Tetsuo Yasuoka
Tokyo Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tetsuo Yasuoka.
International Journal of Aeronautical and Space Sciences | 2013
Tetsuo Yasuoka; Yoshinobu Shimamura; Akira Todoroki
Carbon nanofibers (CNFs) are electrically conductive. When CNFs are used as fillers in resin, this electrical conductivity can be yielded without adversely affecting the mechanical properties of the resin. When an elastomer is adopted as the resin, a conductive elastomer can then be produced. Due to its flexibility and conductive properties, a large strain sensor based on changes in resistivity may be produced, for strain sensing in flexible structures. In this study, a patch-type large strain sensor using resistivity change in a CNF/elastomer composite was proposed. The measurement limits of the sensor were investigated experimentally, and the limit was found to be 40%, which greatly exceeded the limits of conventional metal-foiled strain gages. Also, the proposed CNF/elastomer large strain sensor can be used to measure flexible materials, while conventional strain gages cannot be used to measure such strains.
ASME 2013 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference | 2013
Tetsuo Yasuoka; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Akira Todoroki
Welds and heat affected zones have the distribution of the residual stress or the yield strength. The crack growth evaluation is conventionally conducted using stress intensity factor in those regions. However, the stress intensity factor may be invalid when the residual stress distribution or yield strength distribution changes in the vicinity of a crack tip. The reason is that the distributions around the crack tip affect the plastic zone size and the stress intensity factor inappropriately represents the stress state in the vicinity of a crack tip. In this study, the residual stress distribution and yield strength distribution was assumed along the crack propagation path and the validity of the stress intensity factor was discussed on that condition. As a result, the stress intensity factor tended to be invalid when the steep residual stress distribution or the steep yield strength distribution. When the steep distribution exists, the crack growth evaluation should be conducted using a parameter considering the elastoplastic behavior near the crack tip. For that purpose, the authors proposed new method of the plastic zone correction using a differential term of the stress intensity factor. The new method was demonstrated through the case study for stress corrosion cracking of nuclear power plants.Copyright
Composites Part B-engineering | 2014
Akira Todoroki; Hiroumi Kurokawa; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Ryosuke Matsuzaki; Tetsuo Yasuoka
Engineering Fracture Mechanics | 2012
Tetsuo Yasuoka; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Akira Todoroki
Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers. A | 2013
Masatobu Kawagoe; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Akira Todoroki; Ryosuke Matsuzaki; Tetsuo Yasuoka
Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers. A | 2013
Akira Todoroki; Daichi Haruyama; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Yoshiro Suzuki; Tetsuo Yasuoka
Engineering Fracture Mechanics | 2013
Tetsuo Yasuoka; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Akira Todoroki
Mechanical Engineering Journal | 2014
Tetsuo Yasuoka; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Akira Todoroki
Journal of The Society of Materials Science, Japan | 2014
Makoto Ohta; Yoshihiro Mizutani; Akira Todoroki; Ryosuke Matsuzaki; Tetsuo Yasuoka
Journal of the Japan Society for Composite Materials | 2007
Tetsuo Yasuoka; Yoshinobu Shimamura; Akira Todoroki