Abstract
Self-assembly has emerged as a paradigm for highly parallel fabrication of complex three-dimensional structures. However, there are few principles that guide a priori design, yield, and defect tolerance of self-assembling structures. We examine with experiment and theory the geometric principles that underlie self-folding of submillimeter-scale higher polyhedra from two-dimensional nets. In particular, we computationally search for nets within a large set of possibilities and then test these nets experimentally. Our main findings are that (i) compactness is a simple and effective design principle for maximizing the yield of self-folding polyhedra; and (ii) shortest paths from 2D nets to 3D polyhedra in the configuration space are important for rationalizing experimentally observed folding pathways. Our work provides a model problem amenable to experimental and theoretical analysis of design principles and pathways in self-assembly.
Keywords: microfabrication, origami, programmable matter, viral capsid
Nature uses hierarchical assembly to construct essential biomolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids and biological containers such as viral capsids. Our increased understanding of biological systems has inspired several synthetic methods of self-assembly (1). Conversely, part of the promise of synthetic self-assembly has been that it may yield essential insights into the formation of biological structure. In order to realize these ambitions, it is necessary to develop model experimental systems and theoretical analyses that make precise the analogies between natural and synthetic self-assembly. Abstraction of the essentials of complex biochemical processes is an important step in this process, and perhaps the simplest abstraction is of the geometric form of a biological structure. Two such abstractions are the Caspar–Klug (CK) theory of viral structure (2) and hydrophobic-polar (HP) lattice models for protein folding (3). The consequences of geometry alone can be striking in such models: The CK theory provides a valuable classification of virus shapes by T number, and much of the detailed architecture of compact proteins such as helices, and antiparallel and parallel sheets emerges from purely steric restrictions on long chain molecules (4). Building such geometric models is, of course, part of a long tradition in biochemistry. What is now striking is the ability to build basic geometric structures such as polyhedra in laboratory self-assembly experiments using molecules such as DNA (5–8) or 100-nm to 1-mm scale lithographically interconnected panels (9). In addition to the intellectual value of such experiments, many of the self-assembled structures realized cannot be fabricated by alternate methods, and they are of technological relevance in optics, electronics, and medicine. In order to translate these self-assembly processes from the laboratory to a manufacturing setting, there is a need to uncover rules that govern yield and defect tolerance. Several experiments, in combination with a growing body of theory, point the way to a future of algorithmic design of biomimetic devices and materials of increasing complexity (10–16).
Our focus in this work is on the role of discrete geometry in self-assembly. We present an experimental and theoretical study of surface-tension driven self-folding of the dodecahedron, icosahedron, and truncated octahedron starting from a two-dimensional template called a net. In geometry, a net is an unfolding of the polyhedron that consists of a single, simply connected, nonoverlapping polygon made up of faces of the polyhedron attached at edges (17, chap. 21). The polyhedron is constructed by folding the net at the edges according to prescribed rules. In our experiments, the nets are realized as patterned panels of side length 300 μm, connected by solder hinges. We study how the choice of initial net determines the folding pathway and yield for these polyhedra. A combinatorial explosion in the set of nets makes this study challenging. Our main finding is that compactness is a simple and effective design principle to maximize the yield of self-folding of polyhedra. We also find that shortest paths between 2D nets and the 3D polyhedron in a discrete model of the configuration space of foldings are a useful idealization of experimentally observed folding pathways. We comment on common themes with other self-assembly models at the end of this article.
Design Criterion for Synthesis by Self-Folding
Nets and Self-Folding Polyhedra.
Nets have traditionally been used to build models of polyhedra from a stiff material such as cardboard. They first appear explicitly in Dürer’s work in the 15th century (18) and have been used to build a complete set of Archimedean and Platonic solids (19, 20). Despite their importance in classical geometry, a systematic investigation of nets is quite recent and several basic questions are poorly understood (17, chap. 21–23). It is not known if every convex polyhedron has a net (21), nor are there systematic estimates of the number of nets for a given polyhedron, though the number is known for Platonic solids (22). The tetrahedron has two nets, the cube and octahedron have 11 nets each, and the dodecahedron and icosahedron have 43,380 nets each. (Strictly speaking, the calculation of ref. 22 allows overlapping nets for the dodecahedron and icosahedron, but we tabulated all 43,380 nets and found no overlap; this was independently verified in ref. 23.) We have also estimated that the truncated octahedron has approximately 2.3 million nets. Such a combinatorial explosion creates an interesting conundrum for engineering design: What criteria determine self-folding with high yield? How do we search efficiently for the “best” net within such a large set?
In our experiments, nets are used as templates for the surface-tension-driven self-folding of polyhedra on the submillimeter scale. The nets are made up of polygonal panels patterned with hinges (Fig. 1) and are fabricated using wafer scale processes such as photolithography, wet etching, and electrodeposition, as described in detail elsewhere (24). Here, we utilized metallic hinges (lead-tin solder) and panels (nickel), but it is noteworthy that elsewhere we have shown that polyhedra can be self-assembled with polymeric panels and hinges (25), suggesting that this self-assembly paradigm would apply to diverse materials. Polyhedral self-assembly occurs after patterned nets are released from the silicon substrate on which they are fabricated and heated above the melting point of the hinge material, which in the present case requires that the templates are heated in a high boiling point solvent (N-methylpyrrolidone) above the melting point of solder (183 °C). Assembly is driven by the minimization of surface tension of the liquid hinges both at the folding hinges which rotate the panels and at the locking hinges which self-align (26) and fuse the self-folding panels into place (Fig. 1 and Movie S1).
The use of liquid locking hinges at the edges of the panels is critical to enable self-assembly of higher order polyhedra with large numbers of panels, because they introduce favorable secondary interactions at the edges of the panels. As compared to solid mechanical latches utilized in earlier self-folding studies of optoelectronic structures on substrates (27), the introduction (28) of liquefiable locking hinges has lead to the facile assembly of polyhedra with high yields (9). The reason is that liquid locking hinges are deformable, and hence allow for small relative motions of the panels, thereby increasing fabrication defect tolerance. The small panel fluctuations are driven primarily by convective agitation of the solvent during heating. Our experimental methodology is also amenable to the use of alternate agitation schemes such as stirring or bubbling of an inert gas during heating. Because molten solder has a relatively high surface energy, large motions or complete separation of panels during assembly is rare. The angles between panels can be controlled by the volume of solder deposited, but panels are not programmed to fold in a particular sequence, nor are they actively controlled externally. When building polyhedra from nets, a prescription of folding rules is essential. Simple examples show that the same net may sometimes be folded into different polyhedra. Thus it is surprising that, in many of our experiments, nets self-fold with high yield into a specified 3D polyhedron.
Compactness as a Design Criterion.
The nets were rarely varied in the first experiments on self-folding polyhedra. For example, a cruciform was almost always chosen to self-fold a cube. However, a recent study of the self-folding of all 11 nets for the cube and octahedron revealed that different nets fold through different pathways and have different yield (29). In particular, it was found that compact nets had higher yield. Both metric and topological measures of compactness were used. A metric measure of compactness is the radius of gyration, Rg, defined in Eq. 1 below. A topological measure of compactness, denoted Vc, is defined as follows. A vertex shared by two faces in the net that do not share an edge is called a vertex connection, and we say that the faces are topological neighbors. Vc is defined to be the total number of distinct vertex connections in a net. For example, the reader may count that nets in Fig. 2 A–C have Vc = 2, 6, and 10, respectively. These notions of compactness are correlated but distinct.
In this work, we test compactness as a design criterion for higher polyhedra, specifically the dodecahedron, icosahedron, and truncated octahedron. The number of nets for these polyhedra is too large for a complete experimental study. Instead, we computationally search the set of all nets, choose representative nets according to compactness, and test the selected nets for self-folding in experiments.
Summary of Results
We tabulated all 43,380 nets for the dodecahedron and icosahedron, and 123,452 nets (of 2.3 million estimated nets) for the truncated octahedron, using a Monte Carlo scheme. We then chose three nets for each polyhedron: the most compact, the least compact, and the median for each of the two compactness criterion. Several nets may have the same Vc, so when choosing nets according to Vc we made the following choice: Among all maximum Vc nets, we chose the net with smallest Rg; among all minimum Vc nets, we chose the net with highest Rg; and among all nets with the median Vc, we chose the net with median Rg. Fifty samples of each of these nets were self-folded experimentally and the resulting 3D structures were graded in three categories—A, B, and C—and the yield tabulated. “A” polyhedra were defect-free, “B” had minor defects, and “C” were defective. The experiments, grading scheme, and mathematics involved are described in greater detail in Materials and Methods.
Optical and SEM images showing the photolithographically fabricated 2D panels connected by solder hinges and representative self-folded 3D structures for all three polyhedra for both compactness criteria are shown in Fig. 2. Histograms of the yield are shown in Fig. 3. The yield is tabulated in Tables S1 and S2. We observe that both measures of compactness determine yield for these higher polyhedra just as for the cube and octahedron. Of the two measures, Vc is a better predictor. For the dodecahedron, the percentage of A-grade self-folded polyhedra from nets with the maximum Vc is more than five times that from nets with the lowest Rg, Rg = 693.7 μm. In addition, almost 80% of the maximum Vc samples are of grade A and B as compared with about 20% for the minimum Rg samples. For the truncated octahedron, the percentage of grade-A self-folded polyhedra from nets with the maximum Vc net is two times that of A-grade samples for minimum Rg, Rg = 795 μm. Moreover, almost 60% of the maximum Vc samples are of grade A and B as compared with about 30% for the minimum Rg samples. In contrast with these polyhedra, we were unable to fold any of the icosahedral nets. However, it is still the case that the more compact nets are less malformed than the others. Typical optical and SEM images for the icosahedron are shown in Fig. 2. SEM images of pathways are shown in Figs. S1 and S2.
There are 21 dodecahedron nets that have maximal Vc and we found four truncated octahedron nets that have maximal Vc (Fig. S3). As we have remarked above, the maximum Vc nets in Figs. 2 and 3 were chosen to have the lowest Rg among all nets with the same Vc. A finer investigation of maximum Vc nets was carried out in a second round of experiments. We repeated the self-folding experiments with 50 samples and the same grading scheme for four new dodecahedron nets (nets denoted 2, 5, 17, and 21 from Fig. S3A) and all four high Vc truncated octahedron nets (Fig. S3B). Images for these experiments are presented in Fig. 4 and histograms for the yield in Fig. 5. The yield is tabulated in Tables S3 and S4. We find again that the compact nets (as measured by low Rg now) have higher yield. We note that there is one common net (Fig. 2I and Fig. 4H for truncated octahedra). The yields of A-grade polyhedra from this net in two 50-sample experiments done months apart was 24% and 30%. This variation in the yield corresponds to a standard deviation of 4.2% in the plots of Figs. 3 and 5 and is consistent with the variation in our experiments.
Discussion
Algorithmic Design for Self-Assembly.
We have found that the optimality criterion best suited to our experiments is to first maximize Vc and then minimize Rg. The superior performance of nets satisfying this criterion illustrates the importance of an algorithmic search. Of 123,452 truncated octahedron nets found, only four had Vc = 12. In contrast, the expected Vc for a random net chosen uniformly is approximately seven. Similarly, of the 43,380 dodecahedron nets, only 21 had Vc = 10 and the expected Vc is approximately six. For these polyhedra, Fig. 3 shows that the difference in yield between an optimal net and a uniformly chosen random net is dramatic.
Vertex Connections and Error-Correction.
The effectiveness of compactness as a design criterion stems from its influence on the self-folding pathway. In experiments, we observe that topological compactness has two main consequences: (i) error correction at edges, and (ii) error correction in the pathway through partially rigid intermediates.
Outer panels are observed to fold before inner panels. When two outer panels are joined at a vertex connection, they begin by folding independently about their respective folding hinges. When the outer panels have folded by approximately the dihedral angle, the locking hinges meet and fuse. The liquid hinges then allow small readjustment so that the panels meet at the correct dihedral angles.
Pathways that start with compact nets have intermediates that are more rigid. We say a mechanical linkage of panels is rigid if it cannot be deformed continuously while keeping each panel rigid. For example, a linkage of two square panels joined at a hinge is not rigid, but a linkage of three square panels joined at 90° at a corner is rigid. Dodecahedra and truncated octahedra that self-fold successfully from compact nets typically form rigid modules that mate with one another (Movie S1). Similar rigid intermediates are seen for the cube (29) (Fig. S2). In contrast, the pathway for the low Vc nets consists of more steps and involves the movement of long, floppy segments consisting of several panels (Fig. S1). Misalignment errors propagate during the motion of these segments. The absence of rigidity is a particular problem for the icosahedron. The icosahedron has 12 symmetric five-valent vertices and these must form as the net folds. Models of the pathways for the icosahedra show that even though high Vc nets eventually form symmetric halves that mate, neither these halves nor the intermediates that lead to them have rigid corners (Fig. S4). Intermediates have partially formed corners with three-, four-, or five-valent vertices. These corners are not rigid and can get misaligned as the net self-folds, even for the most compact nets.
Modeling Folding Pathways.
In experiments, self-folding is a continuous transformation of a net into a polyhedron. However, it is useful to model self-folding as a discrete sequence of elementary steps, each of which corresponds to the gluing of locking hinges at vertex connections. First note that, to obtain a net from a convex polyhedron, we may cut it apart in a sequence of steps. At each step, we pick a face and cut along its edges until it is free to rotate and then rotate it to lie flat, as illustrated for the cube in Fig. 6B. In reverse, we may fold a net into a convex polyhedron by a process we call gluing at vertex connections: At each step, (i) a vertex connection on the boundary is chosen, and (ii) all faces linked by this vertex connection are glued at the locking hinges that meet at the chosen vertex connection. When gluing locking hinges, faces are only allowed to rotate rigidly through the dihedral angle about the folding hinges that meet at the vertex connection. If these rotations force other edges to meet, these are also glued. At each step of this process, new vertex connections may form, which may be used as new vertices for gluing. For all nets we consider, this procedure transforms the net into the polyhedron through a sequence of nonintersecting, partially folded intermediates (Fig. S4). We say that the discrete configuration space consists of all such intermediates, including the net and polyhedron.
The discrete configuration space is a graph. Each node in the graph corresponds to an intermediate, and its neighbors are intermediates to which it can be folded or unfolded. We define a distance between two intermediates in Eq. 1 below. This distance is defined using the geometric constraint that rotations about the folding hinges are required to fold or unfold one intermediate to another. Shortest paths between 2D nets and the 3D polyhedron are called geodesics.
The discrete configuration space and geodesics for the cube are illustrated in Fig. 7. An interesting feature is that the geodesics pass through only a small subset of the set of possible intermediates. For example, in row three of Fig. 7, we see that two dominant intermediates (states 1 and 5) “focus” the geodesics. State 5 consists of two rigid mating halves and three of the nets with maximum Vc (nets 2, 5, 9, with Vc = 4) fold through this intermediate. The configuration space of foldings is much larger for the dodecahedron and truncated octahedron and cannot be represented as simply as Fig. 7. However, we have computed geodesics that originate at the nets chosen in our experiments. In particular, for the compact nets (Figs. 2 C and F and 4 A–D for the dodecahedron, and Figs. 2 I and L and 4 E–H for the truncated octahedron), we find that all computed geodesics pass through two dominant intermediates consisting of two mating half-dodecahedron or half-truncated octahedron (Fig. S4 A and B). These computed geodesic pathways may be compared visually with the experimentally observed folding pathways. When making this comparison, we focus on the later intermediates because, in the discrete model, folding occurs at one vertex at a time, whereas in experiments, outer panels can fold simultaneously. So it is only in the later stages that we can compare the model and experiment. In each case, we find that the dominant intermediates in the theoretically computed geodesics are typically also seen in experimentally observed pathways starting at the same net.
Some Common Themes in Self-Assembly.
Our main objective in this work is algorithmic design to maximize yield and understand the pathways of self-folding. However, some central underlying questions arise in other mathematical models of self-assembly: What is the geometry of the configuration space of a self-assembling system? How can it be explored with experiment and computation? What are the pathways of assembly? Two examples that motivated us are compared with self-folding polyhedra in Fig. 6. A common feature shared by folding of HP chains on a lattice and self-folding a net through vertex connections is that in both cases the process of folding is driven by the formation of secondary links between topological neighbors. A common feature of self-folding pathways for nets and viral capsid assembly is that both can be modeled by similar evolutions of a two-color graph coloring on the polyhedron as explained in Fig. 6. In all three models, the configuration space is a graph and self-assembly may be modeled as a path on this graph between two special states: from the flat HP string, the net, and the empty polyhedral shell to an accessible compact string, the polyhedron, and the filled polyhedral shell. The structure of the configuration space is determined by an HP string (for the HP model) or polyhedron (for folding or capsid assembly). An explicit description (as in Fig. 7) is only possible in very small systems. The size of the configuration space explodes combinatorially as the length of the HP string grows or as the size of the polyhedron increases. A great deal of further computation on larger systems is necessary to establish whether the geometry of the configuration space in these examples shares some essential structure. The concentration of geodesics on a few dominant intermediates is a suggestive link; a similar collapse from all intermediates into a few dominant intermediates has also been observed for the assembly of viral capsids (30).
Conclusions
Our goal was to elucidate the geometric principles that underlie self-folding of polyhedron from nets. We have verified that compactness is an effective design criterion for several polyhedra by computationally exploring a large set of possible nets and testing selected nets experimentally. We also introduced a discrete configuration space of foldings and found that the geodesic between the 2D net and 3D polyhedron is a useful idealization of experimentally observed pathways.
These findings suggest further studies of self-folding in order to build more complex shapes and to minimize errors through the loss of rigidity. Although the number of nets is large for the polyhedra we considered, it was still amenable to an exhaustive search, which ceases to be the case for more complex polyhedra such as models for viral capsids. In seeking nets for realistic virus shapes, we have encountered polyhedra with approximately 1030 spanning trees (a number obtained from Kirchhoff’s matrix tree theorem). It is impossible to find an optimal net and geodesics by an exhaustive search for such polyhedra, and suitable randomized algorithms must be used instead. On the experimental side, the ability to observe folding pathways provides additional insight into self-assembly. In combination, these techniques serve as a template for the emerging area of algorithmic design of self-assembly.
Materials and Methods
Experiments.
Regular polyhedra were fabricated using a previously established process that enabled us to fabricate 3D polyhedra from 2D nets (24). Nets were chosen according to an algorithm described below. Fifty samples of each net were self-folded in the experiments. We used Autodesk AutoCAD to draw nets and then printed them on transparent sheets to make photomasks. Sides of a panel measured 300 μm, with two adjacent panels spaced apart by a width equal to 10% of the panel edge length. Optical lithography was used to develop features on a silicon wafer, and nickel and solder were electrodeposited on the panels and hinges, respectively. All Vc and Rg nets for a fixed polyhedron were processed across the same wafer with a uniform random distribution of nets to minimize processing variations during lithography. We released the nets from the substrate with nickel panels connected with solder hinges and heated the free-standing structures until they folded. All the nets for a fixed polyhedra were self-folded in close proximity in order to minimize the effect of variation in temperature and fluidic agitation. After self-folding, the solution was allowed to cool gradually. The molten solder solidified and the polyhedra were held robustly in place. Self-folded 3D structures realized from each net were carefully examined under an optical microscope and graded into three categories—A, B, and C. Grade-A polyhedra had no discernible defects when examined under an optical microscope. The dihedral angles were well formed (116.56° for dodecahedra, 125.27° for square and hexagonal panels of truncated octahedra, and 109.47° for two hexagonal panels of truncated octahedra). Grade-B polyhedra had the desired shapes but had faces that were misaligned with a maximum tolerance of 20° misalignment. Samples with defects more severe than 20° misalignment were graded as C polyhedra.
Mathematical Methods.
Let Ω be a polygon in . The center of mass (, ) and the radius of gyration Rg of Ω are given by the area integrals
[1] |
We used a Monte Carlo scheme to generate random spanning trees and tabulate nets for each polyhedron. The main steps were as follows: (i) random spanning trees of the face-edge graph were found as follows. Independent weights uniformly distributed in (0,1) were assigned to the edges of the face-edge graph and a minimum weight spanning tree was found using either Kruskal’s or Prim’s algorithm. (ii) A traverse order of the spanning tree was chosen at random. A net was generated in this traverse order by linking each face with its connected neighbors using the face-edge graph. (iii) The planar boundary of the net was generated as a list of vertices. Because all edge lengths are equal here, the boundary was represented as a list of angles. Two such lists were compared to determine congruence (accounting for reflections and rotations). The main bottleneck in the algorithm is congruence testing. In practice, comparison of a list of angles is inefficient and hash tables were used. (iv) For the icosahedron and dodecahedron, the algorithm was run until all 43,380 nets had been found and we were satisfied that the algorithm did not generate any spurious nets. For the truncated octahedron, the algorithm was run until 123,452 nets had been found (an arbitrary number based on limitations on computer time). The Monte Carlo algorithm was also tested on the cube and octahedron and two smaller regular polyhedron (the pentagonal dipyramid and a square antiprism). These polyhedra have a smaller number of nets (98 and 231, respectively) intermediate between the cube (11) and the dodecahedron (43,380). The algorithm also yields a rough estimate of the total number of nets as follows: Let N denote the total number of nets, r = 1 - 1/N and μn the expected number of nets found after step n. Under the assumption that all nets are equally likely, μn = N(1 - rn) and this may be used to estimate N by linear regression. A posteriori we found that the assumption that all nets are equally likely in a trial is not valid, nevertheless the assumption was approximately valid, and the estimator predicts accurate answers for the Platonic solids and dipyramid and antiprism. Based on this assumption, we estimate that the truncated octahedron has roughly 2.3 million nets.
When gluing at vertex connections, an intermediate is transformed to its neighbors through a sequence of rotations about folding hinges that meet at the vertex connection. For example, to transform intermediate 11, row 1 to intermediate 10, row 2 in Fig. 7A, we must rotate two panels one after the other by 90°. More formally, an intermediate I is folded into a neighbor J through a chain of states (S0,S1,…,Sk), S0 = I, Sk = J each of which differ by a single rotation about a folding hinge. We first define the distance between two states Sj and Sj+1 as follows. Assume Sj is transformed to Sj+1 by a rotation about a folding hinge through an angle θ. The folding hinge separates the starting configuration Sj into two connected domains denoted Ω1 and Ω2. If the domain Ωi rotates through an angle θi about the folding hinge, each point in Ωi at a distance r from the axis travels on a circular arc of length rθi. The total squared distance traveled by Ωi is then , where Ii is the second moment of area of the domain Ωi about the folding hinge. We minimize the total distance subject to the constraint θ1 + θ2 = θ to obtain d2(Sj,Sj+1) = (I1I2/(I1 + I2))θ2. The distance between two intermediates I and J in the configuration space is then defined to be
[2] |
where the minimum is taken over all sequences of admissible rotations (S0,S1,…,Sk), S0 = I, Sk = J that transform I into J.
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgments.
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grants Division of Mathematical Sciences 0748482, Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (EFRI) 1022638, and EFRI 1022730.
Footnotes
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1110857108/-/DCSupplemental.
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