Mechanical Design of Structural Materials in Animals
By (Author) John M. Gosline
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
16th July 2018
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Zoology and animal sciences
Biochemistry
Biophysics
571.43
Hardback
400
Width 178mm, Height 254mm
Mechanical Design of Structural Materials in Animals explores the principles underlying how molecules interact to produce the functional attributes of biological materials: their strength and stiffness, ability to absorb and store energy, and ability to resist the fatigue that accrues through a lifetime of physical insults. These attributes play a
"Combining a limited number of basic components, animals have developed a tremendous diversity of materials, most of which have not been scientifically examined or understood fully. Even the most detailed information about their chemical composition and genetic background has not answered questions about mechanical performance. In this outstanding book, Gosline shows us how to analyze the relationship between structure and function and how to exploit this knowledge to design original bioinspired materials."Stanislav Gorb, Kiel University
"This excellent book is useful for teaching materials science or biomechanics to biologists, as well as for giving materials scientists and engineers a biological or bioinspirational perspective."Peter Fratzl, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces
"This book argues that adaptive design in load-bearing biological materials necessarily involves contributions at multiple length and time scales ranging from nanometers and microseconds to meters and years. Well-supported through his analysis of case studies, Gosline succeeds in reconciling and integrating contributions to function at different scales as no other writer has done to date."J. Herbert Waite, University of California, Santa Barbara
John M. Gosline (19432016) was a professor of zoology at the University of British Columbia from 1973 to 2008. He is the coauthor of Mechanical Design in Organisms (Princeton).