Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology (Mar 2018)

Bioinspired self-healing materials: lessons from nature

  • Joseph C. Cremaldi,
  • Bharat Bhushan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.9.85
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 907 – 935

Abstract

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Healing is an intrinsic ability in the incredibly biodiverse populations of the plant and animal kingdoms created through evolution. Plants and animals approach healing in similar ways but with unique pathways, such as damage containment in plants or clotting in animals. After analyzing the examples of healing and defense mechanisms found in living nature, eight prevalent mechanisms were identified: reversible muscle control, clotting, cellular response, layering, protective surfaces, vascular networks or capsules, exposure, and replenishable functional coatings. Then the relationship between these mechanisms, nature’s best (evolutionary) methods of mitigating and healing damage, and existing technology in self-healing materials are described. The goals of this top-level overview are to provide a framework for relating the behavior seen in living nature to bioinspired materials, act as a resource to addressing the limitations/problems with existing materials, and open up new avenues of insight and research into self-healing materials.

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