Poly-albumen: Bio-derived structural polymer from polymerized egg white
Source
Materials Today Chemistry
Date Issued
2018-09-01
Author(s)
Owuor, Peter Samora
Tsafack, Thierry
Agrawal, Himani
Hwang, Hye Yoon
Zelisko, Matthew
Li, Tong
Radhakrishnan, Sruthi
Park, Jun Hyoung
Yang, Yingchao
Stender, Anthony S.
Ozden, Sehmus
Joyner, Jarin
Vajtai, Robert
Kaipparettu, Benny A.
Wei, Bingqing
Lou, Jun
Sharma, Pradeep
Tiwary, Chandra Sekhar
Ajayan, Pulickel M.
Abstract
Bio-derived materials could play an important role in future sustainable green and health technologies. This work reports the synthesis of a unique egg white-based bio-derived material showing excellent stiffness and ductility by polymerizing it with primary amine-based chemical compounds to form strong covalent bonds. As shown by both experiments and theoretical simulations, the amine-based molecules introduce strong bonds between amine ends and carboxylic ends of albumen amino acids resulting in an elastic modulus of ∼4 GPa, a fracture strength of ∼2 MPa and a high ductility of 40%. The distributed and interconnected network of interfaces between the hard albumen and the soft amine compounds gives the structure its unique combination of high stiffness and plasticity. A range of in-situ local and bulk mechanical tests as well as molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, reveal a significant interfacial stretching during deformation and a micro-crack diversion leading to an increased in ductility and toughness. The structure also shows a self-stiffening behavior under dynamic loading and a strength-induced aging suggesting adaptive mechanical behavior. This egg white-derived material could also be developed for bio-compatible and bio-medical applications.
Subjects
Egg white | MD simulation | Polymerization | Primary amines | Strength
