Uncovering high-strain rate protection mechanism in nacre

Under high-strain-rate compression (strain rate ∼10 3  s −1 ), nacre (mother-of-pearl) exhibits surprisingly high fracture strength vis-à-vis under quasi-static loading (strain rate 10 −3  s −1 ). Nevertheless, the underlying mechanism responsible for such sharply different behaviors in these two lo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2011-11, Vol.1 (1), p.148-148, Article 148
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Zaiwang, Li, Haoze, Pan, Zhiliang, Wei, Qiuming, Chao, Yuh J., Li, Xiaodong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Under high-strain-rate compression (strain rate ∼10 3  s −1 ), nacre (mother-of-pearl) exhibits surprisingly high fracture strength vis-à-vis under quasi-static loading (strain rate 10 −3  s −1 ). Nevertheless, the underlying mechanism responsible for such sharply different behaviors in these two loading modes remains completely unknown. Here we report a new deformation mechanism, adopted by nacre, the best-ever natural armor material, to protect itself against predatory penetrating impacts. It involves the emission of partial dislocations and the onset of deformation twinning that operate in a well-concerted manner to contribute to the increased high-strain-rate fracture strength of nacre. Our findings unveil that Mother Nature delicately uses an ingenious strain-rate-dependent stiffening mechanism with a purpose to fight against foreign attacks. These findings should serve as critical design guidelines for developing engineered body armor materials.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/srep00148