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Accelerated Testing Method for Predicting Long-Term Properties of Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Shape Memory Polymer Composites in a Low Earth Orbit Environment

Joon Hyeok Jang, Seok Bin Hong, Jin‐Gyun Kim, Nam-Seo Goo, Woong‐Ryeol Yu

2021Polymers24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Carbon fiber-reinforced shape memory polymer composites (CF-SMPCs) have been researched as a potential next-generation material for aerospace application, due to their lightweight and self-deployable properties. To this end, the mechanical properties of CF-SMPCs, including long-term durability, must be characterized in aerospace environments. In this study, the storage modulus of CF-SMPCs was investigated in a simulation of a low Earth orbit (LEO) environment involving three harsh conditions: high vacuum, and atomic oxygen (AO) and ultraviolet (UV) light exposure. CF-SMPCs in a LEO environment degrade over time due to temperature extremes and matrix erosion by AO. The opposite behavior was observed in our experiments, due to crosslinking induced by AO and UV light exposure in the LEO environment. The effects of the three harsh conditions on the properties of CF-SMPCs were characterized individually, using accelerated tests conducted at various temperatures in a space environment chamber, and were then combined using the time-temperature superposition principle. The long-term mechanical behavior of CF-SMPCs in the LEO environment was then predicted by the linear product of the shift factors obtained from the three accelerated tests. The results also indicated only a slight change in the shape memory performance of the CF-SMPCs.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceLow earth orbitComposite materialShape-memory polymerSuperposition principlePolymerDurabilityAerospaceAccelerated agingFiberAerospace engineeringPhysicsSatelliteQuantum mechanicsEngineeringPolymer composites and self-healingSilicone and Siloxane ChemistryMarine Biology and Environmental Chemistry