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Investigation of Energy Deposition by Soft X-rays into Solar Cell Materials

Youssef Abouhussien, Gennady Miloshevsky

Nuclear Science and Engineering / Volume 199 / Number 6 / June 2025 / Pages 1000-1009

Research Article / dx.doi.org/10.1080/00295639.2024.2399456

Received:May 30, 2024
Accepted:August 18, 2024
Published:April 23, 2025

A high-altitude nuclear detonation releases a significant portion of energy as X-rays with a blackbody spectrum. Satellites are particularly vulnerable to prompt soft X-rays (~1 keV) absorbed within a few microns of the surface of the solar array, causing melting and evaporation of its materials. The absorption of soft X-rays in solar cell materials is studied using GEANT4 computer software. Energy deposition as a function of depth (depth-dose profile) is calculated for slab geometries of dielectric and metallic materials. The photo-absorption and Compton scattering of X-rays and the contribution of secondary radiation, such as photo-electrons, Auger-electrons, and fluorescence photons are taken into account. The effect of the production of secondary radiation on the distribution of deposited dose in the near-surface region of materials is investigated. The results presented in this work are validated against published data and provide valuable insights into X-ray absorption by solar cell materials, the redistribution of energy by secondary radiation, and the spatial scale of power density deposition that can be used as a source term for the further thermomechanical analysis of a material’s phase transformations and melting.