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January
14, 2005
Uncovering Secrets Of Abalone Body Armor
By Rex Graham
Engineering
researchers at the University of California, San Diego are using
the shell of a seaweed-eating snail as a guide in the development
of a new generation of bullet-stopping armor. The colorful oval
shell of the red abalone is highly prized as a source of nacre,
or mother-of-pearl, jewelry, but the UCSD researchers are most
impressed by the shell’s ability to absorb heavy blows
without breaking.
In a paper published
in the Jan. 15 issue of Materials Science and Engineering
A, Marc A. Meyers, a professor in UCSD’s Jacobs School
of Engineering, and engineering graduate student Albert Lin
explain in detail for the first time the steps taken by the
abalone to produce a helmet-like home made with 95 percent calcium
carbonate “tiles” and 5 percent protein adhesive.
Teachers who write on blackboards know that calcium carbonate,
or chalk, is weak and brittle, but Meyers and Lin have demonstrated
that a highly ordered brick-like tiled structure created by
the mollusk is the toughest arrangement of tiles theoretically
possible.
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| The
mother of pearl growth surface of abalone shell is colored
due to the way light refracts as it strikes tiny ridges
of calcium carbonate. |
The abalone shell investigation
is one of a growing number of science-mimicking-nature, or biomimetic,
projects at UCSD. For example, Meyers also is analyzing the
strong, but extremely lightweight bill of the Toco Toucan, a
Central and South American bird that squashes fruit and berries
with its banana-shaped bill. “We are actually interested
in basic research on new materials,” said Meyers. “We
have turned to nature because millions of years of evolution
and natural selection have given rise in many animals to some
very sturdy materials with surprising mechanical properties.”
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| The
UCSD engineering researchers showed that the terraced, Christmas
tree-like surface of abalone shell has evenly spaced nucleation
sites from which stacks of hexagonal “tiles”
of calcium carbonate begin to grow. The top and bottom surfaces
of each layer of tiles are separated by a protein adhesive,
but the adhesive does not bind the edges of tiles to adjoining
tiles. |
Other biomimetic projects
at UCSD include development of a new artificial limb technology
that relies on bars and wires, new drug synthesis techniques
invented to duplicate those of microorganisms, and “epidemiology-based”
techniques designed to detect and defend against viruses, worms
and other plagues afflicting the Internet.
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| Under
stress, tiles of calcium carbonate can slide, absorbing
energy. Because of this microstructure, the abalone shell
can absorb a great deal of energy without failing. |
Abalone shell can’t
stop an AK47 bullet. However, laminates of aluminum and other
materials have been disappointing as armors. Meyers argues that
a careful examination of the steps taken by abalone to make
their shells may help materials scientists develop similarly
lightweight and effective body armor for soldiers, police, and
others.
“In our search
for a new generation of armors, we have exhausted the conventional
possibilities, so we’ve turned to biology-inspired, or
biomimetic, structures,” said Meyers, a former scientist
with the U.S. Army Research Office. “The laminate structure
of abalone shell has stimulated our group to development a new
synthetic material using this lowly mollusk as a guide.”
Biomimetic researchers
interested in tough materials have discovered that mollusk shells,
bird bills, deer antler, animal tendon, and other biocomposite
materials have recurring building plans that yield a hierarchy
of structures from the molecular level to the macro scale. For
example, at the nanoscale, abalone shell is made of thousands
of layers of calcium carbonate “tiles,” about 10
micrometers across and 0.5 micrometer thick, or about one-one
hundredth the thickness of a strand of human hair. The irregular
stacks of thin tiles refract light to yield the characteristic
luster of mother of pearl.
Meyers said a key to
the strength of the shell is a positively charged protein adhesive
that binds to the negatively charged top and bottom surfaces
of the calcium carbonate tiles. The glue is strong enough to
hold layers of tiles firmly together, but weak enough to permit
the layers to slip apart, absorbing the energy of a heavy blow
in the process. Abalones quickly fill in fissures within their
shells that form due to impacts, and they also deposit “growth
bands” of organic material during seasonal lulls in shell
growth. The growth bands further strengthen the shells.
The precise what that
building blocks of shells are assembled determines their strength,
and many of those details have been unknown. “Contrary
to what others have thought, the tiles abutting each other in
each layer are not glued on their sides, rather they are only
glued on the top and bottom, which is why adjacent tiles can
separate from one another and slide when a strong force is applied,”
said Meyers. “The adhesive properties of the protein glue,
together with the size and shape of the calcium carbonate tiles,
explain how the shell interior gives a little without breaking.
On the contrary, when a conventional laminate material breaks,
the whole structure is weakened.”
Meyers and Lin closely
measured shell growth by coaxing abalone grown in a laboratory
aquarium at UCSD’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
They gently pushed back a section of the mantle from the shell
of individual abalones, glued 15 millimeter glass slides to
the shell, and later withdrew the slides at various time intervals
and examined the growth of “flat pearl” with a transmission
electron microscope.
The flat pearl samples
revealed that about every 10 micrometers, the abalone mantle
initiated calcium carbonate precipitation. At those points,
tiles began to form, growing 0.5 micrometer thick and slowly
outward and assuming a hexagonal shape as individual tiles in
each layer gradually grew to abut a neighboring tile. Photographed
from above by a microscope, the growth surface of the shells
has a Christmas-tree appearance because abalones add layers
of tile faster than each layer is filled in.
Meyers and Lin plan
to complete their analysis of the abalone shell and generate
a mathematical description that can be used by others to construct
body armor based on the abalone.
Media Contact: Rex
Graham, (858) 822-3075
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