PhDSupervision:Dhananjay Ipparthi
From IridiaWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Personal Information
Name: Dhananjay Ipparthi
Date of arrival in Brussels: 08th February, 2012
Home address: Rue des Vierges 58, 1000 Bruxelles
Telephone number: +32 483 382 207
Milestones
- Three papers
- Thesis
Project pages
Study of yield predictions of a self-assembling system - extended
Conformational Switching
Dynamics of self-assembly
Dipole words
Parallel self-assembling systems review paper
Papers in progress
Updated August 17, 2016
- Yield Predictions for a Model of Homogeneous Parallel Aggregation
- Authors: Dhananjay Ipparthi, Andrew Winslow, Metin Sitti, Marco Dorigo, Massimo Mastrangeli.
- Target journal: Soft Matter
- Synopsis: Statistics to compare model and physical experiments.
- Project page: Theory of incompatible substructure problem
- Forecast submission: March 15, 2017
- Velocities of 2D constrained orbitally shaken particles are Rayleigh distributed
- Authors: Dhananjay Ipparthi, Tijmen Hageman, Nicolas Cambier, Metin Sitti, Marco Dorigo, Leon Abelmann and Massimo Mastrangeli
- Target journal: Advanced Physics Letters
- Synopsis: Experimental evidence that velocities of components constrained in 2D that are orbitally shaken are Rayleigh distributed
- Project page: Dynamics of self-assembly
- Forecast submission: March 31, 2017
- 1, 2 and 3 order Chi-distribution
- Authors: Tijmen Hageman, Dhananjay Ipparthi, Marc Pichel, Per Arvid Loethman, Marco Dorigo, Massimo Mastrangeli and Leon Abelmann
- Target journal: TBD
- Synopsis: The velocity distribution of 1 particle shaken in 1D, 2D and 3D are respectively Gaussian, Rayleigh and Maxwell-Boltzman distributed. That is, their velocity distributions are nth order of Chi.
- Forecast submission: April 30, 2017
- Solutions to the incompatible substructures problem in macroscale systems
- Authors: Dhananjay Ipparthi, Andrew Winslow, Massimo Mastrangeli and Marco Dorigo
- Target journal:
- Synopsis: Presentation of the different approaches to the incompatible substurcture problem: modifying geometry, modifying bonding rules, conformational switching, high inertia particles, partitioning the container and self-assembly.
- Project pages: Conformational Switching, Use of a external agent to break incompatible substructures
- Missing: Conformational switching design still not working
- Forecast submission: July 31, 2017 (it will include parts of PPSN 2015 paper and parts of Theoretical Computer Science 2015 paper)
- Review of macroscale parallel self-assembling systems - Not sure it will be done
- Authors: Dhananjay Ipparthi, Massimo Mastrangeli and Marco Dorigo
- Target journal: Micromachines: Special Issue on Building by Self-Assembly
- Synopsis: An in-depth review of macroscale parallel self-assembling systems. Summaries, categorisations and differentiations of the various works till date. Provide open problems.
- Project page: Parallel self-assembling systems review paper
Academic Activities
17th February - 20th April, 2016
- Setup experiment workspace
- Installed shaker + universal platform
- Cut out containers
- Installed lighting system
- Installed and calibrated video tracking system
- Conducted ~ 1100 trials for extended yield predictions paper
- Modified master equation based simulation in order to collect relevant data
- Plotted model vs. physical experiment data
- Plotted possible number of combination vs. observed combinations data
- Complete revision of the conformational switching design --- pendulum based
- 3 iteration of the pendulum design
- Random shaker design and fabrication
- Preliminary experiments with high inertia particles
- Designed and fabricated jib for shaking with periodic kicks
- Preliminary work on theoretical study on homogeneous set of components
- Designed and fabricated container with no walls
- Conducted preliminary tests
- Test results not particularly promising
- Preliminary setup of dynamic self-assembly system
8th February - 16th February, 2016
- Presented my work to the "Programmable self-assembly subgroup" on the 11th of February. Metin attended that presentation. The group expressed interest in one of the results presented in "A geometrical approach to the incompatible substructure problem in parallel self-assembly". The wanted to know why the 90 deg component experiments resulted in a high yield. I told the group that we suspect that symmetry and the high probability of forming pairs could be the reason for the high yield. I added that we would be studying this phenomenon in detail using video tracking in our upcoming work on the extended yield prediction paper. The group also had some input for the issues I have with regard to the conformational switching work.
- Increased the shielding of conformational switching components. The increased shielding seems to reduce the local effects of magnets in the vicinity.
- Finished designing the jig that we will use to create "random kicks" during orbital shaking. I will be meeting the in-house production engineer this afternoon before getting it fabricated.
- The shaker has not yet arrived. The secretary here (Janina) says we would have to wait for a few more weeks.