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Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

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Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids. Biological hybrids: key points. Hybrids made by plants or animals Strong composites from very weak components Wet protein and carbohydrates are very soft calcium carbonate is also weak and soft - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials

Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Page 2: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Biological hybrids: key points

• Hybrids made by plants or animals• Strong composites from very weak components

– Wet protein and carbohydrates are very soft– calcium carbonate is also weak and soft

• Multiple phases, hierarchical structures

Page 3: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Hybrid Organic-Inorganic materials are common in nature: composites

Nacre

Argonite (CaCO3) plates as inorganicwith protein (polyamide) as organic

Animals

Plants

phytolith

Teeth, spines in echindermsMussel shells, sponges, diatoms and corals are utilize hybrid organic-inorganic materials

Organic phase is biopolymers

Carbohydrates are the template and organic phase

Page 4: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

What is a hierarchical structure?

In materials, a structure with different structures at different length scales: like in tendons (above)

Page 5: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

The Building PlanFabrication Conditions in Living Organisms

only few elements: C, H, O, N, P, S, Ca, Si, Mg

mild pH

ambient pressure and temperature

Calcite Crystals Extracted from the Prismatic Layer of Pinna Nobilis Shells

www.cutgana.it/acquario/specie Marin et al., J. Biol. Chem., 2005, 40, 33895

Page 6: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

The Building Plan

Hierarchical Design – Morhpology Control on Several Levels

Interaction of an Organic and an Inorganic Component

Fabrication Conditions in Living Organisms

only few elements: C, H, O, N, P, S, Ca, Si, Mg

mild pH

ambient pressure and temperature

Incorporation of biopolymers increased fracture resistence

&

aspartate residue in peptide bond

chitin network

Nudelman et al., Faraday Discuss. 2007, 136, 9

Page 7: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Colloidal silica in diatoms: Hierarchical structure

Silica walls are build up from ca. 5nm particles to give ca. 40nm diameter particles that are organized within the frustule.

pH ≈ 5

Page 8: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Silica (SiO2) & protein

radiolaria diatoms

Proteins act as templates for building silica architectures

Page 9: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Bio-Hybrids based on CaCO3: NacreArgonite (CaCO3) plates as inorganic phasewith protein (polyamide) as organic phase

Mother-of-pearl

Opalescence from light diffraction in nacre (argonite blocks height ≈ λ light)

Fracture strength is 3000 times higher than its mineral constituent CaCO3.

Page 10: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

The hierarchical structure of nacre

Barthelat F Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A 2007;365:2907-2919

argonitecrystalstructure

Phasemorphology

Long range order: stacked crystals

Growth rings (mesolayers)

Macromolecular

Inner surface of shell (mother or pearl)

The shell itself

Page 11: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Lobster exoskelton

CaCO3

& Carbohydrate & protein

Page 12: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Teeth: Enamel, dentin, & cementum

Apatite – hydrated CaPO4

Protein– collagen & others

Page 13: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

The layered, rod structure of hydroxyapatite (a calcium phopshate) in dental enamel. Very tough for a ceramic.

Page 14: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Hierarchical structure of alligator gar, a primitive fish, scales. Ganoine is mostly mineral, like enamel, with tougher bone beneath.

Page 15: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Enamel and collagen

Regular Fish Scales

Page 16: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Fish scale puncture resistance

fish scales are better than polycarbonate.note how they give, and then reload. This is just one scale.

Page 17: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

200 MPa yield strength 30 MPaM0.5 toughness

Apatite – hydrated CaPO4

Protein– collagen

Bones

Page 18: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

The Building Plan

Hierarchical Design – Morhpology Control on Several Levels

Interaction of an Organic and an Inorganic Component

structural optimization from the atomic to the macroscopic scale

Fabrication Conditions in Living Organisms

only few elements: C, H, O, N, P, S, Ca, Si, Mg

mild pH

ambient pressure and temperature

&

Bone

Fratzl et al., Progr. Mat. Science, 2007

Peterlik et al., Nat. Mat., 2006

Gupta et al., PNAS, 2006

Page 19: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Echinoderm spine

CaCO3

Protein templating

Page 20: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Phytoliths

Horsetail, banana leaves

2-3% silicon by weight

SiO2 silica

Page 21: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Silica in Sponges

Templated by proteins

hierarchical structures

Page 22: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Euplectella sp.

7 hierarchical levels

Stress-deflection responses of synthetic silica rod and sponge spicule in flexuretesting. (Courtesy of M. Sarikaya and G. Mayer.)

Page 23: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

conch shell Almost no protein 3 hierarchical levels of layers made from layers of calcite.

Page 24: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Chiton Teeth

the tips of the teeth are hard magnetite (Fe3O4) with a tough fibrous calcite interior

Page 25: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Metal in Spider Fangscarbohydrate fibers in a protein matrixwith zinc and magnesium ions

Politi, Y., Priewasser, M., Pippel, E., Zaslansky, P., Hartmann, J., Siegel, S., Li, C., Barth, F. G. and Fratzl, P. (2012), A Spider's Fang: How to Design an Injection Needle Using Chitin-Based Composite Material. Adv. Funct. Mater., 22: 2519–2528

Page 26: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Biomaterial: Toucan Beak

(a) Toucan beak; (b) external shell made of keratin scales. Cellular materials: (a) synthetic aluminium foam; (b) foamfound in the inside of toucan beak.(Courtesy of M. S. Schneider andK. S. Vecchio.)

Page 27: Physics and Chemistry of Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Materials Lecture 5: Naturally occurring hybrids

Bio Hybrid Organic-Inorganic MaterialsSophisticated, highly evolved hybrids

-nominally weak, but bio-accessible minerals (eg. CaCO3)-hydrophilic, water plasticized biopolymers (eg. protein) -Integrated at nano-length scales-Phase separation templating of hierarchical structures-All water based chemistry!! The ultimate green

chemistry

Optimized to give non-additive property (synergistic effects)

Models for many research programs in hybrid materials