Publication | Closed Access
Designing the Self-Assembly of Arbitrary Shapes Using Minimal Complexity Building Blocks
37
Citations
55
References
2023
Year
Building BlocksEngineeringMolecular BiologyGeometry GenerationComputer-aided DesignBiological ComputingStructural OptimizationMolecular DesignDna NanotechnologyDigital FabricationDesign SpaceDna ComputingComputational GeometryGeometric ModelingDesignComputer EngineeringDna ReplicationDistinct Building BlocksMolecular EngineeringHierarchical Assembly3D PrintingIndustrial DesignPattern FormationNatural SciencesSelf-assemblySolid Modeling
The design space for self-assembled multicomponent objects ranges from a solution in which every building block is unique to one with the minimum number of distinct building blocks that unambiguously define the target structure. We develop a pipeline to explore the design spaces for a set of structures of various sizes and complexities. To understand the implications of the different solutions, we analyze their assembly dynamics using patchy particle simulations and study the influence of the number of distinct building blocks, and the angular and spatial tolerances on their interactions, on the kinetics and yield of the target assembly. We show that the resource-saving solution with a minimum number of distinct blocks can often assemble just as well (or faster) than designs where each building block is unique. We further use our methods to design multifarious structures, where building blocks are shared between different target structures. Finally, we use coarse-grained DNA simulations to investigate the realization of multicomponent shapes using DNA nanostructures as building blocks.
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