ASU Scientists were able to unravel the mysteries of spider silk
Jeffery Yarger |
Scientists
at ASU are celebrating their recent success on the path to understanding what
makes the fiber that spiders spin -- weight for weight -- at least five times
as strong as piano wire. They have found a way to obtain a wide variety of
elastic properties of the silk of several intact spiders' webs using a
sophisticated but non-invasive laser light scattering technique. "Spider
silk has a unique combination of mechanical strength and elasticity that make
it one of the toughest materials we know," said Professor Jeffery Yarger
of ASU's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and lead researcher of the
study. "This work represents the most complete understanding we have of
the underlying mechanical properties of spider silks."
Spider
silk is an exceptional biological polymer, related to collagen (the stuff of
skin and bones) but much more complex in its structure. The ASU team of
chemists is studying its molecular structure in an effort to produce materials
ranging from bulletproof vests to artificial tendons.
The
extensive array of elastic and mechanical properties of spider silks in situ,
obtained by the ASU team, is the first of its kind and will greatly facilitate
future modeling efforts aimed at understanding the interplay of the mechanical
properties and the molecular structure of silk used to produce spider webs.
The team published their results in a recent issue of Nature materials and
their paper is titled "Non-invasive determination of the complete elastic
moduli of spider silks."
"This
information should help provide a blueprint for structural engineering of an
abundant array of bio-inspired materials, such as precise materials engineering
of synthetic fibers to create stronger, stretchier, and more elastic
materials," explained Yarger.
Other
members of Yarger's team, in ASU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,
included Kristie Koski, at the time a postdoctoral researcher and currently a
postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, and ASU undergraduate students Paul
Akhenblit and Keri McKiernan.
The
Brillouin light scattering technique used an extremely low power laser, less
than 3.5 milliwatts, which is significantly less than the average laser
pointer. Recording what happened to this laser beam as it passed through the
intact spider webs enabled the researchers to spatially map the elastic
stiffnesses of each web without deforming or disrupting it. This non-invasive,
non-contact measurement produced findings showing variations among discrete
fibers, junctions and glue spots.
Four
different types of spider's webs were studied. They included Nephila clavipes
(pictured), A. aurantia ("gilded silver face"-common to the
contiguous United States), L. Hesperus the western black widow and P. viridans
the green lynx spider, the only spider included that does not build a web for
catching prey but has major silk elastic properties similar to those of the
other species studied.
The
group also investigated one of the most studied aspects of orb-weaving dragline
spider silk, namely supercontraction, a property unique to silk. Spider silk
takes up water when exposed to high humidity. Absorbed water leads to shrinkage
in an unrestrained fiber up to 50 percent shrinkage with 100 percent humidity
in N. clavipes silk.
Their
results are consistent with the hypothesis that supercontraction helps the
spider tailor the properties of the silk during spinning. This type of
behavior, specifically adjusting mechanical properties by simply adjusting
water content, is inspirational from a bio-inspired mechanical structure
perspective.
"This
study is unique in that we can extract all the elastic properties of spider
silk that cannot and have not been measured with conventional testing,"
concluded Yarger.
Source: Arizona State University
Posted by Unknown
on Tuesday, January 29, 2013.
Filed under
Chemistry and Physics
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