2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024;
Minneapolis & Virtual
Session Y35: Nonequilibrium Self-Assembly and Self-Organization I
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 8, 2024
Room: 103A
Sponsoring
Units:
DSOFT GSNP DBIO
Chair: William Jacobs, Princeton University
Abstract: Y35.00001 : Design principles for fast and efficient self-assembly processes
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Abstract
Presenter:
Erwin A Frey
(Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich)
Authors:
Erwin A Frey
(Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich)
Florian Gartner
(LMU)
Self-assembly is a fundamental concept in biology and of significant interest to nanotechnology. Considerable progress has been made in characterizing and controlling the properties of the resulting structures, both experimentally and theoretically. However, much less is known about kinetic constraints and determinants of dynamical properties like time efficiency, although these constraints can become severe limiting factors of self-assembly processes. I will discuss how the time efficiency and other dynamical properties of reversible self-assembly depend on the morphology (shape) of the building blocks for systems in which the binding energy between the constituents is large. As paradigmatic examples, I will discuss the self-assembly of constituents with triangular, square, and hexagonal morphology into two-dimensional structures of a specified size. A key finding is that the constituents' morphology critically determines the assembly time and how it scales with the size of the target structure. The theoretical analysis reveals three key structural parameters defined by the morphology: The nucleation size and attachment order, which describe the effective order of the chemical reactions by which clusters nucleate and grow, respectively, and the growth exponent, which determines how the growth rate of an emerging structure scales with its size. Using this characterization, it is possible to formulate an effective theory of the self-assembly kinetics, which exhibits an inherent scale invariance. This critical insight leads to general scaling laws that describe the minimal assembly time as a function of the size of the target structure. Finally, I will discuss how these insights on the kinetics of self-assembly processes can be used to design assembly schemes that could significantly increase the time efficiency and robustness of artificial self-assembly processes.