Physics World 03月04日
‘Phononic shield’ protects mantis shrimp from its own shock waves
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美国西北大学的研究人员发现,螳螂虾通过一种特殊的结构来过滤掉有害频率的冲击波,从而保护自身组织免受伤害。这种结构位于螳螂虾的棒状肢体内,研究人员利用超声技术对其表面和体波传播进行研究,揭示了其工作原理。研究表明,这种天然的“声子盾”可以有效阻挡特定频率范围内的应力波,防止其传播回螳螂虾的身体,从而保护软组织。这项发现有望为军用和民用领域开发新型先进防护材料提供灵感,例如头盔、个人防护装备以及电子产品和其他敏感设备的包装。

🔨螳螂虾的棒状肢体是一种锤状结构,通过类似于弹簧的弹性结构储存能量,并由肌腱锁定。当螳螂虾收缩肌肉时,闩锁释放,释放储存的能量,并以高达1500牛顿的峰值力向前推进棒状肢体,产生冲击波。

🌊棒状肢体的冲击还会产生气泡,这些气泡迅速塌陷,产生兆赫兹范围内的冲击波,被称为空化塌陷。这种次级冲击波效应使得螳螂虾的攻击更具破坏性,但螳螂虾自身却能免受伤害。

🧬螳螂虾棒状肢体包含三层结构:最外层是坚硬的羟基磷灰石涂层,中间层是矿化的几丁质纤维,最里层是螺旋状排列的纤维束,称为Bouligand结构。Bouligand结构中存在声子带隙,可以过滤掉有害的应力波,防止其传播回螳螂虾的身体。

🛡️研究人员通过瞬态光栅光谱和异步光学采样等超声技术,分析了应力波在螳螂虾装甲中的传播方式,并表征了材料的微观结构,从而揭示了螳螂虾保护自身免受冲击波伤害的机制。

When a mantis shrimp uses shock waves to strike and kill its prey, how does it prevent those shock waves from damaging its own tissues? Researchers at Northwestern University in the US have answered this question by identifying a structure within the shrimp that filters out harmful frequencies. Their findings, which they obtained by using ultrasonic techniques to investigate surface and bulk wave propagation in the shrimp’s dactyl club, could lead to novel advanced protective materials for military and civilian applications.

Dactyl clubs are hammer-like structures located on each side of a mantis shrimp’s body. They store energy in elastic structures similar to springs that are latched in place by tendons. When the shrimp contracts its muscles, the latch releases, releasing the stored energy and propelling the club forward with a peak force of up to 1500 N.

This huge force (relative to the animal’s size) creates stress waves in both the shrimp’s target – typically a hard-shelled animal such as a crab or mollusc – and the dactyl club itself, explains biomechanical engineer Horacio Dante Espinosa, who led the Northwestern research effort. The club’s punch also creates bubbles that rapidly collapse to produce shockwaves in the megahertz range. “The collapse of these bubbles (a process known as cavitation collapse), which takes place in just nanoseconds, releases intense bursts of energy that travel through the target and shrimp’s club,” he explains. “This secondary shockwave effect makes the shrimp’s strike even more devastating.”

Protective phononic armour

So how do the shrimp’s own soft tissues escape damage? To answer this question, Espinosa and colleagues studied the animal’s armour using transient grating spectroscopy (TGS) and asynchronous optical sampling (ASOPS). These ultrasonic techniques respectively analyse how stress waves propagate through a material and characterize the material’s microstructure. In this work, Espinosa and colleagues used them to provide high-resolution, frequency-dependent wave propagation characteristics that previous studies had not investigated experimentally.

The team identified three distinct regions in the shrimp’s dactyl club. The outermost layer consists of a hard hydroxyapatite coating approximately 70 μm thick, which is durable and resists damage. Beneath this, an approximately 500 μm-thick layer of mineralized chitin fibres arranged in a herringbone pattern enhances the club’s fracture resistance. Deeper still, Espinosa explains, is a region that features twisted fibre bundles organized in a corkscrew-like arrangement known as a Bouligand structure. Within this structure, each successive layer is rotated relative to its neighbours, giving it a unique and crucial role in controlling how stress waves propagate through the shrimp.

“Our key finding was the existence of phononic bandgaps (through which waves within a specific frequency range cannot travel) in the Bouligand structure,” Espinosa explains. “These bandgaps filter out harmful stress waves so that they do not propagate back into the shrimp’s club and body. They thus preserve the club’s integrity and protect soft tissue in the animal’s appendage.”

 The team also employed finite element simulations incorporating so-called Bloch-Floquet analyses and graded mechanical properties to understand the phonon bandgap effects. The most surprising result, Espinosa tells Physics World, was the formation of a flat branch around the 450 to 480 MHz range, which correlates to frequencies arising from bubble collapse originating during club impact.

Evolution and its applications

For Espinosa and his colleagues, a key goal of their research is to understand how evolution leads to natural composite materials with unique photonic, mechanical and thermal properties. In particular, they seek to uncover how hierarchical structures in natural materials and the chemistry of their constituents produce emergent mechanical properties. “The mantis shrimp’s dactyl club is an example of how evolution leads to materials capable of resisting extreme conditions,” Espinosa says. “In this case, it is the violent impacts the animal uses for predation or protection.”

The properties of the natural “phononic shield” unearthed in this work might inspire advanced protective materials for both military and civilian applications, he says. Examples could include the design of helmets, personnel armour, and packaging for electronics and other sensitive devices.

In this study, which is described in Science, the researchers analysed two-dimensional simulations of wave behaviour. Future research, they say, should focus on more complex three-dimensional simulations to fully capture how the club’s structure interacts with shock waves. “Designing aquatic experiments with state-of-the-art instrumentation would also allow us to investigate how phononic properties function in submerged underwater conditions,” says Espinosa.

The team would also like to use biomimetics to make synthetic metamaterials based on the insights gleaned from this work.

The post ‘Phononic shield’ protects mantis shrimp from its own shock waves appeared first on Physics World.

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螳螂虾 冲击波 声子盾 仿生学
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