Mechanical Design Principles of Avian Eggshells for Survivability
Fan Liu, Xihang Jiang, and Lifeng Wang

TL;DR
This paper explores the complex structure-property relationships of avian eggshells, revealing design principles that balance strength, toughness, and resource efficiency, with implications for bioinspired material development.
Contribution
It introduces a three-index model explaining eggshell thickness evolution and highlights design trade-offs in eggshell structure for survivability and resource use.
Findings
Dome-shaped structure inhibits crack propagation.
Membrane enhances toughness and is tunable via moisture content.
Eggshell thickness balances protection and calcium resource constraints.
Abstract
Biological materials exhibit complex structure-property relationships which are only beginning to be elucidated. Understanding the underlying physical mechanisms of the structure-property relationships is the key to designing bioinspired materials. The eggshell is an excellent example because many design trade-offs are well balanced by its seemingly simple but highly evolved structures. The first design trade-off: to break an eggshell, the internal breaking load needed is much lower than the external breaking load. The reason is that the dome-shaped structure leads to a special stress distribution which inhibits the propagation of the first crack. The second design trade-off: the eggshell is tough during the incubation but weakened at the time of hatching. The membrane of the eggshell significantly improves the toughness by bridging the primary crack and creating more secondary cracks.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSilk-based biomaterials and applications · Microplastics and Plastic Pollution · Animal Nutrition and Physiology
