🇬🇧 🇹🇷 🇩🇪 🇫🇷 🇪🇸 🇮🇹 🇸🇦 🇨🇳 🇯🇵 🇰🇷 🇮🇳 🇷🇺 🇺🇦 🇮🇱 🇮🇷 🇮🇩 🇲🇾 🇹🇭 🇻🇳
Schedule Demo

ISS/JAXA-Kibo Space Heritage

Hardware that survived 13 months in the most hostile radiation environment accessible to human engineering.

13

MONTHS
Orbital Exposure

11.1%

GAMMA RAY
Improvement

38.56%

NEUTRON
Enhancement

8071

JAXA EXP.
Reference ID

In the defence materials sector, claims are abundant but validation is rare. Dr BEL's materials have achieved what most deep-tech founders only promise: 13 months of continuous operation in Low Earth Orbit at the outer zone of the Van Allen Belts—the most hostile radiation environment accessible to human engineering.

Space hardware validation represents the ultimate de-risking signal. Materials must survive launch vibration (up to 14g), vacuum outgassing, thermal cycling (-150°C to +120°C), atomic oxygen fluence, ultraviolet degradation, and continuous cosmic radiation flux. There is no terrestrial simulation that replicates this combination of environmental stresses.

The ISS/JAXA-Kibo experiment validates not just material performance under radiation but manufacturing consistency, formulation stability, and structural integrity under operational conditions. Materials that return functional from space have proven qualification credentials impossible to replicate in any ground-based laboratory.

Experiment Configuration

Platform International Space Station (ISS)
Module Kibo Japanese Experiment Module
Facility Exposed Facility (JEM-EF)
Hardware Exposed Experiment Handrail Attachment Mechanism (ExHAM)
Experiment ID 8071
Exposure Duration 13 months (November 2018 – December 2019)
Orbital Altitude ~400 km (Low Earth Orbit)
Radiation Environment Van Allen Belt outer zone, South Atlantic Anomaly traversal

Material System

Primary Material: PMMA/Colemanite (Ca2B6O11·5H2O) nanocomposite

Architecture: Boron-oxide nanoparticle reinforced polymer matrix

Function: Radiation shielding through neutron thermalization and gamma attenuation via high boron cross-section

Environmental Exposure

  • Vacuum: <10⁻⁶ Torr continuous
  • Thermal Cycling: -150°C to +120°C (90-minute orbital period)
  • Atomic Oxygen Fluence: ~2×10²⁰ atoms/cm² (equivalent to 1+ year LEO)
  • Cosmic Radiation: Van Allen Belt protons, galactic cosmic rays, solar particle events
  • UV Radiation: Unfiltered solar UV including vacuum UV <200nm

Validated Performance Results

Performance Metric Validated Result
Gamma Ray Shielding Improvement 11.1% improvement versus baseline PMMA
Neutron Shielding Enhancement 38.56% enhancement versus baseline PMMA
Beta Attenuation Performance Validated in Van Allen Belt proton/electron environment
Material Structural Integrity Maintained through 13-month exposure—no delamination, cracking, or significant mass loss
Optical Property Retention Transmittance characteristics preserved post-exposure
Atomic Oxygen Resistance Surface recession within acceptable parameters for LEO mission duration

Technical Significance

The 38.56% neutron shielding enhancement is particularly significant for space applications. Neutron radiation—primarily from galactic cosmic ray interactions with spacecraft structures—represents the most challenging shielding problem in human spaceflight. Boron-10's high neutron capture cross-section (3,840 barns for thermal neutrons) enables effective thermalization and absorption without the mass penalty of traditional polyethylene moderators.

The 11.1% gamma ray improvement demonstrates that the colemanite nanoparticle dispersion enhances rather than compromises the matrix's photon attenuation characteristics—a critical validation point for multi-radiation environment applications.

The Space Environment Challenge

Space qualification represents the gold standard in materials validation

Radiation Environment

The ISS orbits within and below the Van Allen radiation belts, experiencing continuous exposure to:

  • Trapped protons (peak flux at 200-600 km)
  • Trapped electrons (inner and outer belt)
  • Galactic cosmic rays (heavy ions to iron)
  • Solar energetic particles
  • South Atlantic Anomaly traversals

Thermal Extremes

The ISS experiences 16 sunrises and sunsets per day. Materials on the exposed facility cycle between approximately -150°C (eclipse) and +120°C (direct sunlight) every 90 minutes.

This thermal cycling—over 5,000 cycles during a 13-month mission—tests material fatigue, CTE mismatch at interfaces, and structural integrity in ways impossible to replicate terrestrially.

Atomic Oxygen

Low Earth Orbit contains residual atomic oxygen at sufficient density (~10⁸ atoms/cm³ at 400 km) to cause significant surface erosion of organic materials.

Polymers that survive LEO exposure without protective coatings have inherent resistance to oxidative degradation—a valuable characteristic for long-duration applications.

Collaborating Organisations

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)

Role: Kibo module operations, ExHAM hardware provision, sample return logistics, experiment coordination

Contribution: Access to ISS external exposure platform, post-flight sample analysis support

Turkish Space Agency (TUA)

Role: National coordination, regulatory support, international agreement facilitation

Contribution: Government-to-government space cooperation framework enabling Turkish research access to ISS facilities

Istanbul Technical University (ITU)

Role: Academic home institution, facilities access, materials characterisation

Departments: Energy Institute, Materials Engineering

Contribution: Pre-flight preparation, post-flight radiation characterisation, thesis supervision

Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS (Malaysia)

Role: International research collaboration

Contribution: Vibrating sample magnetometry (VSM) for magnetic characterisation, Raman spectroscopy for molecular structure analysis

APRSAF-26 International Presentation

Dr Tayfun BEL presented "Turkish Experience of ISS-KIBO" at the 26th Asia-Pacific Regional Space Agency Forum (APRSAF-26), Space Environment Utilization Working Group, Nagoya Convention Hall, Japan, 26 November 2019.

The session placed Dr BEL alongside delegates from:

JAXA
Japan
NASA
USA
KARI
Republic of Korea
GISTDA
Thailand
LAPAN
Indonesia
TUA
Turkey

From Space Heritage to Defence Products

Materials science insights validated through ISS directly inform Belvyon's commercial products

VELON-G Smart Material Canopy

Polymer matrix stability under radiation and thermal cycling validated through ISS heritage. The same PMMA-based architecture—now enhanced with graphene-ITO metamaterial inclusions—demonstrates confidence in long-duration operational survivability for fighter canopy applications.

Learn More

SYNAPLEX Neuromorphic Substrate

Radiation tolerance foundations established through colemanite nanocomposite validation. SYNAPLEX's fluoropolymer architecture inherits design principles from space-qualified polymer formulations, targeting >500 kGy total dose tolerance for space-based AI applications.

Learn More

TOPSPOT Ballistic Armour

Polymer-ceramic interface engineering principles from radiation shielding composites applied to ballistic protection. The FGM (Functionally Graded Material) architecture benefits from matrix formulation expertise developed through ISS material system optimization.

Learn More

Peer-Reviewed Publications

Primary Publication

Bel, T., Mehranpour, S., Sengul, A.V., Camtakan, Z., Baydogan, N. "Electron beam penetration of poly (methyl methacrylate)/colemanite composite irradiated at low earth orbit space radiation environment." Wiley Journal — ISS/JAXA-Kibo ExHAM experiment results.

Related Publications

[1] Bel, T., Arslan, C., Baydogan, N. "Radiation Shielding Properties of Poly (Methyl Methacrylate) / Colemanite Composite for the use in Mixed Irradiation Fields of Neutrons and Gamma Rays." Materials Chemistry and Physics (SCI), DOI: 10.1016/j.matchemphys.2018.09.014, September 2018.

[2] Bel, T., Cakar, H., Yahya, N., Arslan, C., Baydogan, N. "Investigation of the Bubble Effect in Lightweight PMMA Polymer." Defect and Diffusion Forum, Vol. 380, pp. 227-231, 2017.

[3] Bel, T., Baydogan, N., Cimenoglu, H. "Chapter 18: Effect of Curing Time on Poly(methacrylate) Living Polymer." Energy Systems and Management, Springer, 2015, pp. 193-198.

Access Technical Documentation

For detailed experiment methodology, radiation characterisation data, and post-flight analysis reports, contact our technical team.

Request Technical Documentation Return to Validation Heritage