Tiling with Rods

This entry is part 49 of 71 in the series Durtles Problems of the Weeks
Problem of the Week #49: Monday December 11th, 2023
As before, these problems are the results of me following my curiosity, and I make no promises regarding the topics, difficulty, solvability of these problems.
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This problem is inspired by this twitter post.

The original problem asks for a combination of 1×2 and 1×3 rods that can tile a 5×5 square. Tiling problems have a tendency to get complicated quickly, so let’s start small.

a). How many ways are there to tile a 3×3 square using 1×2 or 1×3 rods?

A 3x3 square tiled with 3 of 1x2 rods and 1 of 1x3 rod.

b). How many ways are there to tile a 4×4 square using only 1×2 rods?

A 4x4 square tiled with 8 of 1x2 rods

c). How many ways are there to tile a 4×4 square using 1×2 and 1×3 rods (at least one of each)?

A 4x4 square tiled using 5 1x2 rods and 2 1x3 rods

d). How many ways are there to tile a 4×4 square using 1×2, 1×3, and 1×4 rods (at least one of each)?

A 4x4 square tiled with 1 1x4 rod, 2 1x3 rods, and 3 1x2 rods.

e). How many ways are there to tile a 4×4 square using rods of any sizes (1xn)?

f). How many combinations of different sized rods are there for tiling the 5×5 square?  For example, the figure for part d) uses this combination of rods: 1 of 1×4, 2 of 1×3, and 3 of 1×4.

g). How many ways are there to tile a 5×5 square using rods of any sizes?

h). Share your own problem inspired by this one.

i). Give one of these questions to a friend/colleague/student/family member to start a mathematical discussion.

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