"Shrilk" could one day replace plastic in consumer
products, be used to suture wounds, and serve as scaffolding for tissue
regeneration.
BOSTON -- Researchers at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired
Engineering at Harvard University have developed a new material that
replicates the exceptional strength, toughness, and versatility of one
of nature's more extraordinary substances -- insect cuticle. Also
low-cost, biodegradable, and biocompatible, the new material, called
"Shrilk," could one day replace plastics in consumer products and be
used safely in a variety of medical applications.
The research findings appear today in the online issue of Advanced
Materials. The work was conducted by Wyss Institute postdoctoral fellow,
Javier G. Fernandez, Ph.D., with Wyss Institute Founding Director
Donald Ingber, M.D., Ph.D. Ingber is the Judah Folkman Professor of
Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and Children's Hospital
Boston and is a Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences.
Natural insect cuticle, such as that found in the rigid exoskeleton
of a housefly or grasshopper, is uniquely suited to the challenge of
providing protection without adding weight or bulk. As such, it can
deflect external chemical and physical strains without damaging the
insect's internal components, while providing structure for the insect's
muscles and wings. It is so light that it doesn't inhibit flight and so
thin that it allows flexibility. Also remarkable is its ability to vary
its properties, from rigid along the insect's body segments and wings
to elastic along its limb joints.
Insect cuticle is a composite material consisting of layers of
chitin, a polysaccharide polymer, and protein organized in a laminar,
plywood-like structure. Mechanical and chemical interactions between
these materials provide the cuticle with its unique mechanical and
chemical properties. By studying these complex interactions and
recreating this unique chemistry and laminar design in the lab,
Fernandez and Ingber were able to engineer a thin, clear film that has
the same composition and structure as insect cuticle. The material is
called Shrilk because it is composed of fibroin protein from silk and
from chitin, which is commonly extracted from discarded shrimp shells.
Shrilk is similar in strength and toughness to an aluminum alloy, but
it is only half the weight. It is biodegradable and can be produced at a
very low cost, since chitin is readily available as a shrimp waste
product. It is also easily molded into complex shapes, such as tubes. By
controlling the water content in the fabrication process, the
researchers were even able to reproduce the wide variations in
stiffness, from elasticity to rigidity.
These attributes could have multiple applications. As a cheap,
environmentally safe alternative to plastic, Shrilk could be used to
make trash bags, packaging, and diapers that degrade quickly. As an
exceptionally strong, biocompatible material, it could be used to suture
wounds that bear high loads, such as in hernia repair, or as a scaffold
for tissue regeneration.
"When we talk about the Wyss Institute's mission to create
bioinspired materials and products, Shrilk is an example of what we have
in mind," said Ingber. "It has the potential to be both a solution to
some of today's most critical environmental problems and a stepping
stone toward significant medical advances."
For more information:
http://wyss.harvard.edu/
twig.mowatt@wyss.harvard.edu
http://wyss.harvard.edu/
twig.mowatt@wyss.harvard.edu
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