Assembling of a few particles into a cluster commonly occurs in many systems.However,it is still challenging to precisely control particle assembling,due to the various amorphous structures induced by thermal fluctuat...Assembling of a few particles into a cluster commonly occurs in many systems.However,it is still challenging to precisely control particle assembling,due to the various amorphous structures induced by thermal fluctuations during cluster formation.Although these structures may have very different degrees of aggregation,a quantitative method is lacking to describe them,and how these structures evolve remains unclear.Therefore a significant step towards precise control of particle self-assembly is to describe and analyze various aggregation structures during cluster formation quantitatively.In this work,we are motivated to propose a method to directly count and quantitatively compare different aggregated structures.We also present several case studies to evaluate how the aggregated structures during cluster formation are affected by external controlling factors,e.g.,different interaction ranges,interaction strengths,or anisotropy of attraction.展开更多
文摘Assembling of a few particles into a cluster commonly occurs in many systems.However,it is still challenging to precisely control particle assembling,due to the various amorphous structures induced by thermal fluctuations during cluster formation.Although these structures may have very different degrees of aggregation,a quantitative method is lacking to describe them,and how these structures evolve remains unclear.Therefore a significant step towards precise control of particle self-assembly is to describe and analyze various aggregation structures during cluster formation quantitatively.In this work,we are motivated to propose a method to directly count and quantitatively compare different aggregated structures.We also present several case studies to evaluate how the aggregated structures during cluster formation are affected by external controlling factors,e.g.,different interaction ranges,interaction strengths,or anisotropy of attraction.