Today I read a paper titled “Self-Assembly with Geometric Tiles”
The abstract is:
In this work we propose a generalization of Winfree’s abstract Tile Assembly Model (aTAM) in which tile types are assigned rigid shapes, or geometries, along each tile face.
We examine the number of distinct tile types needed to assemble shapes within this model, the temperature required for efficient assembly, and the problem of designing compact geometric faces to meet given compatibility specifications.
Our results show a dramatic decrease in the number of tile types needed to assemble $n \times n$ squares to $\Theta(\sqrt{\log n})$ at temperature 1 for the most simple model which meets a lower bound from Kolmogorov complexity, and $O(\log\log n)$ in a model in which tile aggregates must move together through obstacle free paths within the plane.
This stands in contrast to the $\Theta(\log n / \log\log n)$ tile types at temperature 2 needed in the basic aTAM.
We also provide a general method for simulating a large and computationally universal class of temperature 2 aTAM systems with geometric tiles at temperature 1.
Finally, we consider the problem of computing a set of compact geometric faces for a tile system to implement a given set of compatibility specifications.
We show a number of bounds on the complexity of geometry size needed for various classes of compatibility specifications, many of which we directly apply to our tile assembly results to achieve non-trivial reductions in geometry size.