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Featured researches published by Chang-Yu Sun.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Nanoscale Transforming Mineral Phases in Fresh Nacre

Ross T. DeVol; Chang-Yu Sun; Matthew A. Marcus; S. N. Coppersmith; Satish C. B. Myneni; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

Nacre, or mother-of-pearl, the iridescent inner layer of many mollusk shells, is a biomineral lamellar composite of aragonite (CaCO3) and organic sheets. Biomineralization frequently occurs via transient amorphous precursor phases, crystallizing into the final stable biomineral. In nacre, despite extensive attempts, amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) precursors have remained elusive. They were inferred from non-nacre-forming larval shells, or from a residue of amorphous material surrounding mature gastropod nacre tablets, and have only once been observed in bivalve nacre. Here we present the first direct observation of ACC precursors to nacre formation, obtained from the growth front of nacre in gastropod shells from red abalone (Haliotis rufescens), using synchrotron spectromicroscopy. Surprisingly, the abalone nacre data show the same ACC phases that are precursors to calcite (CaCO3) formation in sea urchin spicules, and not proto-aragonite or poorly crystalline aragonite (pAra), as expected for aragonitic nacre. In contrast, we find pAra in coral.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Amorphous calcium carbonate particles form coral skeletons

Tali Mass; Anthony J. Giuffre; Chang-Yu Sun; Cayla Stifler; Matthew J. Frazier; Maayan Neder; Nobumichi Tamura; Camelia V. Stan; Matthew A. Marcus; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

Significance Whether coral skeleton crystals grow by attachment of ions from solution or particles from tissue determines (i) corals’ growth rate, (ii) how they survive acidifying oceans, and (iii) the isotopes in the crystals used for reconstructing ancient temperatures. Our data show that two amorphous precursors exist, one hydrated and one dehydrated amorphous calcium carbonate; that these are formed in the tissue as ∼400-nm particles; and that they attach to the surface of coral skeletons, remain amorphous for hours, and finally crystallize into aragonite. Since these particles are formed inside tissue, coral skeleton growth may be less susceptible to ocean acidification than previously assumed. Coral bleaching and postmortem dissolution of the skeleton will occur, but a calcification crisis may not. Do corals form their skeletons by precipitation from solution or by attachment of amorphous precursor particles as observed in other minerals and biominerals? The classical model assumes precipitation in contrast with observed “vital effects,” that is, deviations from elemental and isotopic compositions at thermodynamic equilibrium. Here, we show direct spectromicroscopy evidence in Stylophora pistillata corals that two amorphous precursors exist, one hydrated and one anhydrous amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC); that these are formed in the tissue as 400-nm particles; and that they attach to the surface of coral skeletons, remain amorphous for hours, and finally, crystallize into aragonite (CaCO3). We show in both coral and synthetic aragonite spherulites that crystal growth by attachment of ACC particles is more than 100 times faster than ion-by-ion growth from solution. Fast growth provides a distinct physiological advantage to corals in the rigors of the reef, a crowded and fiercely competitive ecosystem. Corals are affected by warming-induced bleaching and postmortem dissolution, but the finding here that ACC particles are formed inside tissue may make coral skeleton formation less susceptible to ocean acidification than previously assumed. If this is how other corals form their skeletons, perhaps this is how a few corals survived past CO2 increases, such as the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum that occurred 56 Mya.


Science | 2017

Coherently aligned nanoparticles within a biogenic single crystal: A biological prestressing strategy

Iryna Polishchuk; Avigail Aronhime Bracha; Leonid Bloch; Davide Levy; Stas Kozachkevich; Yael Etinger-Geller; Yaron Kauffmann; Manfred Burghammer; Carlotta Giacobbe; Julie Villanova; Gordon Hendler; Chang-Yu Sun; Anthony J. Giuffre; Matthew A. Marcus; Lakshminath Kundanati; Paul Zaslansky; Nicola Pugno; P. U. P. A. Gilbert; Alex Katsman; Boaz Pokroy

Many roads to being tough A number of routes exist to increase toughness in both natural and human-made materials—for example, using secondary phases and precipitates or exploiting tailored architectures and shaped crystals. Polishchuk et al. detail the nanoscale internal structure of calcitic microlenses formed by a brittlestar (see the Perspective by Duffy). The segregation of magnesium-rich particles forms a secondary phase that places compressive stresses on the host matrix. This toughening mechanism resembles Guinier-Preston zones known in classical metallurgy. Science, this issue p. 1294 see also p. 1254 Coherent precipitation, known in metal alloys to provide substantial hardening and strengthening, is observed in a biomineral. In contrast to synthetic materials, materials produced by organisms are formed in ambient conditions and with a limited selection of elements. Nevertheless, living organisms reveal elegant strategies for achieving specific functions, ranging from skeletal support to mastication, from sensors and defensive tools to optical function. Using state-of-the-art characterization techniques, we present a biostrategy for strengthening and toughening the otherwise brittle calcite optical lenses found in the brittlestar Ophiocoma wendtii. This intriguing process uses coherent nanoprecipitates to induce compressive stresses on the host matrix, functionally resembling the Guinier–Preston zones known in classical metallurgy. We believe that these calcitic nanoparticles, being rich in magnesium, segregate during or just after transformation from amorphous to crystalline phase, similarly to segregation behavior from a supersaturated quenched alloy.


ACS Nano | 2017

Parrotfish Teeth: Stiff Biominerals Whose Microstructure Makes Them Tough and Abrasion-Resistant to Bite Stony Corals

Matthew A. Marcus; Shahrouz Amini; Cayla Stifler; Chang-Yu Sun; Nobumichi Tamura; Hans A. Bechtel; Dilworth Y. Parkinson; Harold S. Barnard; Xiyue X. X. Zhang; J.Q. Isaiah Chua; Ali Miserez; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

Parrotfish (Scaridae) feed by biting stony corals. To investigate how their teeth endure the associated contact stresses, we examine the chemical composition, nano- and microscale structure, and the mechanical properties of the steephead parrotfish Chlorurus microrhinos tooth. Its enameloid is a fluorapatite (Ca5(PO4)3F) biomineral with outstanding mechanical characteristics: the mean elastic modulus is 124 GPa, and the mean hardness near the biting surface is 7.3 GPa, making this one of the stiffest and hardest biominerals measured; the mean indentation yield strength is above 6 GPa, and the mean fracture toughness is ∼2.5 MPa·m1/2, relatively high for a highly mineralized material. This combination of properties results in high abrasion resistance. Fluorapatite X-ray absorption spectroscopy exhibits linear dichroism at the Ca L-edge, an effect that makes peak intensities vary with crystal orientation, under linearly polarized X-ray illumination. This observation enables polarization-dependent imaging contrast mapping of apatite, a method to quantitatively measure and display nanocrystal orientations in large, pristine arrays of nano- and microcrystalline structures. Parrotfish enameloid consists of 100 nm-wide, microns long crystals co-oriented and assembled into bundles interwoven as the warp and the weave in fabric and therefore termed fibers here. These fibers gradually decrease in average diameter from 5 μm at the back to 2 μm at the tip of the tooth. Intriguingly, this size decrease is spatially correlated with an increase in hardness.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

X-ray Linear Dichroism in Apatite

Cayla Stifler; Nina Kølln Wittig; Michel Sassi; Chang-Yu Sun; Matthew A. Marcus; Henrik Birkedal; Elia Beniash; Kevin M. Rosso; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

The recent observation in parrotfish teeth of X-ray linear dichroism motivated an in-depth investigation into this spectroscopic effect in various apatite crystals, including geologic hydroxyapatite (Ca5(PO4)3OH), fluorapatite (Ca5(PO4)3F), and their biogenic counterparts in human bone, mouse enamel, and in parrotfish bone, dentin, and enameloid, the equivalent of dental enamel in certain fish. These data are important because they now enable visualization of the nano- to microscale structure of apatite crystals in teeth and bone. Polarization-dependent imaging contrast (PIC) maps of lamellar bone, obtained with a new method that minimizes space-charge and charging effects, show the expected rotating apatite crystal orientations. PIC maps of mouse enamel reveal a complex arrangement of hydroxyapatite crystals perpendicular to the dentin-enamel junction, with rods arranged in a decussation pattern in inner enamel and nearly parallel to one another in outer enamel. In both inner and outer enamel crystal c-axes are not always aligned with the rod elongation direction.


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

Narrowly Distributed Crystal Orientation in Biomineral Vaterite

Boaz Pokroy; Lee Kabalah-Amitai; Iryna Polishchuk; Ross T. DeVol; Adam Z. Blonsky; Chang-Yu Sun; Matthew A. Marcus; Andreas Scholl; P. U. P. A. Gilbert


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2017

Nacre tablet thickness records formation temperature in modern and fossil shells

P. U. P. A. Gilbert; Kristin D. Bergmann; Corinne E. Myers; Matthew A. Marcus; Ross T. DeVol; Chang-Yu Sun; Adam Z. Blonsky; Erik Tamre; Jessica Zhao; Elizabeth A. Karan; Nobumichi Tamura; Sarah Lemer; Anthony J. Giuffre; Gonzalo Giribet; John M. Eiler; Andrew H. Knoll


ACS Nano | 2017

Spherulitic Growth of Coral Skeletons and Synthetic Aragonite: Nature’s Three-Dimensional Printing

Chang-Yu Sun; Matthew A. Marcus; Matthew J. Frazier; Anthony J. Giuffre; Tali Mass; P. U. P. A. Gilbert


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2018

Optical Paleothermometry Using Nacre

Jad Salman; Alireza Shahsafi; Chang-Yu Sun; Steve Weibel; Chris Draves; Michel Frising; Bradley S. Gundlach; Yuzhe Xiao; Gabor Kemeny; P. U. P. A. Gilbert; Mikhail A. Kats


Geology | 2018

Exceptional preservation of organic matrix and shell microstructure in a Late Cretaceous Pinna fossil revealed by photoemission electron spectromicroscopy

Corinne E. Myers; Kristin D. Bergmann; Chang-Yu Sun; Nicholas Boekelheide; Andrew H. Knoll; P. U. P. A. Gilbert

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P. U. P. A. Gilbert

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Matthew A. Marcus

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Cayla Stifler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Anthony J. Giuffre

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Kristin D. Bergmann

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nobumichi Tamura

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Erik Tamre

Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study

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