Structure-Property Relationships in Sea Urchin Spines and Implications for Technical Materials

Autor: Lauer, Christoph
Přispěvatelé: Nickel, Klaus G. (Prof. Dr.)
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Popis: Sea urchin spines have been studied for numerous reasons including their crystallographic and chemical composition, their aesthetic appearance and their enigmatic growth at ambient conditions. Depending on the species, sea urchins use their spines for protection against predators, for burial in the substrate, for locomotion and for withstanding wave energy by wedging into reef cervices. Hence, sea urchin spines are in most cases optimized for bearing load. This study deals with the mechanical properties of the unique spines of Heterocentrotus mamillatus, a large Indo-Pacific Echinoid. They consist as all skeletal elements of Echinoids of Mg-calcite arranged in a porous meshwork (stereom) with very little organic material incorporated (107 struts/cm3. The µm sized struts can be bent elastically, demonstrating that they are practically free of surface flaws. The struts are separated by pores which restrict crack growth and keep damage localised. The porous meshwork is covered irregularly by dense layers, the “growth layers” marking earlier growth stages. They provide the spines with additional stiffness and strength. Spines with many growth layers have a significantly higher strength and stiffness. The strength of the spines seems not to decrease significantly with increasing size, contradicting scaling theories. To test this unexpected finding, compression tests on samples with and without growth layers were conducted. A novel micro-compression test, the pin indentation was also applied. Despite the uncertainties induced by natural heterogeneities, it seems that spines of H. mamillatus counteract the size effect by adding more and denser growth layers to larger (older) spines. By this they work against the decrease in strength with increasing size. This hypothesis was confirmed by segments lacking growth layers that show a size effect.
Databáze: OpenAIRE