2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(647f) Peptidoglycan Dominates Bacillus Subtilis Spore’s Water-Responsive Actuation
Authors
Zhi-Lun Liu - Presenter, The City College of New York
Xi Chen, City College of New York
Haozhen Wang, Advanced Science Research Center
Water-responsive (WR) materials that swell and shrink in response to changes in relative humidity (RH) show a great potential as high-energy actuators for soft robotics and novel energy harvesting systems. Bacillus (B.) subtilis spore is a WR material that shows an extremely high actuation energy density of ~10 MJ m-3, surpassing that of existing artificial muscles and actuators. However, the underlying mechanism of sporesâ powerful actuation remains unclear. Here, we present that peptidoglycan (PG) within sporesâ cortex layer dominates sporesâ WR behaviors, and PGâs WR energy density reaches 59.9 MJ m-3 that exceeds sporesâ record high energy density by three-fold. We found that, when RH is increased from 10% to 90%, PGâs exhibit WR strain of ~52.4%, which is ~5 times larger than that of spores. To correlate PGâs WR properties to that of spores, we analyzed PGâs distribution in 85 spores by three-dimensional reconstructing sporesâ serial cross-section images obtained by an FIB-SEM dual-beam system. PGâs spatial distribution, together with its WR energy density, suggest that PG dominates sporesâ water-responsiveness. Our finding of PGâs extreme water-responsiveness provides a new record energy density for actuators, but also suggests opportunities to grow spores with higher actuation energy density by using genetic modification.