Equilibrium mechanisms of self-limiting assembly
Michael F. Hagan, Gregory M. Grason
Abstract
. These include well-known cases in biology and synthetic soft matter - micellization of amphiphiles and shell/tubule formation of tapered subunits - as well as less widely known classes of assemblies, such as short-range attractive/long-range repulsive systems and geometrically-frustrated assemblies. For each of these self-limiting mechanisms, we describe the physical mechanisms that select equilibrium assembly size, as well as potential limitations of finite-size selection. Finally, we discuss alternative mechanisms for finite-size assemblies, and draw contrasts with the size-control that these can achieve relative to self-limitation in equilibrium, single-species assemblies.
Topics & Concepts
LimitingStatistical physicsSelf-assemblyPhysicsNanotechnologyClass (philosophy)Soft matterStatistical mechanicsRange (aeronautics)Self-organizationChemical physicsComputer scienceChemistryMaterials scienceMechanical engineeringColloidArtificial intelligenceEngineeringPhysical chemistryComposite materialPickering emulsions and particle stabilizationSupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsProtein Structure and Dynamics