articleProceedings of the National Academy of SciencesNov 10, 2006BRONZE OA

Cooperative deformation of mineral and collagen in bone at the nanoscale

Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces · European Synchrotron Radiation Facility

PubMed
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Abstract

In biomineralized tissues such as bone, the recurring structural motif at the supramolecular level is an anisotropic stiff inorganic component reinforcing the soft organic matrix. The high toughness and defect tolerance of natural biomineralized composites is believed to arise from these nanometer scale structural motifs. Specifically, load transfer in bone has been proposed to occur by a transfer of tensile strains between the stiff inorganic (mineral apatite) particles via shearing in the intervening soft organic (collagen) layers. This raises the question as to how and to what extent do the mineral particles and fibrils deform concurrently in response to tissue deformation. Here we show that both mineral…

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