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OYSTER CEMENT CHEMISTRY FOR BIOMIMETIC COMMERCIAL APPLICATIONS

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  • Additional Information
    • Publication Date:
      2025
    • Collection:
      Purdue University Graduate School: Figshare
    • Abstract:
      Oysters are a keystone species found across the world. Oyster reefs can dissipate storm energy, prevent shoreline erosion, are home to various species, and filter seawater. Oysters ability to be pivotal in the ecosystem shows how robust they are as a species. Oysters produce cement that starts from the larval stage when a pediveliger lays down an organic matrix, which later calcifies to form the cement. By understanding how oyster cement works on a chemical level, biomimetic versions will be able to be synthesized and tested. Previous studies have shown that around 10 percent of oyster cement is organic (peptides, carbohydrates and lipids), with the remainder of the cement represented as calcium carbonate (CaCO3). Though exact protein characterization is unknown, peptides in oyster cement are fitted with an abundance of serine residues, which provide good docking ports for post-transitional modifications (PTM). Phosphorylation is a common PTM, and thoughts of phosphorylated proteins could be responsible for the adhesion of oyster cement. Current commercial cement systems utilize hydrophobic polymers in the form of emulsions to increase the properties of cement, known as polymer-modified cement (PMC). This typically increases flexural strength, torsion, chemical resistance, improved hydrophobicity, and others. Polymers in PMC typically have 3 base polymers in the form of acrylate, styrene, or butadiene, and functional groups of these polymers may be modified for improved material functionality. Therefore, the addition of oyster cement chemistry into current PMC systems should improve the adhesion of CaCO3 based systems. The impacts of this research would reduce cure time for cement, and increase the integrity of cement-based repairs. That is the goal of this thesis, to make a biomimetic oyster cement utilizing the theorized peptide chemistry and current PMC polymer backbones to chelate to Ca2+ ions to form an inorganic-based cementous adhesive. Chapter 1 will act as a literature review of biomimetic adhesives, ...
    • Relation:
      https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/OYSTER_CEMENT_CHEMISTRY_FOR_BIOMIMETIC_COMMERCIAL_APPLICATIONS/28840955
    • Accession Number:
      10.25394/PGS.28840955.v1
    • Online Access:
      https://doi.org/10.25394/PGS.28840955.v1
    • Rights:
      CC BY 4.0
    • Accession Number:
      edsbas.538286B1