3.8 Article

Biomorphic Ceramics: Synthesis and Characterization of Preceramic Polymer-Modified Melanin

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 7, Issue 7, Pages 3103-3113

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.1c00265

Keywords

synthetic biology; melanin; biotemplated ceramics; preceramic polymers

Funding

  1. Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering and its Applied Research for the Advancement of S&T Priorities Program in Synthetic Biology for Military Environments
  2. Air Force Research Laboratory Materials & Manufacturing Directorate
  3. AFRL/RX [FA8650-15-D-5230]
  4. Air Force Office of Scientific Research under the Aerospace Composites Portfolio, program officer Ming-Jen Pan
  5. NRC Research Associateship awards at the Air Force Research Laboratory

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Recent research has shown that the morphology of ceramics can be manipulated to control their deformation mechanism and mechanical performance. By using biotemplating and chemical synthesis, novel biomorphic silicon-based ceramic materials were successfully fabricated, showcasing the potential of bacterial-templated ceramics and opening up possibilities for further studies and applications.
Recent efforts have demonstrated that the morphology of ceramics can be manipulated to control both their deformation mechanism and mechanical performance. However, precise control of the ceramic nanostructure is still difficult to achieve. Biotemplating, leading to biomorphic materials, provides a facile route to manipulate the nanostructure of the resulting materials, and the use of melanin as a coating provides a new route to biotemplated materials. Melanin is underutilized for structural materials partly due to the cost of procuring it from natural sources and the inability to control the shape and sizes of melanin particles. Taking a combined synthetic biology and chemical synthesis approach, we report the melanization of Escherichia coli and its subsequent silanization and functionalization with preceramic polymers to make novel biomorphic silicon-based ceramic materials. Graft-to and graft-from reactions were used to append preceramic polymers to the melanin, followed by pyrolysis under argon. Samples were analyzed by FTIR, XRD, XPS, and TEM and found to retain the shape and size of the original cells with high fidelity. The homogeneity of coverage and yield of the resulting ceramic materials depended on the type of grafting reaction. This work provides a promising proof-of-concept that bacterial-templated ceramics can be readily made and opens a host of possibilities for further studies and applications.

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