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Deformable hard tissue with high fatigue resistance in the hinge of bivalve Cristaria plicata
Author(s) -
Xiang-Sen Meng,
Lichuan Zhou,
Lei Liu,
YinBo Zhu,
YuFeng Meng,
Dongchang Zheng,
Bo Yang,
Qiuhua Rao,
LiBo Mao,
HengAn Wu,
ShuHong Yu
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.ade2038
Subject(s) - hinge , brittleness , materials science , deformation (meteorology) , fracture (geology) , structural engineering , biomineralization , stress (linguistics) , bending , microstructure , composite material , geology , engineering , paleontology , linguistics , philosophy
The hinge of bivalve shells can sustain hundreds of thousands of repeating opening-and-closing valve motions throughout their lifetime. We studied the hierarchical design of the mineralized tissue in the hinge of the bivalve Cristaria plicata , which endows the tissue with deformability and fatigue resistance and consequently underlies the repeating motion capability. This folding fan-shaped tissue consists of radially aligned, brittle aragonite nanowires embedded in a resilient matrix and can translate external radial loads to circumferential deformation. The hard-soft complex microstructure can suppress stress concentration within the tissue. Coherent nanotwin boundaries along the longitudinal direction of the nanowires increase their resistance to bending fracture. The unusual biomineral, which exploits the inherent properties of each component through multiscale structural design, provides insights into the evolution of antifatigue structural materials.

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