Abstract
Structuring overmany length scales is a design strategy widely used in Nature to create materials with unique functional properties. We here present a comprehensive analysis of an adult sea urchin spine, and in revealing a complex, hierarchical structure, showhow Nature fabricates a material which diffracts as a single crystal of calcite and yet fractures as a glassy material. Each spine comprises a highly oriented array of Mg-calcite nanocrystals in which amorphous regions and macromolecules are embedded. It is postulated that this mesocrystalline structure forms via the crystallization of a dense array of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) precursor particles. A residual surface layer of ACC and/or macromolecules remains around the nanoparticle units which creates the mesocrystal structure and contributes to the conchoidal fracture behavior. Nature's demonstration of how crystallization of an amorphous precursor phase can create a crystalline material with remarkable properties therefore provides inspiration for a novel approach to the design and synthesis of synthetic composite materials.
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Seto, J., Ma, Y., Davis, S. A., Meldrum, F., Gourrier, A., Kim, Y. Y., … Cölfen, H. (2012). Structure-property relationships of a biological mesocrystal in the adult sea urchin spine. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(10), 3699–3704. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1109243109
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