Abstract

For engineering materials, it is important to search for strategies to enhance certain combinations of mechanical properties, because many performances, such as strength and toughness, are mutually exclusive. Effective strategies have evolved in the biological tissues of many plants and animals to construct composite materials with unique combinations of mechanical properties. One impressive example is found in the hammer-like appendages of mantis shrimp, which are exceptionally resistant to crushing because they must withstand the reaction forces created when attacking prey. In this paper, quasi-static compression tests, advanced microscopic observation, and spectroscopic analysis were employed to identify a series of characteristic changes, including changes in mineral composition and arrangement of chitin fibers, and the resulting toughening mechanisms are also examined. The combination of experiments and finite element analysis revealed that by combining different fiber arrangements and components in adjacent macroscopic layers, longitudinal stress could be shifted to the lateral direction, hence efficiently enhancing longitudinal compression resistance while avoiding catastrophic failure. Overall, these findings further the understanding of the fiber structure and toughening mechanism of appendages, which may serve as a foundation for the development of tough bioinspired composites.

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