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1.
Sci Adv ; 6(19): eaba5581, 2020 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32494728

RESUMEN

It is of significance, but still remains a key challenge, to simultaneously enhance the strength and damping capacities in metals, as these two properties are often mutually exclusive. Here, we provide a multidesign strategy for defeating such a conflict by developing a Mg-NiTi composite with a bicontinuous interpenetrating-phase architecture through infiltration of magnesium melt into three-dimensionally printed Nitinol scaffold. The composite exhibits a unique combination of mechanical properties with improved strengths at ambient to elevated temperatures, remarkable damage tolerance, good damping capacities at differing amplitudes, and exceptional energy absorption efficiency, which is unprecedented for magnesium materials. The shape and strength after deformation can even be largely recovered by heat treatment. This study offers a new perspective for the structural and biomedical applications of magnesium.

2.
Adv Mater ; 31(52): e1904603, 2019 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31713926

RESUMEN

Making replacements for the human body similar to natural tissue offers significant advantages but remains a key challenge. This is pertinent for synthetic dental materials, which rarely reproduce the actual properties of human teeth and generally demonstrate relatively poor damage tolerance. Here new bioinspired ceramic-polymer composites with nacre-mimetic lamellar and brick-and-mortar architectures are reported, which resemble, respectively, human dentin and enamel in hardness, stiffness, and strength and exhibit exceptional fracture toughness. These composites are additionally distinguished by outstanding machinability, energy-dissipating capability under cyclic loading, and diminished abrasion to antagonist teeth. The underlying design principles and toughening mechanisms of these materials are elucidated in terms of their distinct architectures. It is demonstrated that these composites are promising candidates for dental applications, such as new-generation tooth replacements. Finally, it is believed that this notion of bioinspired design of new materials with unprecedented biologically comparable properties can be extended to a wide range of material systems for improved mechanical performance.


Asunto(s)
Materiales Biomiméticos/química , Nácar/química , Cerámica/química , Módulo de Elasticidad , Dureza , Humanos , Ensayo de Materiales , Polímeros/química , Circonio/química
3.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 91: 278-286, 2019 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30611924

RESUMEN

Operating mainly as a type of weapon, the beetle horn develops an impressive mechanical efficiency based on chitinous materials to maximize the injury to opponent and simultaneously minimize the damage to itself and underlying brain under stringent loading conditions. Here the cephalic horn of the beetle Allomyrina dichotoma is probed using multiscale characterization combined with finite element simulations to explore the origins of its biomechanical functionality from the perspective of materials science. The horn is revealed to be highly regulated from the macroscopic shape, geometry, and connection with the body to the meso- and microscopic architecture, moisture content, and chemical and structural characteristics. Varying kinds of gradients are integrated at all length-scales. Such designs are demonstrated to benefit the mechanical performance by mitigating stress concentrations, retarding crack propagation, and modulating local properties to better adapt to stress. Enhanced rigidity, robustness and stability are additionally generated from the constrained flexibility endowed by the nanocomposite plywood structure through the reorientation of chitin nanofibrils within the proteinaceous matrix. These findings shed light on the intriguing materials-design strategies of nature in creating synergy of offence and persistence. They may even offer inspiration for the synthesis of high-performance materials and structures, in particular beams to resist bending and torsion.


Asunto(s)
Materiales Biomiméticos/química , Quitina/química , Escarabajos , Cuernos , Nanocompuestos/química , Animales , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Análisis de Elementos Finitos , Estrés Mecánico
4.
Acta Biomater ; 86: 96-108, 2019 03 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30639350

RESUMEN

Seeking strategies to enhance the overall combinations of mechanical properties is of great significance for engineering materials, but still remains a key challenge because many of these properties are often mutually exclusive. Here we reveal from the perspective of materials science and mechanics that adaptive structural reorientation during deformation, which is an operating mechanism in a wide variety of composite biological materials, functions more than being a form of passive response to allow for flexibility, but offers an effective means to simultaneously enhance rigidity, robustness, mechanical stability and damage tolerance. As such, the conflicts between different mechanical properties can be "defeated" in these composites merely by adjusting their structural orientation. The constitutive relationships are established based on the theoretical analysis to clarify the effects of structural orientation and reorientation on mechanical properties, with some of the findings validated and visualized by computational simulations. Our study is intended to give insight into the ingenious designs in natural materials that underlie their exceptional mechanical efficiency, which may provide inspiration for the development of new man-made materials with enhanced mechanical performance. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: It is challenging to attain certain combinations of mechanical properties in man-made materials because many of these properties - for example, strength with toughness and stability with flexibility - are often mutually exclusive. Here we describe an effective solution utilized by natural materials, including wood, bone, fish scales and insect cuticle, to "defeat" such conflicts and elucidate the underlying mechanisms from the perspective of materials science and mechanics. We show that, by adaptation of their structural orientation on loading, composite biological materials are capable of developing enhanced rigidity, strength, mechanical stability and damage tolerance from constrained flexibility during deformation - combinations of attributes that are generally unobtainable in man-made systems. The design principles extracted from these biological materials present an unusual yet potent new approach to guide the development of new synthetic composites with enhanced combinations of mechanical properties.


Asunto(s)
Productos Biológicos/química , Ensayo de Materiales , Fenómenos Mecánicos , Docilidad , Animales , Fuerza Compresiva , Simulación por Computador , Peces , Insectos , Modelos Teóricos , Estrés Mecánico
5.
Acta Biomater ; 81: 267-277, 2018 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30273740

RESUMEN

The tooth enamel of vertebrates comprises a hyper-mineralized bioceramic, but is distinguished by an exceptional durability to resist impact and wear throughout the lifetime of organisms; however, enamels exhibit a low resistance to the initiation of large-scale cracks comparable to that of geological minerals based on fracture mechanics. Here we reveal that the tooth enamel, specifically from the giant panda, is capable of developing durability through counteracting the early stage of damage by partially recovering its innate geometry and structure at nano- to micro- length-scales autonomously. Such an attribute results essentially from the unique architecture of tooth enamel, specifically the vertical alignment of nano-scale mineral fibers and micro-scale prisms within a water-responsive organic-rich matrix, and can lead to a decrease in the dimension of indent damage in enamel introduced by indentation. Hydration plays an effective role in promoting the recovery process and improving the indentation fracture toughness of enamel (by ∼73%), at a minor cost of micro-hardness (by ∼5%), as compared to the dehydrated state. The nano-scale mechanisms that are responsible for the recovery deformation, specifically the reorientation and rearrangement of mineral fragments and the inter- and intra-prismatic sliding between constituents that are closely related to the viscoelasticity of organic matrix, are examined and analyzed with respect to the structure of tooth enamel. Our study sheds new light on the strategies underlying Nature's design of durable ceramics which could be translated into man-made systems in developing high-performance ceramic materials. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Tooth enamel plays a critical role in the function of teeth by providing a hard surface layer to resist wear/impact throughout the lifetime of organisms; however, such enamel exhibits a remarkably low resistance to the initiation of large-scale cracks, of hundreds of micrometers or more, comparable to that of geological minerals. Here we reveal that tooth enamel, specifically that of the giant panda, is capable of partially recovering its geometry and structure to counteract the early stages of damage at nano- to micro-scale dimensions autonomously. Such an attribute results essentially from the architecture of enamel but is markedly enhanced by hydration. Our work discerns a series of mechanisms that lead to the deformation and recovery of enamel and identifies a unique source of durability in the enamel to accomplish this function. The ingenious design of tooth enamel may inspire the development of new durable ceramic materials in man-made systems.


Asunto(s)
Esmalte Dental/química , Estrés Mecánico , Ursidae , Animales , Dureza
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