The waveguide length was adjusted to achieve a resonance frequency of 24 GHz using an electromagnetic wave simulation, assuming that the microchannel was filled with pure water. Microwaves with an input power of 4 W caused a maximum temperature increase of 93 °C; this result is ~10 °C higher than that of a microchip with non‐resonant structure. In this study, Ag nanoparticles were synthesized using a chemical reaction induced by microwave irradiation of a chip flow system. Owing to irradiating the mixing reagent with microwaves of an input power of 4 W while controlling the flow rate at 0.7 μl/min, the formation of Ag nanoparticles with an average particle size of ~19.2 ± 2.4 nm was demonstrated by absorbance measurements and dynamic light scattering. It is expected that microwave microfluidics enhanced by the resonance effect will substantialize nanoparticle synthesis and high‐efficiency automated chemical synthesis combined with multichemical unit operations. © 2024 Institute of Electrical Engineers of Japan and Wiley Periodicals LLC.
  • Daisuke Fujiki, Kaito Fujitani, Mana Honkawa, Nobuyuki Terayama, Eiji Komatu, Jun Asano, Tsunemasa Saiki, Hirosuke Sumida, Satoru Suzuki, Yuichi Utsumi
    Journal of Photopolymer Science and Technology, 37(3) 345-350, Jun 25, 2024  Peer-reviewed
  • Kaito Fujitani, Satoru Suzuki, Mitsuyoshi Kishihara, Yuichi Utsumi
    Journal of Applied Physics, 135(3), Jan 21, 2024  Peer-reviewedLead authorCorresponding author

Misc.

 1

Presentations

 27

Teaching Experience

 2

Professional Memberships

 1

Research Projects

 4