Intrinsic hierarchical structural imperfections in a natural ceramic of bivalve shell with distinctly graded properties

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Abstract

Despite the extensive investigation on the structure of natural biological materials, insufficient attention has been paid to the structural imperfections by which the mechanical properties of synthetic materials are dominated. In this study, the structure of bivalve Saxidomus purpuratus shell has been systematically characterized quantitatively on multiple length scales from millimeter to sub-nanometer. It is revealed that hierarchical imperfections are intrinsically involved in the crossed-lamellar structure of the shell despite its periodically packed platelets. In particular, various favorable characters which are always pursued in synthetic materials, e.g. nanotwins and low-angle misorientations, have been incorporated herein. The possible contributions of these imperfections to mechanical properties are further discussed. It is suggested that the imperfections may serve as structural adaptations, rather than detrimental defects in the real sense, to help improve the mechanical properties of natural biological materials. This study may aid in understanding the optimizing strategies of structure and properties designed by nature, and accordingly, provide inspiration for the design of synthetic materials.

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Jiao, D., Liu, Z., Zhang, Z., & Zhang, Z. (2015). Intrinsic hierarchical structural imperfections in a natural ceramic of bivalve shell with distinctly graded properties. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep12418

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