Journal
ACTA BIOMATERIALIA
Volume 25, Issue -, Pages 313-324Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2015.07.028
Keywords
Diatoms; Nanoindentation; Mechanical properties; Simulation; Bio-inspired materials
Funding
- NSF [EEC-0832819]
- GRC
- NSF CRIF [CHE 1048651]
- Office of Naval Research [N00014-12-C-0241]
- National Science Foundation [DMR-9803045]
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The wide variety of diatom frustule shapes and intricate architectures provide viable prototypes to guide the design and fabrication of nanodevices and nanostructured materials for applications ranging from sensors to nanotemplates. In this study, a combined experimental-simulation method was developed to probe the porous structure and mechanical behavior of two distinct marine diatom species, Coscinodiscus sp. (centric) and Synedra sp. (pennate), through ambient nanoindentation and finite element method analysis. These diatom frustule dimensions differed largely depending on diatom species with pore diameters d ranging from 0.3 to 3.0 mu m. Young's modulus E and hardness H measurements of the diatom frustules were obtained via nanoindentation experiments. These values varied depending on diatom species (E between 1.1-10.6 GPa, H between 0.10-1.03 GPa for the Coscinodiscus sp.; and E between 13.7-18.6 GPa, H between 0.85-1.41 GPa for the Synedra sp.). Additionally, the mechanical response of diatom structures to uniform compression was examined. Predictive simulations were performed on the aforementioned diatom frustules, as well as another diatom structure (pennate Fragilariopsis kerguelensis), to correlate the mechanical response with specific morphology variables (e.g., pore or slit sizes). Results from calculated von Mises stress and displacement distributions unveil unique information on the effect that uniform loads have on these frustules, which can aid the design of tailored nanotemplates. A correlation between mechanical properties and porosity was established for selected frustules, and reported for the first time in this study. (C) 2015 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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