Abstract
The increasing utilization of radiation in medicine, industry, and water purification highlights the need for efficient radiation-protection materials. This study investigates lead-free polymer composites based on high-density polyethylene (HDPE) filled with four metallic fillers: tungsten carbide (WC), molybdenum carbide (MoC), tungsten (W), and molybdenum (Mo) at 15 wt%. The objective is to evaluate their potential as alternatives to lead for shielding ionizing radiation. Mechanical performance was examined through tensile testing, while thermal stability was assessed based on the residual mass. Radiation-attenuation behavior was analyzed through linear and mass attenuation coefficients (µ and µₘ), radiation protection efficiency (RPE), half-value layer (HVL), mean free path (MFP), buildup factors (B), and effective atomic number (Z(eff)) within the 47.9-248 keV energy range. The HDPE/W composite exhibited the greatest enhancement, with a mass attenuation coefficient (µₘ) 82.5% higher than that of pure HDPE, along with the highest linear attenuation coefficient (µ). Furthermore, tungsten-loaded samples achieved an RPE of 98.05% at 47.9 keV. The increased density, low B, and high Z(eff) values collectively contribute to superior shielding performance. These findings indicate that HDPE filled with WC, MoC, W, and Mo are promising lead-free candidates for low-energy X-ray shielding applications.