Adaptations for Wear Resistance and Damage Resilience: Micromechanics of Spider Cuticular “Tools”

Maryam Tadayon, Osnat Younes-Metzler, Yaniv Shelef, Paul Zaslansky, Alon Rechels, Alex Berner, Emil Zolotoyabko, Friedrich G. Barth, Peter Fratzl, Benny Bar-On, Yael Politi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

In the absence of minerals as stiffening agents, insects and spiders often use metal-ion cross-linking of protein matrices in their fully organic load-bearing “tools.” In this comparative study, the hierarchical fiber architecture, elemental distribution, and the micromechanical properties of the manganese- and calcium-rich cuticle of the claws of the spider Cupiennius salei, and the Zn-rich cuticle of the cheliceral fangs of the same animal are analyzed. By correlating experimental results to finite element analysis, functional microstructural and compositional adaptations are inferred leading to remarkable damage resilience and abrasion tolerance, respectively. The results further reveal that the incorporation of both zinc and manganese/calcium correlates well with increased biomaterial's stiffness and hardness. However, the abrasion-resistance of the claw material cross-linked by incorporation of Mn/Ca-ions surpasses that of many other non-mineralized biological counterparts and is comparable to that of the fang with more than triple Zn content. These biomaterial-adaptation paradigms for enhanced wear-resistance may serve as novel design principles for advanced, high-performance, functional surfaces, and graded materials.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2000400
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
Volume30
Issue number32
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Aug 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • abrasion resistance
  • biopolymers
  • metal-ion cross-linking
  • microstructure
  • tribological behavior

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