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Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications

There is a growing need to develop lead-free shielding materials that are safe, low weight, durable, environmentally friendly, chemically and mechanically stable and customizable for specific applications. Fused deposition modeling (FDM), an additive manufacturing technique based on the extrusion of...

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Autores principales: Jreije, Antonio, Mutyala, Swaroop Kumar, Urbonavičius, Benas Gabrielis, Šablinskaitė, Aušrinė, Keršienė, Neringa, Puišo, Judita, Rutkūnienė, Živilė, Adlienė, Diana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10096962/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37050314
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15071700
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author Jreije, Antonio
Mutyala, Swaroop Kumar
Urbonavičius, Benas Gabrielis
Šablinskaitė, Aušrinė
Keršienė, Neringa
Puišo, Judita
Rutkūnienė, Živilė
Adlienė, Diana
author_facet Jreije, Antonio
Mutyala, Swaroop Kumar
Urbonavičius, Benas Gabrielis
Šablinskaitė, Aušrinė
Keršienė, Neringa
Puišo, Judita
Rutkūnienė, Živilė
Adlienė, Diana
author_sort Jreije, Antonio
collection PubMed
description There is a growing need to develop lead-free shielding materials that are safe, low weight, durable, environmentally friendly, chemically and mechanically stable and customizable for specific applications. Fused deposition modeling (FDM), an additive manufacturing technique based on the extrusion of a thermoplastic filament into a 3D printed object one layer at a time, could be employed well in applications involving ionizing radiation due to its relatively low cost, design flexibility and high manufacturing precision. This study aimed at developing 3D printing composites that contain Titanium dioxide as a filler agent for shielding in a medical radiation environment. First, the effect of low-dose ionizing radiation (up to 15 Gy) on the mechanical properties of common 3D printing polymers, ABS, ULTRAT, PLA, NYLON, ASA and PETG, was investigated. Since ABS experienced the lowest variation in its ultimate tensile strength (±5%) and Young’s modulus (−5%/+11%), it was chosen as a matrix for a new extruded 3D filament containing TiO(2) at 1 wt.%, 3 wt.%, and 5 wt.%. With the incorporation of TiO(2) at different filler contents, the UTS of the ABS composites varied between 24.1 MPa and 28.4 MPa, with the highest value recorded for 3 wt.% TiO(2). Young’s modulus values were dependent on both the TiO(2) concentration and on the irradiation dose. In addition, the ABS/TiO(2) composites with a higher filler content (3 wt.% and 5 wt.%) maintained their attenuation ability even after exposure to a radiation dose of 100 Gy as opposed to pure ABS, which exhibited a ~2.5% reduction in its mass attenuation coefficient after exposure to the same dose of radiation. The pilot investigation performed demonstrated that the newly developed ABS/TiO(2) composite containing 5 wt.% of filler can be successfully employed to shield electronic devices operating in a radiotherapy room.
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spelling pubmed-100969622023-04-13 Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications Jreije, Antonio Mutyala, Swaroop Kumar Urbonavičius, Benas Gabrielis Šablinskaitė, Aušrinė Keršienė, Neringa Puišo, Judita Rutkūnienė, Živilė Adlienė, Diana Polymers (Basel) Article There is a growing need to develop lead-free shielding materials that are safe, low weight, durable, environmentally friendly, chemically and mechanically stable and customizable for specific applications. Fused deposition modeling (FDM), an additive manufacturing technique based on the extrusion of a thermoplastic filament into a 3D printed object one layer at a time, could be employed well in applications involving ionizing radiation due to its relatively low cost, design flexibility and high manufacturing precision. This study aimed at developing 3D printing composites that contain Titanium dioxide as a filler agent for shielding in a medical radiation environment. First, the effect of low-dose ionizing radiation (up to 15 Gy) on the mechanical properties of common 3D printing polymers, ABS, ULTRAT, PLA, NYLON, ASA and PETG, was investigated. Since ABS experienced the lowest variation in its ultimate tensile strength (±5%) and Young’s modulus (−5%/+11%), it was chosen as a matrix for a new extruded 3D filament containing TiO(2) at 1 wt.%, 3 wt.%, and 5 wt.%. With the incorporation of TiO(2) at different filler contents, the UTS of the ABS composites varied between 24.1 MPa and 28.4 MPa, with the highest value recorded for 3 wt.% TiO(2). Young’s modulus values were dependent on both the TiO(2) concentration and on the irradiation dose. In addition, the ABS/TiO(2) composites with a higher filler content (3 wt.% and 5 wt.%) maintained their attenuation ability even after exposure to a radiation dose of 100 Gy as opposed to pure ABS, which exhibited a ~2.5% reduction in its mass attenuation coefficient after exposure to the same dose of radiation. The pilot investigation performed demonstrated that the newly developed ABS/TiO(2) composite containing 5 wt.% of filler can be successfully employed to shield electronic devices operating in a radiotherapy room. MDPI 2023-03-29 /pmc/articles/PMC10096962/ /pubmed/37050314 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15071700 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Jreije, Antonio
Mutyala, Swaroop Kumar
Urbonavičius, Benas Gabrielis
Šablinskaitė, Aušrinė
Keršienė, Neringa
Puišo, Judita
Rutkūnienė, Živilė
Adlienė, Diana
Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications
title Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications
title_full Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications
title_fullStr Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications
title_full_unstemmed Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications
title_short Modification of 3D Printable Polymer Filaments for Radiation Shielding Applications
title_sort modification of 3d printable polymer filaments for radiation shielding applications
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10096962/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37050314
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15071700
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