Affiliation:
1. Laboratory for Atomistic and Molecular Mechanics (LAMM) Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge MA 02139 USA
2. Department of Chemistry Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge MA 02139 USA
3. Department of Physics University of Wisconsin Madison WI 53706 USA
4. Mechanics of Biological and Bioinspired Materials Laboratory Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering University of Liège Liège B‐4000 Belgium
5. Department of Chemistry University of Wisconsin Madison WI 53706 USA
6. Advanced Light Source Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley CA 94720 USA
7. Laboratory of Functional and Evolutionary Morphology (FOCUS Research Unit) and Center for Applied Research and Education in Microscopy (CAREM) University of Liège Liège B‐4000 Belgium
8. Departments of Materials Science and Engineering Geoscience University of Wisconsin Madison WI 53706 USA
9. Chemical Sciences Division Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley CA 94720 USA
Abstract
AbstractBiominerals are organic–mineral composites formed by living organisms. They are the hardest and toughest tissues in those organisms, are often polycrystalline, and their mesostructure (which includes nano‐ and microscale crystallite size, shape, arrangement, and orientation) can vary dramatically. Marine biominerals may be aragonite, vaterite, or calcite, all calcium carbonate (CaCO3) polymorphs, differing in crystal structure. Unexpectedly, diverse CaCO3 biominerals such as coral skeletons and nacre share a similar characteristic: Adjacent crystals are slightly misoriented. This observation is documented quantitatively at the micro‐ and nanoscales, using polarization‐dependent imaging contrast mapping (PIC mapping), and the slight misorientations are consistently between 1° and 40°. Nanoindentation shows that both polycrystalline biominerals and abiotic synthetic spherulites are tougher than single‐crystalline geologic aragonite. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of bicrystals at the molecular scale reveal that aragonite, vaterite, and calcite exhibit toughness maxima when the bicrystals are misoriented by 10°, 20°, and 30°, respectively, demonstrating that slight misorientation alone can increase fracture toughness. Slight‐misorientation‐toughening can be harnessed for synthesis of bioinspired materials that only require one material, are not limited to specific top‐down architecture, and are easily achieved by self‐assembly of organic molecules (e.g., aspirin, chocolate), polymers, metals, and ceramics well beyond biominerals.
Funder
Office of Naval Research
Army Research Office
National Science Foundation
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science
Cited by
15 articles.
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