In geometry, a tile substitution is a method for constructing highly ordered tilings. Most importantly, some tile substitutions generate aperiodic tilings, which are tilings whose prototiles do not admit any tiling with translational symmetry. The most famous of these are the Penrose tilings. Substitution tilings are special cases of finite subdivision rules, which do not require the tiles to be geometrically rigid.
Introduction
A tile substitution is described by a set of prototiles , an expanding map and a dissection rule showing how to dissect the expanded prototiles to form copies of some prototiles. Intuitively, higher and higher iterations of tile substitution produce a tiling of the plane called a substitution tiling. Some substitution tilings are periodic, defined as having translational symmetry. Every substitution tiling can be "enforced by matching rules"—that is, there exist a set of marked tiles that can only form exactly the substitution tilings generated by the system. The tilings by these marked tiles are necessarily aperiodic. A simple example that produces a periodic tiling has only one prototile, namely a square:
By iterating this tile substitution, larger and larger regions of the plane are covered with a square grid. A more sophisticated example with two prototiles is shown below, with the two steps of blowing up and dissecting merged into one step.
In 1973 and 1974, Roger Penrose discovered a family of aperiodic tilings, now called Penrose tilings. The first description was given in terms of 'matching rules' treating the prototiles as jigsaw puzzle pieces. The proof that copies of these prototiles can be put together to form a tiling of the plane, but cannot do so periodically, uses a construction that can be cast as a substitution tiling of the prototiles. In 1977 Robert Ammann discovered a number of sets of aperiodic prototiles, i.e., prototiles with matching rules forcing nonperiodic tilings; in particular, he rediscovered Penrose's first example. This work gave an impact to scientists working in crystallography, eventually leading to the discovery of quasicrystals. In turn, the interest in quasicrystals led to the discovery of several well-ordered aperiodic tilings. Many of them can be easily described as substitution tilings.
Mathematical definition
We will consider regions in that are well-behaved, in the sense that a region is a nonempty compact subset that is the closure of its interior. We take a set of regions as prototiles. A placement of a prototile is a pair where is an isometry of. The image is called the placement's region. A tiling T is a set of prototile placements whose regions have pairwise disjoint interiors. We say that the tiling T is a tiling of W where W is the union of the regions of the placements in T. A tile substitution is often loosely defined in the literature. A precise definition is as follows. A tile substitutionwith respect to the prototiles P is a pair, where is a linear map, all of whose eigenvalues are larger than one in modulus, together with a substitution rule that maps each to a tiling of. The substitution rule induces a map from any tiling T of a region W to a tiling of, defined by Note, that the prototiles can be deduced from the tile substitution. Therefore it is not necessary to include them in the tile substitution. Every tiling of, where any finite part of it is congruent to a subset of some is called a substitution tiling.