Design and control of quasiperiodic patterns of particles with standing acoustic waves
Elena Cherkaev, Fernando Guevara Vasquez, China Mauck

TL;DR
This paper presents a method to design and control tunable quasiperiodic particle patterns in fluids using standing acoustic waves, enabling advanced material fabrication and pattern transformations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach based on the acoustic radiation potential and higher-dimensional functional analysis for designing and tuning quasiperiodic structures.
Findings
Successfully designed quasiperiodic patterns in 2D and 3D
Demonstrated smooth transitions between different patterns
Enabled control over pattern properties through optimization
Abstract
We develop a method to design tunable quasiperiodic structures of particles suspended in a fluid by controlling standing acoustic waves. One application of our results is to ultrasound directed self-assembly, which allows fabricating composite materials with desired microstructures. Our approach is based on identifying the minima of a functional, termed the acoustic radiation potential, determining the locations of the particle clusters. This functional can be viewed as a two- or three-dimensional slice of a similar functional in higher dimensions as in the cut-and-project method of constructing quasiperiodic patterns. The higher dimensional representation allows for translations, rotations, and reflections of the patterns. Constrained optimization theory is used to characterize the quasiperiodic designs based on local minima of the acoustic radiation potential and to understand how…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Automata and Applications · Diatoms and Algae Research · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
