The contactless selective manipulation of individual objects at the
microscale is powerfully enabled by acoustical tweezers based on acoustical
vortices [Baudoin et al., Sci. Adv., 5:eaav1967 (2019)]. Nevertheless, the
ability to assemble multiple objects with these tweezers has not yet been
demonstrated yet and is critical for many applications, such as tissue
engineering or microrobotics. To achieve this goal, it is necessary to overcome
a major difficulty: the ring of high intensity ensuring particles trapping at
the core of the vortex beam is repulsive for particles located outside the
trap. This prevents the assembly of multiple objects. In this paper, we show
(in the Rayleigh limit and in 2D) that this problem can be overcome by trapping
the target objects at the core of two synchronized vortices. Indeed, in this
case, the destructive interference between neighboring vortices enables to
create an attractive path between the captured objects. The present work may
pioneer particles precise assembly and patterning with multi-tweezers