• Cuttlebone's microstructure sits at a 's

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Fri Sep 11 21:30:40 2020
    Cuttlebone's microstructure sits at a 'sweet spot'

    Date:
    September 11, 2020
    Source:
    Virginia Tech
    Summary:
    A professor has a lesson in one of his mechanical engineering
    courses on how brittle materials like calcium carbonate behave
    under stress. In it, he takes a piece of chalk composed of the
    compound and snaps it in half to show his students the edge of
    one of the broken pieces. The break is blunt and straight.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    Ling Li has a lesson in one of his mechanical engineering courses on
    how brittle materials like calcium carbonate behave under stress. In it,
    he takes a piece of chalk composed of the compound and snaps it in half
    to show his students the edge of one of the broken pieces. The break is
    blunt and straight.


    ========================================================================== Then, he twists a second piece, which results in sharper shards broken at
    a 45- degree angle, indicating the more dangerous direction of tensile
    stress on the chalk. The broken chalk helps Li demonstrate what brittle
    calcium carbonate will do under normal forces: it tends to fracture.

    "If you bend it, it will break," Li said.

    In Li's Laboratory for Biological and Bio-Inspired Materials, many of
    the ocean animals he studies for their biological structural materials
    have parts made of calcium carbonate. Some mollusks use it in photonic
    crystals that create a vivid color display, "like a butterfly's wings,"
    Li said. Others have mineral eyes built with it, into their shells. The
    more Li studies these animals, the more he's amazed by the uses their
    bodies find for intrinsically brittle and fragile material. Especially
    when the use defies that fragility.

    In a study published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    of the United States of America, Li's research team focused on the
    cuttlefish, another one of those inventive, chalk-built animals and
    a traveler of the ocean's depths. The researchers investigated the
    internal microstructure of cuttlebone, the mollusk's highly porous
    internal shell, and found that the microstructure's unique, chambered "wall-septa" design optimizes cuttlebone to be extremely lightweight,
    stiff, and damage-tolerant. Their study goes into the underlying material design strategies that give cuttlebone these high-performance mechanical properties, despite the shell's composition mostly of brittle aragonite,
    a crystal form of calcium carbonate.

    In the ocean, the cuttlefish uses cuttlebone as a hard buoyancy tank to
    control its movement up and down the water column, to depths as low as
    600 meters. The animal adjusts the ratio of gas to water in that tank
    to float up or sink down.

    To serve this purpose, the shell has to be lightweight and porous for
    active fluid exchange, yet stiff enough to protect the cuttlefish's body
    from strong water pressure as it dives deeper. When cuttlebone does get
    crushed by pressure or by a predator's bite, it has to be able to absorb
    a lot of energy. That way, the damage stays in a localized area of the
    shell, rather than shattering the entire cuttlebone.



    ==========================================================================
    The need to balance all of these functions is what makes cuttlebone
    so unique, Li's team discovered, as they examined the shell's internal microstructure.

    Ph.D. student and study co-author Ting Yang used synchrotron-based
    micro- computed tomography to characterize cuttlebone microstructure
    in 3D, penetrating the shell with a powerful X-ray beam from Argonne
    National Laboratory to produce high-resolution images. She and the
    team observed what happened to the shell's microstructure when it was compressed by applying the in-situ tomography method during mechanical
    tests. Combining these steps with digital image correlation, which
    allows for frame-by-frame image comparison, they studied cuttlebone's
    full deformation and fracture processes under loading.

    Their experiments revealed more about cuttlebone's chambered "wall-septa" microstructure and its design for optimized weight, stiffness, and
    damage tolerance.

    The design separates cuttlebone into individual chambers with floors and ceilings, or "septa," supported by vertical "walls." Other animals, like
    birds, have a similar structure, known as a "sandwich" structure. With
    a layer of dense bone atop another and vertical struts in between
    for support, the structure is made lightweight and stiff. Unlike the
    sandwich structure, however, cuttlebone's microstructure has multiple
    layers -- those chambers - - and they're supported by wavy walls instead
    of straight struts. The waviness increases along each wall from floor to ceiling in a "waviness gradient." "The exact morphology we haven't seen,
    at least in other models," said Li of the design. This wall-septa design
    gives cuttlebone control of where and how damage occurs in the shell. It
    allows for graceful, rather than catastrophic, failure: when compressed, chambers fail one by one, progressively rather than instantaneously.



    ==========================================================================
    The researchers found that cuttlebone's wavy walls induce or control
    fractures to form at the middle of walls, rather than at floors or
    ceilings, which would cause the entire structure to collapse. As one
    chamber undergoes wall fracture and subsequent densification -- in
    which the fractured walls gradually compact in the damaged chamber --
    the adjacent chamber remains intact until fractured pieces penetrate
    its floors and ceilings. During this process, a significant amount of mechanical energy can be absorbed, Li explained, limiting external impact.

    Li's team further explored the high-performance potential of cuttlebone's microstructure with computational modeling. Using measurements of
    the microstructure made with the earlier 3D tomography, postdoctoral
    researcher Zian Jia built a parametric model, ran virtual tests that
    altered the waviness of the structure's walls, and observed how the
    shell performed as a result.

    "We know that cuttlebone has these wavy walls with a gradient," Li
    said. "Zian changed the gradient so we could learn how cuttlebone behaved
    if we went beyond this morphology. Is it better, or not? We show that cuttlebone sits in an optimal spot. If the waviness becomes too big,
    the structure is less stiff. If the waves become smaller, the structure
    becomes more brittle. Cuttlebone seems to have found a sweet spot, to
    balance the stiffness and energy absorption." Li sees applications for cuttlebone's microstructural design in ceramic foams.

    Among foams used for crush resistance or energy absorption in packaging, transportation, and infrastructure, polymer and metal materials are the
    more popular choices. Ceramic foams are rarely used because they're
    brittle, Li said. But ceramics have their own unique advantages --
    they're more chemically stable and have a high melting temperature.

    If cuttlebone's properties could be applied to ceramic foams, their
    ability to withstand high heat paired with newfound damage tolerance
    could make ceramic foams ideal for use as thermal protection units in
    space shuttles or as general thermal protection, Li believes. His team
    has been evaluating that application in a separate study.

    Though the team has already begun to look up from the sea to the sky at
    the possibilities that cuttlebone inspires, their study of the shell's fundamental design strategies is just as important to Li.

    "Nature makes a lot of structural materials," Li said. "These materials
    are made at room temperature and regular atmospheric pressure, unlike
    metals, which can be detrimental to the environment to produce -- you
    need to use high temperatures and refraction processes for metals.

    "We're intrigued by such differences between biological structural
    materials and engineered structural materials. Can we bridge these two
    and provide insights in making new structural materials?"

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Virginia_Tech. Note: Content may be
    edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Ting Yang, Zian Jia, Hongshun Chen, Zhifei Deng, Wenkun Liu,
    Liuni Chen,
    Ling Li. Mechanical design of the highly porous cuttlebone:
    A bioceramic hard buoyancy tank for cuttlefish. Proceedings
    of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020; 202009531 DOI:
    10.1073/pnas.2009531117 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/09/200911141711.htm

    --- up 2 weeks, 4 days, 6 hours, 50 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (1337:3/111)