4.8 Review

Biomineralized Materials as Model Systems for Structural Composites: 3D Architecture

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202106259

Keywords

3D imaging techniques; additive manufacturing; bioinspiration; biomineralized materials; structural composites; structure-property relationship

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR-1942865, CMMI-1825646]
  2. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [FA9550-19-1-0033, FA9550-20-1-0161]
  3. US-Israel Binational Science Foundation [BSF-2016341]
  4. Institute for Critical Technology and Applied Science (ICTAS) at Virginia Tech

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Biomineralized materials are complex material systems with hierarchical 3D architectures. The current understanding of their structure is limited by 2D imaging, thus hindering comprehensive understanding of their microstructure and mechanics. This review discusses the importance of applying 3D techniques to study biomineralized materials and provides examples of their applications and future directions.
Biomineralized materials are sophisticated material systems with hierarchical 3D material architectures, which are broadly used as model systems for fundamental mechanical, materials science, and biomimetic studies. The current knowledge of the structure of biological materials is mainly based on 2D imaging, which often impedes comprehensive and accurate understanding of the materials' intricate 3D microstructure and consequently their mechanics, functions, and bioinspired designs. The development of 3D techniques such as tomography, additive manufacturing, and 4D testing has opened pathways to study biological materials fully in 3D. This review discusses how applying 3D techniques can provide new insights into biomineralized materials that are either well known or possess complex microstructures that are challenging to understand in the 2D framework. The diverse structures of biomineralized materials are characterized based on four universal structural motifs. Nacre is selected as an example to demonstrate how the progression of knowledge from 2D to 3D can bring substantial improvements to understanding the growth mechanism, biomechanics, and bioinspired designs. State-of-the-art multiscale 3D tomographic techniques are discussed with a focus on their integration with 3D geometric quantification, 4D in situ experiments, and multiscale modeling. Outlook is given on the emerging approaches to investigate the synthesis-structure-function-biomimetics relationship.

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