G. Ciofani & A. Menciassi (Eds.): Piezoelectric Nanomaterials for Biomedical Appl., EM, pp. 187–211.
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Chapter 7
Piezoelectricity and Ferroelectricity
in Biomaterials: From Proteins
to Self-assembled Peptide Nanotubes
V.S. Bystrov
1,2, *
, I. Bdikin
1,3
, A. Heredia
1
, R.C. Pullar
1
, E. Mishina
4
,
A.S. Sigov
4
, and A.L. Kholkin
1
1
Department of Ceramics and Glass Engineering & CICECO, University of Aveiro,
3810-193, Aveiro, Portugal
2
Institute of Mathematical Problems of Biology RAS, 142290, Pushchino, Russia
3
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Centre for Mechanical Technology
& Automation, University of Aveiro, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal
4 Moscow State Institute of Radioengineering, Electronics and Automation, 119454
Moscow, Russia
bystrov@ua.pt, vsbys@mail.ru
Abstract. Piezoelectricity is one of the common ferroelectric material properties,
along with pyroelectricity, etc. There has been widespread observation of
piezoelectric and ferroelectric phenomena in many biological systems and
molecules, and these are referred to as biopiezoelectricity and bioferroelectricity.
Investigations have been made of these properties in biological and organic
macromolecular systems on the nanoscale, by techniques such as atomic force
microscopy (AFM) and piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM). This chapter
presents a short overview of the main issues of piezoelectricity and
ferroelectricity, and their manifestation in organic and biological objects, materials
and molecular systems. As a showcase of novel biopiezomaterials, the
investigation of diphenylalanine (FF) peptide nanotubes (PNTs) is described in
more detail. FF PNTs present a unique class of self-assembled functional
biomaterials, owing to a wide range of useful properties, including nanostructural
variability, mechanical rigidity and chemical stability. The discovery of strong
piezoactivity and polarization in aromatic dipeptides [ACS Nano 4, 610, 2010]
opened up a new perspective for their use as nanoactuators, nanomotors and
molecular machines as well possible biomedical applications.
7.1 Introduction
Piezoelectricity is one of the common ferroelectric material properties [1-3], along
with pyroelectricity, optical birefringence phenomena, etc. Piezoelectricity in
*
Corresponding author.