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Ribs of Pinna nobilis shell induce unexpected microstructural changes that provide unique mechanical properties

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange
National Science Centre (Poland)
Nalepka, K.
Berent, K.
Checa, Antonio G.
Machniewicz, Tomasz
Harris, Adrian J.
Nalepka, Paweł
Strąg, Martyna
Maj, Łukasz
Szkudlarek, Aleksandra
Bieda, M.
Sztwiertnia, K.
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange
National Science Centre (Poland)
Nalepka, K.
Berent, K.
Checa, Antonio G.
Machniewicz, Tomasz
Harris, Adrian J.
Nalepka, Paweł
Strąg, Martyna
Maj, Łukasz
Szkudlarek, Aleksandra
Bieda, M.
Sztwiertnia, K.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The reinforcement function of shell ribs depends not only on their vaulted morphology but also on their microstructure. They are part of the outer layer which, in the case of the Pinna nobilis bivalve, is built from almost monocrystalline calcitic prisms, always oriented perpendicular to the growth surfaces. Originally, prisms and their c-axes follow the radii of rib curvature, becoming oblique to the shell thickness direction. Later, prisms bend to reach the nacre layer perpendicularly, but their c-axes retain the initial orientation. Calcite grains form nonrandom boundaries. Most often, three twin disorientations arise, with two of them observed for the first time. Nano-indentation and impact tests demonstrate that the oblique orientation of c-axes significantly improves the hardness and fracture toughness of prisms. Moreover, compression tests reveal that the rib area achieves a unique strength of 700 MPa. The detection of the specific microstructure formed to toughen the shell is novel.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1306018137
Document Type :
Electronic Resource