Seiji Fukuyama
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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Featured researches published by Seiji Fukuyama.
Materials Characterization | 2002
Y Li; Bai An; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa; Masamichi Yoshimura
Abstract The surface structures of a Nb(100) single crystal in the initial stages of oxidation have been investigated by ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). A ladder-like (3×10) structure was observed on the surface after numerous cycles of Ar-ion sputtering and flash annealing at 1973 K. The ladder-like structure could be identified as a NbO 2 overlayer on a Nb(100) surface due to the segregation of oxygen on the surface. The ladder-like structure gradually changed to a disordered structure upon exposure to oxygen at room temperature and was restored by annealing at above 853 K in UHV. The oxidation process on the Nb(100) surface is discussed.
Acta Materialia | 2003
Mao Wen; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa
Atomistic simulations are conducted on the hydrogen-affected kinking process of a screw dislocation in iron by the nudged elastic band method. We find that when a kink pair nucleates at hydrogen, the activation energy is decreased by the transition of hydrogen to a stronger binding site, while it is increased by the transition to a weaker binding site. When a kink pair meets hydrogen during expanding, the sideward motion of the kink pair is impeded by hydrogen. The simulation provides an insight into the complex atomistic process of hydrogen-induced softening and hardening.
Journal of Materials Research | 2001
Mao Wen; Xuejun Xu; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa
A new reliable embedded atom method potential for hydrogen in body-centered-cubic (bcc) iron is developed by fitting not only to the properties of hydrogen in a perfect bcc iron lattice but also to the properties of hydrogen binding to vacancies. The validity of the potential is examined by calculating the properties of hydrogen trap binding to surfaces and dislocations that are in good accordance with the experiments. A brief application of the potential by molecular dynamic simulation reveals that hydrogen accumulated ahead of the crack tip induces serious hydrogen embrittlement.
Modelling and Simulation in Materials Science and Engineering | 1999
Zhong Hu; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa; Shingo Okamoto
A molecular dynamics simulation was conducted on hydrogen embrittlement at a crack tip of a single crystal of -iron composed of {100} planes under uniaxial tensile load along the 100 direction on a nanometre scale at 293 K. The modified Morse pair-potential function of Fe-Fe and the Morse potential function of Fe-H were used to calculate the interatomic action force. A three-dimensional model with 2618 iron atoms and from one to 260 hydrogen atoms segregated at the notched area was designed for the simulation. The general conclusion on hydrogen embrittlement of a single crystal of -iron could be described qualitatively as the processes of cavity nucleation, cavity linkage and, finally, fracture. Cavity nucleation occurs on the (100) plane in the notched area of the specimen with more than three hydrogen atoms at the early stage of the deformation and does not depend on the hydrogen content. The cavities are linked to each other and fracture occurs on the plane with progressing deformation. The deformation step of cavity linkage and fracture decrease logarithmically with increasing hydrogen content, while neither the cavity nor the fracture occur, even at the maximum total deformation of 50%, due to blunting of the crack tip in the specimen without hydrogen.
Materials Science and Technology | 2001
D. Sun; G. Han; S. Vaodee; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa
Abstract The tensile behaviour of solution annealed type 304L, solution annealed type 304, and solution annealed and sensitised type 304 stainless steels was investigated in hydrogen and helium under a pressure of 1·1 MPa over the temperature range 300–80 K at strain rates ranging from 4·2×10-5 to 4·2×10-2 s-1. For 304L steel, hydrogen environment embrittlement (HEE) increased with decreasing strain rate. For 304L and 304 steels, HEE increased with decreasing temperature, reached a maximum, and then decreased with further decrease in temperature: the decrease was particularly rapid near the minimum temperature for HEE. Sensitisation enhanced the HEE of 304 steel. Above the maximum HEE temperature, the HEE behaviour was similar to the hydrogen embrittlement behaviour of materials in previous studies, but near the minimum temperature for HEE it was different. Three types of hydrogen induced brittle fracture were observed as a result of HEE: transgranular fracture along strain induced martensite laths and twin boundary fracture on the fracture surfaces of solution annealed 304L and 304 steels, and grain boundary fracture on the sensitised 304 steel. It was found that from room temperature to the maximum HEE temperature, the HEE of the materials depended on the transformation of strain induced martensite and below the maximum HEE temperature it depended on the diffusion of hydrogen.
Japanese Journal of Applied Physics | 1998
Bai An; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa; Masamichi Yoshimura
Carbon nanotubes deposited on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) are annealed in ultra high vacuum. The effect of annealing temperature on the surface morphology of the carbon nanotubes on HOPG is examined by scanning tunneling microscopy. The ring-like surface superstructure of (√ 3×√ 3)R30° of graphite is found on the carbon nanotubes annealed above 1593 K. The tips of the carbon nanotubes are destroyed and the stacking misarrangement between the upper and the lower walls of the tube join with HOPG resulting in the superstructure.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2010
Lin Zhang; B. An; Seiji Fukuyama; Takashi Iijima; Kiyoshi Yokogawa
Hydrogen-induced crack initiation in hydrogen-charged metastable austenitic stainless steels during deformation at 295 K is characterized by performing a combined tensile and hydrogen release experiment and scanning probe microscopy. Strain-induced martensite (α′) not only provides a path for rapid hydrogen diffusion in austenite (γ) but also promotes crack initiation. Hydrogen rapidly diffuses from α′ and accumulates at the boundary between the α′-rich and γ-rich zones during deformation due to the high hydrogen diffusivity and low hydrogen solubility in α′, resulting in crack initiation at the boundary between the α′-rich and γ-rich zones. The hydrogen-induced crack initially grows along the boundary between the α′-rich and γ-rich zones and then propagates in the α′-rich zone.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2002
B. An; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa; Masamichi Yoshimura
The surface evolution of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite irradiated with Ar+ ions of 1.0 keV at doses between 5×1011 and 1×1013 ions/cm2 during annealing was investigated by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) in the tapping mode. Hillocks were observed by both STM and AFM after ion irradiation, where the height of a hillock measured by STM was larger than that measured by AFM. The ion-irradiated surface was recovered in three stages during annealing: the first stage at 473–873 K, the second stage at 873–1473 K, and the third stage at 1473–1873 K. In the first stage, many of the ion-induced hillocks recovered rapidly and irregular domelike protrusions were formed due to both the recombination of the mobile interstitial clusters with the immobile vacancies and the aggregation of interstitial clusters. In the second stage, the hillocks recovered slightly and domelike protrusions aggregated to larger domelike protrusions. In the third stage, the hillocks recovered complet...
Materials Science and Technology | 1999
J. He; G. Han; Seiji Fukuyama; Kiyoshi Yokogawa
Abstract The tensile behaviour of the ferrite and austenite phases of Fe–22Cr–5Ni (wt-%) duplex stainless steel containing a maximum of 17·2% austenite was investigated in the temperature range 65–298 K. The results indicate that mechanical twinning occurred in the testing temperature range, and that austenite impeded the growth of twinning. Mechanical twinning in ferrite was well decorated with a ‘dislocation shell’, and the density of dislocations at the coherent twin boundary and within a twin was much higher than in the matrix above the ductile–brittle transition temperature (DBTT). This supported the occurrence of slip localisation next to coherent twin boundaries. Dislocations in the material with no austenite tested below the DBTT were characterised by coplanar slip dislocation on the { 110} plane, and both coplanar slip on { 110} and cross-slip dislocations were observed above the DBTT. Dislocation in ferrite was negligibly affected by the presence of austenitic particles. Strain induced martensit...
Carbon | 1996
Seong-Ho Yoon; Yozo Korai; Isao Mochia; Kiyoshi Yokogawa; Seiji Fukuyama; Masamitsu Yoshimura
Abstract Nano-scale structures of a mesophase pitch based carbon fiber were characterized using a high-resolution scanning electron microscope (HR-SEM) and a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). Fibril was found to be sectioned by a number of pleat units, being aligned parallel along the fiber axis. The periodical size, thickness and height of pleat unit was estimated as 30–60 nm, 20–30 nm and around 7 nm, respectively. In a pleat, graphitic units of 30–60 nm long and 2–4 nm wide run principally perpendicular to the axis. The basal plane of graphite was observed at the largest magnification. Such a series of nano-structures should be related intimately to the performance of the fibers. The formation mechanism of such series of nano-structural units is discussed in relation to the nano-structure of the liquid crystal mesophase pitch and its deformation during the spinning.
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National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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