“…Among countless biological materials that possess this capacity, silk fibroin (SF) from silkworm Bombyx mori is extensively explored in the literature due to its remarkable characteristics, such as excellent biocompatibility, mechanical resistance, and facile processing. Indeed, SF can be easily converted into several forms, such as films, fibers, hydrogels, and scaffolds. , Therefore, SF can be applied on a wide range of areas, including biomedical, drug delivery, optical devices, and more recently in electronics. , Another exciting feature of SF and other polypeptides with a β-sheet structure is the possibility of modulating the material’s mechanical and electric properties by controlling its hierarchical structure at the mesoscale. , In that regard, the hierarchical structure of SF can be divided into four levels, from the nano- to the macroscopic scale. First, the secondary structure composed of β-sheet crystallites forms nanofibrils and amorphous regions of α-helix and random coil structures.…”