Effect of Terminal Modification on the Molecular Assembly and Mechanical Properties of Protein-Based Block Copolymers — Matthew M. Jacobsen (2017) | RDL Network
Effect of Terminal Modification on the Molecular Assembly and Mechanical Properties of Protein-Based Block Copolymers
Article 2017 en
Authors
MJ
Matthew M. Jacobsen
WH
Wenwen Huang
DL
David Li
Abstract
1 min read
Accurate prediction and validation of the assembly of bioinspired peptide sequences into fibers with defined mechanical characteristics would aid significantly in designing and creating materials with desired properties. This process may also be utilized to provide insight into how the molecular architecture of many natural protein fibers is assembled. In this work, computational modeling and experimentation are used in tandem to determine how peptide terminal modification affects a fiber-forming core domain. Modeling shows that increased terminal molecular weight and hydrophilicity improve peptide chain alignment under shearing conditions and promote consolidation of semicrystalline domains. Mechanical analysis shows acute improvements to strength and elasticity, but significantly reduced extensibility and overall toughness. These results highlight an important entropic function that terminal domains of fiber-forming peptides exhibit as chain alignment promoters, which ultimately has notable consequences on the mechanical behavior of the final fiber products.
Matthew M. Jacobsen, Olena Tokareva, Davoud Ebrahimi, Wenwen Huang, Shengjie Ling, Nina Dinjaski, David Li, Marc Simon, Cristian Staii, Markus J. Buehler, David Kaplan, Joyce Wong
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