We develop a complete structural framework for the Collatz dynamics based on symbolic alternation, diophantine constraints, and dissipative geometry. Critical words — symbolic sequences that maintain a near-equilibrium between the expansive effect of the transformation \ (x 3x+1\) and the contractive effect of division by 2 — are shown to possess a rigid alternating structure, uniform bounds on their expansion and contraction blocks, and a strictly negative average diophantine drift. This drift, reinforced by the analysis on the finite admissible graph on residues modulo \ (2ᵐ\), implies a universal upper bound on the length of critical words. As a consequence, every trajectory eventually exits the critical regime, enters a strictly dissipative region, and converges to the unique cycle \ (1 4 2 1\). The analysis also reveals a finite-depth fractal attractor in the symbolic plane \ ( (h, r) \), providing a unified geometric and analytic proof of the Collatz conjecture.
Franck Coppi (Tue,) studied this question.