Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Polymer Science
Author ORCID Identifier
Seunghyun Moon https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4318-1572
JR Dennison https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5504-3353
Publisher
Crimson Publishers LLC
Publication Date
11-17-2025
Journal Article Version
Accepted Manuscript
First Page
1
Last Page
14
Abstract
This study experimentally investigates the effects of prolonged radiation exposure on mechanical properties of high-strength, highly crystalline polyethylene (PE)/thermally reduced graphene oxide (TrGO) nanocomposite films for space applications. Prior to irradiation, PE/TrGO films were found to have tensile strengths up to ~4 GPa, more than 40 times that of conventional space-deployed membrane films (e.g., those used in solar sails) and over 59× the specific tensile strength. The PE/TrGO films were subjected to three radiation conditions to simulate space environmental conditions: 90Sr beta radiation (0.2 to 2.5 MeV), 80 keV electron beam irradiation, and 4.9 eV ultraviolet (254 nm) exposure. Under exposure to similar total ionizing doses (TID ~2.5 kGy, corresponding to ~3% of the unshielded annual electron dose in GEO) in a vacuum environment, the tensile strength showed little change after high-energy Sr-90 beta irradiation, but decreased by up to ~34.8% following intermediate-energy electron irradiation. Mechanical and Raman spectroscopic analyses were conducted to elucidate the radiation-induced structural and chemical changes before and after exposure, as well as to assess the protective effects of incorporated antioxidants on the stability of the PE films.
Recommended Citation
Moon S, Duhoon A, Gu Z, Dennison JR, Luo T. Effect of Space Radiation on the Mechanical Properties of High-Strength Polyethylene Nanocomposite Films. ChemRxiv. 2025; doi:10.26434/chemrxiv-2025-77lk8