Abstract

Myriad natural protective structures consist of bone plates joined by convoluted unmineralized (soft) collagenous sutures. Examples of such protective structures include: shells of turtles, craniums of almost all animals (including humans), alligator armour, armadillo armour, and others. The function of sutures has been well researched. However, whether, and if so how, sutures improve protective performance during a predator attack has received limited attention. Sutures are ubiquitous in protective structures, and this motivates the question as to whether sutures optimize the protective function of the structure. Hence, in this work the behaviour of structures that contain sutures during predator attacks is investigated. We show that sutures decrease the maximum strain energy density that turtle shells experience during predator attacks by more than an order of magnitude. Hence, sutures make turtle shells far more resilient to material failure, such as, fracture, damage, and plastic deformations. Additionally, sutures increase the viscous behaviour of the shell causing increased dissipation of energy during predator attacks. Further investigations into the influence of sutures on behaviour during locomotion and breathing are also presented. The results presented in this work motivate the inclusion of sutures in biomimetically designed protective structures, such as helmets and protective clothing. Statement of significanceMyriad bony protective structures contain networks of sutures, that is con- voluted soft collagenous tissue. Their ubiquity motivates the question, whether, and if so how, sutures improve protective performance. Hence, this work inves- tigates how sutures affect protective performance using computational experi- ments. Due to the length scale of sutures being far smaller than the structures in which they reside, classical modelling approaches are prohibitively expensive. Hence, in this work, a multiscale approach is taken. To our knowledge, this is the first multiscale investigation of structures that contain sutures.Among other insights, we show that sutures decrease the maximum strain energy density in structures during predator attacks by over an order of mag- nitude. Hence, sutures make structures far more resilient to failure.

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