Quasicrystalline material contained, for twenty five years, the
most fundamental unsolved structural problem in condensed matter
physics. Quasicrystals' 2D tiles in 3D superclusters compiles
further illustrations of the solution proposed in Quasicrystals -
and quasi drivers. "This is new...and interesting." Reviews scatter
widely as is expected for novel theories. The structural driving
force is the icosahedral subcluster. Agglomerations 'rapidly
solidify' into clusters and superclusters. The icosahedra share
edges that outline 2D tiles. The tiles close the surface of a
regular dodecahedron. In 3D, the tiles become pseudo space filling.
The superclusters are supertiles that 'stretch' and 'force the
border'. As in the diffraction pattern, the periodicity on the
superclusters is 'logarithmic.' In this geometry, the tiles,
clusters and superclusters are uniquely oriented. New physical
effects became apparent from the simulation of diffraction
patterns: Angular Filtering that is responsible for the sharp
diffraction; a Compromise Spacing Effect that determines
dimensions; Logarithmically Periodic electronic band structures and
dispersion curves, etc. Quasi science? Referees who can't answer
rebuttals are zero, hence this book. The internet is free...
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