Project

Super absorbing polymers for very flexible radiation shielding of human tissues

Acronym
PD Grant
Code
41D00121
Duration
01 May 2021 → 31 October 2022
Funding
European funding: various
Research disciplines
  • Engineering and technology
    • Destructive and non-destructive testing of materials
    • Materials processing
    • Materials synthesis
    • Polymer processing
Keywords
superabsorbing polymers radiation protection
 
Project description

The current project idea builds on key results obtained during an earlier ESA tender project namely “Innovative Radiation Shielding Technologies (2014)” Here, Monte Carlo simulations were performed to determine what materials would be most suited to protect against space radiation. Both water and polyethylene (PE) were found to works best. The most radiation-vulnerable parts of the human body were identified so that new spacesuits made of such materials could be designed to protect these specific regions. In a later project, funded by the ASI, a personal shielding garment prototype was developed and successfully tested on the ISS, with embedded PE plastic containers that can be filled with water and later drained to recover the water.  

During the development and testing phase of the garment on the ISS, some important risks/challenges were identified:

  1. Danger of water leakage, during filling/draining or because of puncture of the containers, very critical in a mainly electrical environment
  2. Due to zero gravity, unequal water distribution within the stiff plastic reservoirs is possible when incompletely filled with water
  3. To limit the risk of leakage and overpressure, plastic containers were bulky and with regular shapes, which implies a limitation of movement freedom for astronauts.
 

The idea of this proposal is to address these issues by replacing the liquid water with superabsorbent polymers (SAPs) that are able to absorb several hundred times their own weight in water. This would result in the following key advantages:

  1. Equal distribution of the water over the patch and thus equal shielding, independent of the amount of water present
  2. No risk of leakage when the container is punctured
  3. SAPs elements only swell as much as water is present, leading to smaller volumes, less bulky suits and the possibility to develop ergonomic elements fit to anatomical shapes
  4. Water can be recuperated by applying pressure on the suit.