Hierarchical selfassembly
Up: General concept: Convergent assembly
Hierarchical selfassembly (also convergent selfassembly) is the case when
structures get self-assembled from parts that themselves where previously self-assembled.
This implies that hierarchical selfassembly is a subform of iterative self-assembly.
(Iterative self-assembly also covers repeated additions of parts of the same size.)
Note that hierarchical selfassembly is not exclusive to thermally driven self-assembly.
Hierarchical selfassembly is also applicable to:
Experimental demonstrations
As of time of last review (2024-03) hierarchical selfassembly has been …
- … impressively demonstrated with 3D structural DNA nanotechnology.
- … demonstrated with de-novo proteins
with the large caveat that of missing termination control.
Note that terminating structures like rings or balls is not a form of termination control as defined in this wiki.
Rotation symmetry is an infinite symmetry (just like translation symmetry in a crystal) just that it covers over itself.
Hierarchical selfassembly of 3D structural DNA nanotechnology (3D-SDN)
Related
- Selfassembly level in self assembly
- complementary is: hierarchical positional assembly here
covered by page convergent assembly & assembly level in positional assembly