4.7 Article

Electric Field-Induced Polarization Responses of Noncentrosymmetric Crystalline Biopolymers in Different Frequency Regimes - A Case Study on Unidirectionally Aligned β-Chitin Crystals

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 22, Issue 5, Pages 1901-1909

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.0c01799

Keywords

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Funding

  1. iSuperSEED program of the Penn State Materials Research Science & Engineering Center - National Science Foundation, NSF [DMR-1420620]
  2. NSF program [DMR-1807768]

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This study investigates the polarization responses of noncentrosymmetric crystalline biopolymers, particularly unidirectionally aligned beta-chitin crystals interspersed in an amorphous protein matrix. The mechanisms and relationships of polarization responses in different frequency regimes are explained, along with quantitative discussions of the piezoelectricity of the LS tube. The findings of this study provide insights into the polarization responses of other noncentrosymmetric crystalline biopolymers.
A dielectric medium containing noncentrosymmetric domains can exhibit piezoelectric and second-harmonic generation (SHG) responses when an electric field is applied. Since many crystalline biopolymers have noncentrosymmetric structures, there has been a great deal of interest in exploiting their piezoelectric and SHG responses for electromechanical and electro-optic devices, especially owing to their advantages such as biocompatibility and low density. However, exact mechanisms or origins of such polarization responses of crystalline biopolymers remain elusive due to the convolution of responses from multiple domains with varying degrees of structural disorder or difficulty of ensuring the unidirectional alignment of noncentrosymmetric domains. In this study, we investigate the polarization responses of a noncentrosymmetric crystalline biopolymer, namely, unidirectionally aligned beta-chitin crystals interspersed in the amorphous protein matrix, which can be obtained naturally from tubeworm Lamellibrachia satsuma (LS) tube. The mechanisms governing polarization responses in different dynamic regimes covering optical (>10(13) Hz), acoustic/ultrasonic (10(3)-10(5) Hz), and low (10(-2)-10(2) Hz) frequencies are explained. Relationships between the polarization responses dominant in different frequencies are addressed. Also, electromechanical coupling responses, including piezoelectricity of the LS tube, are quantitatively discussed. The findings of this study can be applicable to other noncentrosymmetric crystalline biopolymers, elucidating their polarization responses.

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