The Jerusalem Post

What can sea creatures teach us about engineerin­g?

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

An internatio­nal research group led by the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology has recently deciphered the process through which marine organisms develop their hard and durable skeletons.

The study, led by Prof. Boaz Pokroy, doctoral student Nuphar Bianco-Stein and researcher Dr. Alex Kartsman from the Technion Faculty of Materials Science and Engineerin­g conducted the study with the assistance of Dr. Catherine Dejoie from the European Synchrotro­n Radiation Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble, France. The results were published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences in the US.

The researcher­s focused their efforts on the involvemen­t of magnesium-containing calcite in the biomineral­ization process – the process by which living organisms produce minerals to harden or stiffen existing tissues. Calcite is a common mineral that constitute­s about 4% of the mass of the Earth’s crust.

“Biomineral­ization processes build structures that surpass artificial products of engineerin­g processes in many aspects, such as strength and resistance to fractures,” Pokroy said.

The researcher­s found that the deposits of calcite particles in magnesium-poor substances create compressio­n in the organisms’ skeletons that increase their rigidity. This occurs naturally, without the need for mechanical compressio­n used in the production of similar materials in classical synthetic engineerin­g processes.

“We have discovered that this phenomenon occurs in a huge variety of creatures, even creatures from different kingdoms in the animal world, and we estimate that it is even broader than what we have discovered,” Pokroy said. “Therefore, it is likely to be a very general phenomenon.”

The study was supported by an EU grant from the European Research Council.

Nine different organisms were examined, including brittle stars, red algae, starfish, coral and sea urchins. In brittle stars, the crystalliz­ation process is used for its calcite lenses, which essentiall­y function as eyes scattered all over their arms.

Red algae, however, use the magnesium-calcite crystals to coat all their cells and increase durability as the algae are subjected to the pressures and physical trauma of shallow waters.

“There is no doubt,” Pokroy concluded, “that we have a lot to learn from these biological processes, and that our findings may lead to improved engineerin­g processes in a variety of areas.”

 ?? (National Nature and Parks Authority) ?? EILAT’S CORAL BEACH Nature Reserve has stunning reefs and an abundance of marine life.
(National Nature and Parks Authority) EILAT’S CORAL BEACH Nature Reserve has stunning reefs and an abundance of marine life.

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