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Controllable Nanoparticle Assembly and Actuation with Modified Dipole Potentials in Simulation

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Science at the nanoscale poses several recurring difficulties. How can we control the assembly of objects too small for direct manipulation to be practical? How can we extend that control to extit{in vivo} systems so we can make use of nanotechnology in medicine? And how can we recreate the extraordinary capacities of Nature: healing, replication, growth, adaptation, self-regulation? One of the most powerful tools for addressing these challenges is the simple, familiar dipole moment. Since their debut as fuel control devices at NASA in the early sixties, possible applications for dipole suspensions have grown to areas far beyond what their creators envisioned. A multitude of ambitious new medical and mechanical applications make use of dipolar colloids. Dipoles are attractive from a practical standpoint because one can use fields to control not just their orientation and location, but also their mutual interactions. From a physical standpoint, dipoles are compelling as an exceptionally simple form of symmetry-breaking that leads to a variety of complex phenomena. This thesis studies the assembly and control of spherical colloids with a dipolar interaction modified by additional conditions using simulations. Three cases are examined in detail. The first is the case of an electrical dipole moment created by regions of opposite charge density on the surface of a colloid. Here the dipole potential is modified by strong screening. Such a system is interesting as a model for certain proteins in a high-salt solution and suggests possible uses for inverse Janus colloids. The resulting phases have little resemblance to the usual dipole phases and can be controlled with small quantities of homogeneously charged particles. In the second case, superparamagnetic dipoles are linked into chains. Such chains have been realized in a wide variety of experimental schemes. A general theory is developed for the equilibrium shapes of the chains in a precessing field when their endpoints are fixed. This theory reveals that the chains are good candidates for contracting muscles in microscopic devices with a conveniently harmonic form for their potentials. Ensembles of free chains can be put to more elaborate uses. To illustrate, a regime is designed that spins the chains into a self-healing cross-linked gel. Finally, we will turn to self-replication. Decorating a permanent dipole with a single permanent binding site is enough to enable self-replication using dimers as the template. A periodic magnetic drive provides the energy to drive replication. Several theoretical principles regarding the statistics of linear self-replicators are deduced and used to optimize the dipole replicating system.

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  • 02/19/2018
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