Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin

Resilin is a cuticular protein found in a variety of insects. It can stretch up to 300% of its natural length without any creep or relaxation. Further, it operates across a wide frequency range from 5 Hz in locomotion to 13 kHz in sound production. Both the protein sequence and composition of natura...

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Main Author: Choudhury, Udit
Other Authors: Engineering Science and Mechanics
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40869
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01312012-161014/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-408692021-08-05T05:28:20Z Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin Choudhury, Udit Engineering Science and Mechanics Dudek, Daniel M. Lesko, John J. Moore, Robert Bowen Time-Concentration Superposition Time-Temperature Superposition Dynamic Mechanical Analysis Biopolymers Resilin Biomaterials Resilin is a cuticular protein found in a variety of insects. It can stretch up to 300% of its natural length without any creep or relaxation. Further, it operates across a wide frequency range from 5 Hz in locomotion to 13 kHz in sound production. Both the protein sequence and composition of natural resilin as well as the dynamic mechanical properties vary substantially across species. This suggests that mechanical properties may be evolutionarily tuned for specific functions within an insect. Here, samples of resilin obtained from the tibia-tarsal joint of the cockroach, Periplaneta americana, were tested using a custom built dynamic mechanical analyzer. The material properties in compression are obtained from the rubbery to glassy domain with time-temperature superposition (-2C to 55C) and time-concentration superposition (0 % to 93% ethanol by volume in water). At low frequency the storage modulus was found to be 1.5 MPa increasing to about 5 MPa in the transition zone. The glass transition frequency at 23C in complete hydration was found to be 200 kHz. The data shows that cockroach resilin is less resilient than dragonfly resilin at low frequencies, returning about 79% of the elastic strain energy at 25 Hz compared to 97% for dragonfly resilin. However, at the glass transition (200 kHz) the material returns about 47% of the elastic strain energy compared to 30% in dragonfly (2MHz ). The resilin pad in cockroach is a composite structure, acting as a compressive spring to passively extend the tibia-tarsal joint during cockroach locomotion. Its mechanical properties are more similar to the composite locust pre-alar arm than to the pure resilin dragonfly tendon, suggesting that macroscopic structural influences may be as important as molecular sequence differences in setting properties. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:28:15Z 2014-03-14T21:28:15Z 2012-01-23 2012-01-31 2012-03-01 2012-03-01 Thesis etd-01312012-161014 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40869 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01312012-161014/ Choudhury_U_T_2012.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Time-Concentration Superposition
Time-Temperature Superposition
Dynamic Mechanical Analysis
Biopolymers
Resilin
Biomaterials
spellingShingle Time-Concentration Superposition
Time-Temperature Superposition
Dynamic Mechanical Analysis
Biopolymers
Resilin
Biomaterials
Choudhury, Udit
Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin
description Resilin is a cuticular protein found in a variety of insects. It can stretch up to 300% of its natural length without any creep or relaxation. Further, it operates across a wide frequency range from 5 Hz in locomotion to 13 kHz in sound production. Both the protein sequence and composition of natural resilin as well as the dynamic mechanical properties vary substantially across species. This suggests that mechanical properties may be evolutionarily tuned for specific functions within an insect. Here, samples of resilin obtained from the tibia-tarsal joint of the cockroach, Periplaneta americana, were tested using a custom built dynamic mechanical analyzer. The material properties in compression are obtained from the rubbery to glassy domain with time-temperature superposition (-2C to 55C) and time-concentration superposition (0 % to 93% ethanol by volume in water). At low frequency the storage modulus was found to be 1.5 MPa increasing to about 5 MPa in the transition zone. The glass transition frequency at 23C in complete hydration was found to be 200 kHz. The data shows that cockroach resilin is less resilient than dragonfly resilin at low frequencies, returning about 79% of the elastic strain energy at 25 Hz compared to 97% for dragonfly resilin. However, at the glass transition (200 kHz) the material returns about 47% of the elastic strain energy compared to 30% in dragonfly (2MHz ). The resilin pad in cockroach is a composite structure, acting as a compressive spring to passively extend the tibia-tarsal joint during cockroach locomotion. Its mechanical properties are more similar to the composite locust pre-alar arm than to the pure resilin dragonfly tendon, suggesting that macroscopic structural influences may be as important as molecular sequence differences in setting properties. === Master of Science
author2 Engineering Science and Mechanics
author_facet Engineering Science and Mechanics
Choudhury, Udit
author Choudhury, Udit
author_sort Choudhury, Udit
title Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin
title_short Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin
title_full Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin
title_fullStr Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic Mechanical Properties of Cockroach(Periplaneta americana) Resilin
title_sort dynamic mechanical properties of cockroach(periplaneta americana) resilin
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40869
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01312012-161014/
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