Forty-seven years ago when I started bowhunting with aluminum arrows, "wall thickness" was never an issue when it came to bowhunting whitetail or mule deer. The issue back then was in an arrow's GPP which stands for "grains per pound". Back then, most bowhunters were hunting with 9-12 GPP aluminum arrows.
Deer have been killed with arrows ranging in spine and "wall thickness" from 1716, 1816, 1916, 2013, 2016, 2018, 2020, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2117, 2212, 2213, 2215, 2216, 2219, 2312, 2314, etc.
Wall thickness only came in "vogue" with regards to "stump shooting". I shoot a 2212 aluminum arrow. I don't shoot at stumps since a 2212 will have it's tip damaged from splitting if I hit a very hard stump. I go roving where I shoot at pine cones, large leaves and anomalies on a dirt bank. No damaged done to my 2212 when practicing this way.
When shooting at a deer, the 2212's tip won't be damaged nor will the arrow be bent if it hits a deer and it's a complete pass through. The 2212 will bend if the shot is not a complete pass through and the deer falls on the protruding part of the arrow. But, then again, a 2016, 2114 arrow will bend too.
The 2114 arrow shot from your 53# bow will easily kill a deer if you put the arrow in a vital spot. Since the 2114 weighs 524 grains, you're shooting a high end 9+ GPP (grains per pound) arrow. If your 2114 gets a complete pass through on a deer where the arrow exits the deer and is still flying in the air; after you find the arrow, do a spin test, re-sharpen the broadhead, re-fletch the arrow and the arrow will be good to go again.