In nature, silk fibroin proteins assemble into hierarchical structures with dramatic mechanical properties. With the hope of creating new classes of on demand silk-based biomaterials, Bombyx mori silk is reconstituted back into stable aqueous solutions that can be reassembled into functionalized materials; one strategy for reassembly is electrogelation. Electrogels (e-gels) are particularly versatile and can be produced using electrolysis with small DC electric fields. We characterize the linear and nonlinear rheological behavior of e-gels to provide fundamental insights into these distinct protein-based materials. We observe that e-gels form robust biopolymer networks that exhibit distinctive strain hardening and are recoverable from strains as large as γ=27, i.e. 2700%. We propose a simple microscopic model that is consistent with local restructuring of single proteins within the e-gel network.
Matthew B. Dickerson, Scott P. Fillery, Hilmar Koerner, Kristi M. Singh, Katie Martinick, Lawrence F. Drummy, Michael F. Durstock, Richard A. Vaia, Fiorenzo G. Omenetto, David Kaplan, Rajesh R. Naik
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.