Abstract :
Gao et al. (PNAS, 100, 5597-5600 (2003)) have argued that load-bearing mineralized hard
tissues, including bones, shells, and teeth, are nanocomposites, in which the mineral phase has nanoscale
dimensions that ensure optimum strength and flaw tolerance. In particular, it has been claimed
that the thickness of these brittle building blocks, being smaller than a critical size, h
∗, of the order
of tens of nanometers, renders them insensitive to the presence of crack-like flaws and enables them
to achieve near-theoretical strength, which is why Nature employs nanoscale features in mineralized
biological composites. We find this point of view, which Gao et al. and others have quoted in subsequent
publications and presentations, unpersuasive and present several counterexamples which show
that biological structures, as a result of being comprised of relatively fragile constituents that fracture
at stress levels several orders of magnitude smaller than the theoretical strength, adopt various
strategies to develop mechanical responses that enable them to mitigate catastrophic failure. Nanoscale
structural features are not a result of an innate resistance to very high stresses
Keywords :
crack bridging , flaw-tolerance , nanoscale structures , toughening , flaw-intolerance , Biological structures