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Programming interactions in magnetic handshake materials

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

C.X. Du
H.A. Zhang
T.G. Pearson
J. Ng
P.L. McEuen
Itai Cohen
M.P. Brenner

Abstract

The ability to rapidly manufacture building blocks with specific binding interactions is a key aspect of programmable assembly. Recent developments in DNA nanotechnology and colloidal particle synthesis have significantly advanced our ability to create particle sets with programmable interactions, based on DNA or shape complementarity. The increasing miniaturization underlying magnetic storage offers a new path for engineering programmable components for self assembly, by printing magnetic dipole patterns on substrates using nanotechnology. How to efficiently design dipole patterns for programmable assembly remains an open question as the design space is combinatorially large. Here, we present design rules for programming these magnetic interactions. By optimizing the structure of the dipole pattern, we demonstrate that the number of independent building blocks scales super linearly with the number of printed domains. We test these design rules using computational simulations of self assembled blocks, and experimental realizations of the blocks at the mm scale, demonstrating that the designed blocks give high yield assembly. In addition, our design rules indicate that with current printing technology, micron sized magnetic panels could easily achieve hundreds of different building blocks. © 2022 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Date Published

Journal

Soft Matter

Volume

18

Issue

34

Number of Pages

6404-6410,

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85136853938&doi=10.1039%2fd2sm00604a&partnerID=40&md5=a8ce2c3adbc82b449821717d939f04f7

DOI

10.1039/d2sm00604a

Research Area

Group (Lab)

J.C. Seamus Davis Group
Paul McEuen Group

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