Computational Models of Nanoscale Self-Assembly

Course
Identifier: 
COM S 433

Offered during Fall Semester each year.

  1. Credits and contact hours: 3 credits, 3 contact hours
  2. Instructor’s or course coordinator’s name: Jack Lutz, Jim Lathrop
  3. Text book, title, author, and year: None required
  4. Other supplemental materials: None

Specific course information

  1. Brief description of the content of the course: Programming, modeling, and analysis of natural and engineered systems at the nanoscale. Topics include chemical reaction networks, strand displacement systems, models of self-assembly, biomolecular origami, and molecular robotics. Emphasis on mathematical methods of describing, simulating, programming, and assessing the computational power of such systems. Graduate credit requires a written or oral report on current research.
  2. Prerequisites or co-requisites: Minimum of C- in COM S 331 C- or permission of instructor; for graduate credit: graduate standing or permission of instructor
  3. Required, elective, or selected elective? Selected Elective

Specific goals for the course

  1. Specific outcomes of instruction: By the end of the course students should have a working knowledge (ability to solve problems with rigorously justified reasoning) of the following:
  • Biochemical reaction networks
  • Deterministic mass-action kinetics (6)
  • Stochastic mass-action kinetics
  • DNA strand replacement (6)
  • Molecular robotics
  • DNA origami
  • Tile self-assembly (2)

Brief list of topics to be covered

  • Biochemical reaction networks
  • Deterministic mass-action kinetics
  • Stochastic mass-action kinetics
  • DNA strand replacement
  • Molecular robotics
  • DNA origami
  • Tile self-assembly