Smart Foams: Boron Nitride‐Graphene Nanoplatelet Foams for Tunable Radiation Shielding and Strain Sensing

Author:

Orikasa Kazue1,Benedetti Luiza1,Park Cheol2,Chu Sang‐Hyon2,Jimenez Alberto3,Dolmetsch Tyler1,Thomas Tony1,Agarwal Arvind1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mechanical and Materials Engineering Department Florida International University Miami FL 33174 USA

2. Advanced Materials and Processing Branch NASA Langley Research Center Hampton VA 23681 USA

3. Materials Science and Engineering Area ESCET Rey Juan Carlos University C/Tulipán s/n Móstoles Madrid 28933 Spain

Abstract

AbstractAs space exploration advances, the demand for lightweight, multifunctional materials has substantially grown. Hybrid two‐dimensional (2D) material foams of different boron nitride nanoplatelets (BNNP)‐to‐graphene nanoplatelets (GNP) ratios are developed, which exhibit dual functionality: neutron radiation shields and strain sensors. The relationship between the composition, processing, microstructure, and their resultant neutron shielding and strain‐sensing properties are investigated. The hybrid foam properties can be finely tuned by adjusting BNNP:GNP compositions (1:0, 3:1, 1:1, 1:3, and 0:1). In terms of neutron radiation shielding, the mass absorption coefficient of hybrid foams increased with added BNNP, peaking at 14.9 cmg−1 for a pure BNNP foam. This mass absorption coefficient is 1.6 times that of pure GNP foams and almost 75 times that of aluminum. The radiation shielding properties are simulated using Geant4, a Monte Carlo‐based platform, and the simulations displayed a similar trend to the experimental results. The strain‐sensing properties of hybrid foams, measured by their gauge factor, exhibited exponential growth with rising GNP concentrations. Starting from the electrically insulating BNNP foam, the gauge factor increased to 53.4 with 25% GNP concentration and reached 201.8 for pure GNP foams. These findings highlight the versatility of the hybrid 2D material foams for space exploration.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Publisher

Wiley

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