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Ultrathin, Stretchable, and 3D-Printable Complementary Nanotubes–Polymer Composites for Multimodal Radiation Shielding in Extreme Environments

  • Flandy
  • , Kun Kim
  • , Jaehyoung Ko
  • , Daeun Kim
  • , Daekwon Lee
  • , Heesuk Rho
  • , Sang Seok Lee
  • , Dong Su Lee
  • , Se Gyu Jang
  • , Seokhoon Ahn
  • , Seung Yeol Jeon
  • , Dae Young Jeon
  • , Yongho Joo*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Korea Institute of Science and Technology
  • University of Science and Technology UST
  • Jeonbuk National University
  • Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology
  • Gyeongsang National University

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

A novel material system capable of simultaneously attenuating electromagnetic interference (EMI) and neutron radiation, while retaining multifunctionality such as lightweight and mechanical stretchability, is urgently needed for versatile passivation platforms in advanced aerospace, defense, medical, and next-generation electronic applications operating under extreme environments. Here, we report (1) a neat composite comprising complementary nanotubes (boron nitride nanotubes, BNNTs, and single-walled carbon nanotubes, SWCNTs) for dual-mode attenuation that includes EMI and neutron shielding, and (2) its extension into a 3D-printed architecture using an intrinsically stretchable polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) matrix, which altogether enables a robust and conformable shielding architecture for emerging applications. Utilizing direct ink writing, we achieve scalable fabrication of structurally complex geometries (e.g., freestanding honeycomb lattices) with tunable mechanical and shielding properties. The resulting neat composites demonstrate EMI shielding effectiveness exceeding 50 dB and neutron attenuation coefficient of 1.27 mm−1 (equivalent to ∼72% attenuation at a mm thickness) at thicknesses on the order of tens of micrometers, where the polymer composites exhibit the shielding effectiveness up to 23 dB at sub-millimeter thicknesses while maintaining mechanical resilience under cyclic strain and thermal extremes (–196°C to 250°C). These findings present a lightweight and robust shielding strategy for next-generation electronics in harsh environments.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere13805
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume38
Issue number18
DOIs
StatePublished - 2026.03.25

Keywords

  • 3D printing
  • boron nitride nanotubes
  • electromagnetic interference shielding
  • extreme environments
  • neutron shielding
  • single-walled carbon nanotubes

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