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Protein-Based Fibers

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Keratin

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Keratin is a structural protein located at the hard surfaces in many vertebrates. Keratin has two forms, α-keratin and β-keratin and are used by different classes of animals. The naming convention for proteins follows that for keratin, alpha keratin is helical and beta keratin is sheet like. Alpha keratin is found in mammalian hair, skin, nails, horn and quills, while beta keratin can be found in avian and reptilian species in scales, feathers, and beaks. The two different structures of keratin have dissimilar mechanical properties, as seen in their dissimilar applications. The relative alignment of the keratin fibrils has a significant impact on the mechanical properties. In human hair the filaments of alpha keratin are highly aligned, giving a tensile strength of approximately 200MPa. This tensile strength is an order of magnitude higher than human nails (20MPa), because human hair’s keratin filaments are more aligned. [1]

Moisture Dependence

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The presence of water plays a crucial role in the mechanical behavior of natural fibers. Hydrated, biopolymers generally have enhanced ductility and toughness. Water plays the role of a plasticizer, a small molecule easing passage of polymer chains and in doing so increasing ductility and toughness. When using natural fibers in applications outside of their native use, the original level of hydration must be taken into account. [1] For example when hydrated, the Young’s Modulus of collagen decreases from 3.26 to 0.6 GPa and becomes both more ductile and tougher. Additionally the density of collagen decreases from 1.34 to 1.18 g/cm^3. [1]

Applications

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Nanocomposites

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Nanocomposites are desirable for their unique mechanical properties. When fillers in a composite are at the nanometer length scale, the surface to volume ratio of the filler material is exceptionally higher and influences the bulk properties of the composite more compared to traditional composites. The properties of these nanosized elements is markedly different than that of its bulk constituent.

In regards to natural fibers, come of the best example of nanocomposites appear in biology. Bone, abalone shell, nacre, and tooth enamel are all examples of biological nanocomposites. As of 2010, most synthetic polymer nanocomposites exhibit inferior toughness and mechanical properties compared to biological nanocomposites. [2] Completely synthetic nanocomposites do exist, however nanosized biopolymers are also being tested in synthetic matrices. Several types of protein based, nanosized fibers are being used in nanocomposites currently. These include collagen, cellulose, chitin and tunican. [3] These structural proteins must be processed before use in composites.

To use cellulose as an example, semicrystalline microfibrils are sheared in the amorphous region, resulting in microcrystalline cellulose (MCC). These small, crystalline cellulose fibrils are at this points reclassified as a whisker and can be 2 to 20nm in diameter with shapes ranging from spherical to cylindrical. Whiskers of collagen, chitin and cellulose have all be used to make biological nanocomposites. The matrix of these composites are commonly hydrophobic synthetic polymers such as polyethylene, and polyvinyl chloride and copolymers such as Poly-(styrene-co-butyl acrylate). [3][2]

Traditionally in composite science a strong interface between the matrix and filler is required to achieve favorable mechanical properties. If this is not the case, the phases tend to separate along the weak interface and makes for very poor mechanical properties. In a MCC composite however this is not the case, if the interaction between the filler and matrix is stronger than the filler-filler interaction the mechanical strength of the composite is noticeably decreased. [3]

Currently, difficulties in natural fiber nanocomposites arise from dispersity and the tendency small fibers have to aggregate in the matrix. Because of the high surface area to volume ratio the fibers have a tendency to aggregate, more so than in micro-scale composites. Additionally secondary processing of collagen sources to obtain sufficient purity collagen micro fibrils adds a degree of cost and challenge to creating a load bearing cellulose or other filler based nanocomposite.[3]

Biomaterial/Biocompatibility

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Natural fibers often show promise as biomaterials in medical applications. Chitin is notable in particular and has been incorporated into a variety of uses. Chitin based materials have also been used to remove industrial pollutants from water, processed into fibers and films, and used as biosensors in the food industry. [4] Chitin has also been used several of medical applications. It has been incorporated as a bone filling material for tissue regeneration, a drug carrier and excipient, and as an antitumor agent. [5] Insertion of foreign materials into the body often triggers an immune response, which can have a variety of positive or negative outcomes depending on the bodies response to the material. Implanting something made from naturally synthesized proteins, such as a keratin based implant, has the potential to be recognized as natural tissue by the body. This can lead either to integration in rare cases where the structure of the implant promotes regrowth of tissue with the implant forming a superstructure or degradation of the implant in which the backbones of the proteins are recognized for cleavage by the body. [4] [5]

  1. ^ a b c Meyers, M; Chen, P (2014). Biological Materials Science. Cambridge. pp. 54–60.
  2. ^ a b Ji, Baohua; Gao, Huajian (2010-07-02). "Mechanical Principles of Biological Nanocomposites". http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-matsci-070909-104424. doi:10.1146/annurev-matsci-070909-104424. Retrieved 2017-05-08. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  3. ^ a b c d Azizi Samir, My Ahmed Said; Alloin, Fannie; Dufresne, Alain (March 2005). "Review of Recent Research into Cellulosic Whiskers, Their Properties and Their Application in Nanocomposite Field". Biomacromolecules. 6 (2): 612–626. doi:10.1021/bm0493685.
  4. ^ a b Mohanty, A; Misra, M; Henrichsen, G (March 2000). "Biofibres, biodegradable polymers and biocomposites:An overview". Macromolecular Materials and Engineering. 276: 1–24.
  5. ^ a b Temenoff, J.; Mikos, A (2008). Biomaterials: The Intersection of Biology and Materials Science. Pearson/Prentice Hall.