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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 132(15): 158102, 2024 Apr 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38682980

RESUMEN

Electrophoresis is the motion of particles relative to a surrounding fluid driven by a uniform electric field. In conventional electrophoresis, the electrophoretic velocity grows linearly with the applied field. Nonlinear effects with a quadratic speed vs field dependence are gaining research interest since an alternating current field could drive them. Here, we report on the giant nonlinearity of electrophoresis in a nematic liquid crystal in which the speed grows with the fourth and sixth powers of the electric field. The mechanism is attributed to the shear thinning of the nematic environment induced by the moving colloid. The observed giant nonlinear effect dramatically enhances the efficiency of electrophoretic transport.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 21(24): 13078-13089, 2019 Jun 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31168534

RESUMEN

We report dynamic light scattering measurements of the orientational (Frank) elastic constants and associated viscosities among a homologous series of a liquid crystalline dimer, trimer, and tetramer exhibiting a uniaxial nematic (N) to twist-bend nematic (NTB) phase transition. The elastic constants for director splay (K11), twist (K22) and bend (K33) exhibit the relations K11 > K22 > K33 and K11/K22 > 2 over the bulk of the N phase. Their behavior near the N-NTB transition shows dependency on the parity of the number (n) of the rigid mesomorphic units in the flexible n-mers. Namely, the bend constant K33 in the dimer and tetramer turns upward and starts increasing close to the transition, following a monotonic decrease through most of the N phases. In contrast, K33 for the trimer flattens off just above the transition and shows no pretransitional enhancement. The twist constant K22 increases pretransitionally in both even and odd n-mers, but more weakly so in the trimer, while K11 increases steadily on cooling without evidence of pretransitional behavior in any n-mer. The viscosities associated with pure splay, twist-dominated twist-bend, and pure bend fluctuations in the N phase are comparable in magnitude to those of rod-like monomers. All three viscosities increase with decreasing temperature, but the bend viscosity in particular grows sharply near the N-NTB transition. The N-NTB pretransitional behavior is shown to be in qualitative agreement with the predictions of a coarse-grained theory, which models the NTB phase as a "pseudo-layered" structure with the symmetry (but not the mass density wave) of a smectic-A* phase.

3.
Liq Cryst ; 50(1): 181-190, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37293249

RESUMEN

Polarizing microscopy brought about many advancements in the science of liquid crystals and other soft materials, including those of biological origin. Recent developments in optics and computer-based analysis enabled a new generation of quantitative polarizing microscopy which produces spatial maps of the optic axis. Unfortunately, most of the available approaches require a long acquisition time of multiple images which are then analyzed to produce the map. We describe a polychromatic polarizing microscope, which allows one to map the patterns of the optical axis in a single-shot exposure, thus enabling a fast temporal resolution. We present a comparative analysis of the new microscope with alternative techniques such as a conventional polarizing optical microscope and MicroImager of Hinds Instruments.

4.
Phys Rev E ; 106(2-1): 024702, 2022 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36109979

RESUMEN

Unique electro-optical properties of the oblique helicoidal cholesteric (Ch_{OH}) stem from its heliconical director structure. An applied electric field preserves the single-harmonic modulation of the director while tuning the Ch_{OH} period and the corresponding Bragg-peak wavelength within a broad spectral range. We use the response of Ch_{OH} to the electric field to measure the elastic constants of twist K_{22} and bend K_{33} directly in the cholesteric phase. The temperature dependencies of K_{22} and K_{33} allow us to determine the range of the electric tunability of the Ch_{OH} pitch and the heliconical angle. The data are important for understanding how molecular composition and chirality influence macroscopic elastic properties of the chiral liquid crystals and for the development of Ch_{OH}-based optical devices.

5.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 3932, 2022 Jul 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35798735

RESUMEN

Surface interactions are responsible for many properties of condensed matter, ranging from crystal faceting to the kinetics of phase transitions. Usually, these interactions are polar along the normal to the interface and apolar within the interface. Here we demonstrate that polar in-plane surface interactions of a ferroelectric nematic NF produce polar monodomains in micron-thin planar cells and stripes of an alternating electric polarization, separated by [Formula: see text] domain walls, in thicker slabs. The surface polarity binds together pairs of these walls, yielding a total polarization rotation by [Formula: see text]. The polar contribution to the total surface anchoring strength is on the order of 10%. The domain walls involve splay, bend, and twist of the polarization. The structure suggests that the splay elastic constant is larger than the bend modulus. The [Formula: see text] pairs resemble domain walls in cosmology models with biased vacuums and ferromagnets in an external magnetic field.

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