Composite material in the sea urchin Cidaris rugosa : ordered and disordered micrometre-scale bicontinuous geometries

Author:

Jessop Anna-Lee1ORCID,Millsteed Allan J.1ORCID,Kirkensgaard Jacob J. K.23ORCID,Shaw Jeremy4ORCID,Clode Peta L.45ORCID,Schröder-Turk Gerd E.16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Mathematics, Statistics, Chemistry and Physics, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Australia

2. Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Kobenhavn, Denmark

3. Department of Food Science, University of Copenhagen, Kobenhavn, Denmark

4. Centre for Microscopy, Characterisation, and Analysis, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia

5. School of Biological Sciences, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia

6. Research School of Physics, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia

Abstract

The sponge-like biomineralized calcite materials found in echinoderm skeletons are of interest in terms of both structure formation and biological function. Despite their crystalline atomic structure, they exhibit curved interfaces that have been related to known triply periodic minimal surfaces. Here, we investigate the endoskeleton of the sea urchin Cidaris rugosa that has long been known to form a microstructure related to the Primitive surface. Using X-ray tomography, we find that the endoskeleton is organized as a composite material consisting of domains of bicontinuous microstructures with different structural properties. We describe, for the first time, the co-occurrence of ordered single Primitive and single Diamond structures and of a disordered structure within a single skeletal plate. We show that these structures can be distinguished by structural properties including solid volume fraction, trabeculae width and, to a lesser extent, interface area and mean curvature. In doing so, we present a robust method that extracts interface areas and curvature integrals from voxelized datasets using the Steiner polynomial for parallel body volumes. We discuss these very large-scale bicontinuous structures in the context of their function, formation and evolution.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

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