Biomedical Engineering and Biomechanics Research Centre, School of Engineering, College of Science and Engineering, University of Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Nanoscale. 2024 Feb 8;16(6):3173-3184. doi: 10.1039/d3nr04660e.
Bone as a hierarchical composite structure plays a myriad of roles in vertebrate skeletons including providing the structural stability of the body. Despite this critical role, the mechanical behaviour at the sub-micron levels of bone's hierarchy remains poorly understood. At this scale, bone is composed of Mineralised Collagen Fibrils (MCF) embedded within an extra-fibrillar matrix that consists of hydroxyapatite minerals and non-collagenous proteins. Recent experimental studies hint at the significance of the extra-fibrillar matrix in providing the bone with the stiffness and ductility needed to serve its structural roles. However, due to limited resolution of experimental tools, it is not clear how the arrangement of minerals, and in particular their relative distribution between the intra- and extra-fibrillar space contribute to bone's remarkable mechanical properties. In this study, a Coarse Grained Molecular Dynamics (CGMD) framework was developed to study the mechanical properties of MCFs embedded within an extra-fibrillar mineral matrix and the precise roles extra- and intra-fibrillar mineralisation on the load-deformation response was investigated. It was found that the presence of extra-fibrillar mineral resulted in the development of substantial residual stress in the system, by limiting MCF shortening that took place during intra-fibrillar mineralisation, resulting in substantial compressive residual stresses in the extra-fibrillar mineral phase. The simulation results also revealed the crucial role of extra-fibrillar mineralisation in determining the elastic response of the Extrafibrillar mineralised MCF (EFM-MCF) system up to the yield point, while the fibrillar collagen affected the post-yield behaviour. When physiological levels of mineralisation were considered, the mechanical response of the EFM-MCF systems was characterised by high ductility and toughness, with micro-cracks being distributed across the extra-fibrillar matrix, and MCFs effectively bridging these cracks leading to an excellent combination of strength and toughness. Together, these results provide novel insight into the deformation mechanisms of an EFM-MCF system and highlight that this universal building block, which forms the basis for lamellar bone, can provide an excellent balance of stiffness, strength and toughness, achieving mechanical properties that are far beyond the capabilities of the individual constituents acting alone.
骨骼作为一种分层复合结构,在脊椎动物骨骼中发挥着多种作用,包括为身体提供结构稳定性。尽管骨骼具有如此重要的作用,但骨骼层次结构的亚微米水平的力学行为仍未得到充分理解。在这个尺度上,骨骼由矿化胶原纤维(MCF)嵌入在包含羟基磷灰石矿物质和非胶原蛋白的纤维外基质中组成。最近的实验研究表明,纤维外基质在为骨骼提供刚度和延展性方面具有重要意义,这些特性是骨骼发挥其结构作用所必需的。然而,由于实验工具的分辨率有限,尚不清楚矿物质的排列方式,特别是它们在纤维内和纤维外空间之间的相对分布如何有助于骨骼的显著机械性能。在这项研究中,开发了一种粗粒化分子动力学(CGMD)框架来研究嵌入纤维外矿物质基质中的 MCF 的力学性能,并研究了纤维外和纤维内矿化对载荷-变形响应的精确作用。研究发现,纤维外矿物质的存在通过限制纤维内矿化过程中 MCF 的缩短,导致系统中产生大量残余应力,从而在纤维外矿物质相中产生大量压缩残余应力。模拟结果还揭示了纤维外矿化在确定纤维外矿化 MCF(EFM-MCF)系统弹性响应方面的关键作用,直到屈服点,而纤维状胶原蛋白则影响屈服后的行为。当考虑生理水平的矿化时,EFM-MCF 系统的力学响应表现出高延展性和韧性,微裂纹分布在纤维外基质中,MCF 有效地桥接这些裂纹,从而实现了强度和韧性的优异结合。总之,这些结果为 EFM-MCF 系统的变形机制提供了新的见解,并强调了这种普遍的构建块,它构成了板层骨的基础,可以提供优异的刚度、强度和韧性平衡,实现的机械性能远远超过单独作用的单个成分的能力。