Dense Packings of the Platonic and Archimedean Solids
S. Torquato, Y. Jiao

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Adaptive Shrinking Cell scheme to find dense packings of Platonic and Archimedean solids, revealing new densest packings and supporting a conjecture analogous to Kepler's sphere problem.
Contribution
The paper develops a novel optimization method for dense polyhedral packings and identifies the densest known packings for several Platonic solids.
Findings
Densest packings of tetrahedra, octahedra, dodecahedra, and icosahedra are identified with specific densities.
Densest packings of non-tiling Platonic solids are their known optimal lattice packings.
Strong evidence suggests densest packings of centrally symmetric solids are their densest lattice packings.
Abstract
Dense packings have served as useful models of the structure of liquid, glassy and crystal states of matter, granular media, heterogeneous materials, and biological systems. Probing the symmetries and other mathematical properties of the densest packings is a problem of long-standing interest in discrete geometry and number theory. The preponderance of previous work has focused on spherical particles, and very little is known about dense polyhedral packings. We formulate the problem of generating dense packings of polyhedra within an adaptive fundamental cell subject to periodic boundary conditions as an optimization problem, which we call the Adaptive Shrinking Cell (ASC) scheme. This novel optimization problem is solved here (using a variety of multi-particle initial configurations) to find dense packings of each of the Platonic solids in three-dimensional Euclidean space. We find the…
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