28 research outputs found

    Prospective energy densities in the forisome, a new smart material

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    The forisome is a protein structure of plants which, in low Ca2+ solutions, assumes a crystalline condensed conformation and, at high Ca2+, swells to a dispersed conformation; this transition has been attributed to electrostatic deformation of protein ā€œmodulesā€. Forisomes could become an important smart material if the energy density of transformation approached 1 MJ māˆ’ 3. Quantitation of the forisome as a charged porous continuum permeated by electrolyte fails by orders of magnitude to achieve this energy density electrostatically. However, condensed ā†’ dispersed transitions can be visualized alternatively: (i) an ionic bond near the surface of a forisome crystal dissolves to produce two bound surface charges; (ii) the anionic site bonds to Ca2+ becoming less negative; (iii) the two sites repel each other and move apart drawing in water; (iv) electrolyte anions are attracted, bringing with them bound water; (v) this transition propagates throughout the crystal, with incompressible imbibed electrolyte stabilizing the initial separation. With the above transition sequence, it seems possible to achieve an energy density of 0.5 MJ māˆ’ 3 if the ā€œmodulesā€ in the crystal are roughly 10 nm on a side
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