作者
Noy Cohen, Michal Levin, Claus D Eisenbach
发表日期
2021/1/22
期刊
Biomacromolecules
卷号
22
期号
2
页码范围
993-1000
出版商
American Chemical Society
简介
Spider silk is a protein material that exhibits extraordinary and nontrivial properties such as the ability to soften and decrease its length by up to ∼60% upon exposure to high humidity. This process is commonly called supercontraction and is the result of a transition from a highly oriented glassy phase to a disoriented rubbery phase. In this work, we derive a microscopically motivated and energy-based model that captures the underlying mechanisms that give rise to supercontraction. We propose that the increase in relative humidity and the consequent wetting of a spider silk have two main consequences: (1) the dissociation of hydrogen bonds and (2) the swelling of the fiber. From a mechanical viewpoint, the first consequence leads to the formation of rubbery domains. This process is associated with an entropic gain and a loss of orientation of chains in the silk network, which motivates the contraction of the spider …
学术搜索中的文章
N Cohen, M Levin, CD Eisenbach - Biomacromolecules, 2021