How Water Can Affect Keratin: Hydration‐Driven Recovery of Bighorn Sheep ( <i>Ovis Canadensis</i> ) Horns
Advanced Functional Materials 29(27)
Article 2019 English
Authors
WH
Wei Huang
AZ
Alireza Zaheri
WY
Wen Yang
Abstract
1 min read
Keratin is one of the most common structural biopolymers exhibiting high strength, toughness, and low density. It is found in various tissues such as hairs, feathers, horns, and hooves with various functionalities. For instance, horn keratin absorbs a large amount of energy during intraspecific fights. Keratinized tissues are permanent tissues because of their basic composition consisting of dead keratinized cells that are not able to remodel or regrow once broken or damaged. The lack of a self‐healing mechanism presents a problem for horns, as they are under continued high risk from mechanical damage. In the present work, it is shown for the first time that a combination of material architecture and a water‐assisted recovery mechanism, in the horn of bighorn sheep, endows them with shape and mechanical property recoverability after being subjected to severe compressive loading. Moreover, the effect of hydration is unraveled, on the material molecular structure and mechanical behavior, by means of synchrotron wide angle X‐ray diffraction, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, nanoindentation, and in situ and ex situ tensile tests. The recovery and remodeling mechanism is anisotropic and quite distinct to the self‐healing of living tissue such as bones.
Natascha Kuhl, Stefan Bode, Ranjita K. Bose, Jürgen Vitz, Andreas Seifert, Stephanie Hoeppener, Santiago J. García, Stefan Spange, Sybrand van der Zwaag, Martin D. Hager, Ulrich Sigmar Schubert
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