Université de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CNRS, Institut Lumière Matière, 69622 Villeurbanne, France.
School of Chemistry, Key Laboratory of Bio-inspired Smart Interfacial Science and Technology of Ministry of Education, Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Biomedical Engineering, Beihang University, Beijing 100191, P. R. China.
Acc Chem Res. 2022 Jun 7;55(11):1492-1502. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.2c00064. Epub 2022 May 19.
Using a limited selection of ordinary components and at ambient temperature, nature has managed to produce a wide range of incredibly diverse materials with astonishingly elegant and complex architectures. Probably the most famous example is nacre, or mother-of-pearl, the inner lining of the shells of abalone and certain other mollusks. Nacre is 95% aragonite, a hard but brittle calcium carbonate mineral, that exhibits fracture toughness exceedingly greater than that of pure aragonite, when tested in the direction perpendicular to the platelets. No human-made composite outperforms its constituent materials by such a wide margin. Nature's unique ability to combine the desirable properties of components into a material that performs significantly better than the sum of its parts has sparked strong interest in bioinspired materials design.Inspired by this complex hierarchical architecture, many processing routes have been proposed to replicate one or several of these features. New processing techniques point to a number of laboratory successes that hold promise in mimicking nacre. We pioneered one of them, ice templating, in 2006. When a suspension of particles is frozen, particles are rejected by the growing ice crystals and concentrate in the space between the crystals. After the ice is freeze-dried, the resulting scaffold is a porous body that can eventually be pressed to increase the density and then be infiltrated with a second phase, providing multilayered, lamellar complex composites with a microstructure reminiscent of nacre. The composites exhibit a marked crack deflection during crack propagation, enhancing the damage resistance of the materials, offering an interesting trade-off of strength and toughness.Freezing as a path to build complex composites has turned out to be a rich line of research and development. Understanding and controlling the freezing routes and associated phenomena has become a multidisciplinary endeavor. A step forward in the complexity was achieved with the use of anisotropic particles. Ice-induced segregation and alignment of platelets can yield dense, inorganic composites (nacre-like alumina) with a complex architecture and microstructure, replicating several of the morphological features of nacre. Now, a different class of complex composites is quickly arising: engineered living materials, developed in the soft matter and biology communities. The material-agnostic nature of the freezing routes, the use of an aqueous system, the absence of organic solvents, and the low temperatures being used are all strong assets for the development of such complex composites. More complex building blocks, such as cells or bacteria, can be frozen. Understanding the fundamental mechanisms controlling the interactions between the ice crystals and the objects as well as the interactions between the soft objects themselves and their fate is essential in this context.In this Account, we highlight our efforts over the past decade to achieve the controlled synthesis of nacre-like composites and understand the associated processes and properties. We describe the unique hierarchical and chemical structure of nacre and the fabrication strategies for processing nacre-like composites. We also try to explain why natural materials work so well and see how we can implement these lessons in synthetic composites. Finally, we provide an outlook on the new trends and ongoing challenges in this field. We hope that this Account will inspire future developments in the field of ice templating and bioinspired materials.
利用有限的普通成分并在环境温度下,大自然成功地生产出了各种令人惊叹的、具有惊人优雅和复杂结构的材料。也许最著名的例子是珍珠母,也就是鲍鱼和某些其他软体动物贝壳的内层。珍珠母 95%为文石,这是一种坚硬但易碎的碳酸钙矿物,在垂直于薄片的方向进行测试时,其断裂韧性远远超过纯文石。没有任何人为复合材料能以如此大的优势超越其组成材料。大自然将组成材料的理想特性结合成一种性能明显优于其各部分总和的材料的独特能力,激发了人们对仿生材料设计的浓厚兴趣。受这种复杂的层次结构的启发,已经提出了许多处理方法来复制这些特征中的一种或几种。新的加工技术预示着在模仿珍珠母方面取得了一些实验室的成功。我们在 2006 年率先采用了其中一种方法,即冰模板法。当悬浮颗粒被冷冻时,颗粒会被不断生长的冰晶排斥,并在冰晶之间的空间中浓缩。冰晶被冻干后,得到的支架是一种多孔体,最终可以被压缩以增加密度,然后用第二相渗透,形成具有珍珠母般微观结构的多层、层状复合复合材料。复合材料在裂纹扩展过程中表现出明显的裂纹偏转,提高了材料的抗损伤能力,为强度和韧性提供了有趣的权衡。将冷冻作为构建复杂复合材料的途径已被证明是一条丰富的研究和开发路线。理解和控制冷冻路线和相关现象已成为一项多学科的努力。使用各向异性颗粒实现了复杂性的一个进步。冰诱导的薄片分离和排列可以产生具有复杂结构和微观结构的致密无机复合材料(类似珍珠母的氧化铝),复制了珍珠母的几种形态特征。现在,一种不同类型的复杂复合材料正在迅速出现:由软物质和生物学领域开发的工程活材料。冷冻路线的物质无关性、使用水基系统、没有有机溶剂以及所使用的低温都是开发这种复杂复合材料的有力资产。更复杂的构建块,如细胞或细菌,可以被冷冻。在这种情况下,理解控制冰晶与物体之间相互作用以及软物体本身之间相互作用及其命运的基本机制至关重要。在本报告中,我们重点介绍了我们在过去十年中为实现类似珍珠母的复合材料的可控合成以及理解相关过程和特性所做的努力。我们描述了珍珠母的独特的层次结构和化学结构以及类似珍珠母复合材料的加工策略。我们还试图解释为什么天然材料效果如此之好,并探讨如何将这些经验教训应用于合成复合材料。最后,我们对该领域的新趋势和正在面临的挑战提供了展望。我们希望本报告将激发冰模板和仿生材料领域的未来发展。