Advances in Liquid Crystals

Advances in Liquid Crystals

Author: Glenn H. Brown

Publisher: Academic Press

Published: 2013-10-22

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 1483191362

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Advances in Liquid Crystals, Volume 4 is a collection of papers that deals with liquid crystal sciences, particularly the flow problems in liquid crystals, the effects of high pressure on liquid crystals, lyotropic and thermotropic polymeric liquid crystals, and the light-scattering properties of thermotropic liquid crystals. One paper reviews the continuum theory in flow problems in liquid crystals, presents theoretical predictions, and compares these with associated observations. High-pressure experiments in liquid crystals pave the way for discoveries involving pressure-induced mesomorphism in certain materials, suppression of mesophases, tricritical phase transitions, and re-entrant behavior. Another paper describes the types of macromolecular structures that have a propensity for mesomorphism — linear, conventional types of polymers, such as block copolymers and graft copolymers. Another paper examines the application of light scattering in fluctuations that happens during the liquid crystalline phases. The paper investigates the assumption that light is scattered by inhomogeneities in the dialectric constant of the medium it is passing through. This collection can prove useful for scientists in liquid crystals, and industrial researchers in the field of advanced chemistry and physics.


Liquid Crystal Dispersions

Liquid Crystal Dispersions

Author: Paul S Drzaic

Publisher: World Scientific

Published: 1995-09-18

Total Pages: 447

ISBN-13: 9814518123

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Polymer-dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) materials are of interest both for their potential in display technology and the fascinating science found in liquid crystals confined to small cavities. Liquid Crystal Dispersions is a comprehensive overview of the science and technology of this new class of materials. Topics covered include formation of PDLC devices, a catalog of droplet structures and transformations, device electro-optical properties, and applications. Liquid Crystal Dispersions will be of value to the nonspecialists keen on gaining an overview of this new field, as well as to specialists interested in a comprehensive review of work in this area.


Light Scattering Studies of Defects in Nematic/twist-bend Liquid Crystals and Layer Fluctuations in Free-standing Smectic Membranes

Light Scattering Studies of Defects in Nematic/twist-bend Liquid Crystals and Layer Fluctuations in Free-standing Smectic Membranes

Author: Shokir A. Pardaev

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This research described in this dissertation comprises three experimental topics and includes the development of an appropriate theoretical framework to understand the various observations in each. In the first part, we present results from angle-resolved second-harmonic light scattering measurements on three different classes of thermotropic nematic liquid crystals: polar and non-polar rodlike compounds, and a bent-core compound. We analyze the data in terms of the "flexoelectric" polarization induced by distortions of the nematic director field around topological defects known as inversion walls, which are analogous to Neel walls in magnetic spin systems and which often exhibit a closed loop morphology in nematic systems.The second part of this dissertation explores the possible existence of a helical polarization field in the nematic twist-bend (NTB) phase of dimeric liquid crystals, utilizing a similar nonlinear light scattering approach. The NTB phase is characterized by a heliconical winding of the local molecular long axis (director) with a remarkably short, nanoscale pitch. According to theoretical conjecture, a helical electric polarization field accompanies this director modulation, but, due to the short pitch, presents a significant challenge for experimental detection. Our study focuses on topological defects, classified as parabolic focal conics, in two achiral, NTB-forming liquid crystals. These defects generate distortions of the polarization field on sufficiently long (micron) lengths to enable a confirmation of the existence of polar structure. We analyze our results with a coarse-grained free energy density that combines a Landau-deGennes expansion of the polarization field, the elastic energy of a nematic, and a bilinear coupling between the two.The last part of the dissertation focuses on the layer dynamics of thin, free-standing membranes of a smectic-A liquid crystal, with a particular consideration of the surface (interfacial) parameters that control these dynamics. We utilize photon correlation spectroscopy to probe the contributions of distinct under- and overdamped processes to the membrane motion. According to hydrodynamic theory, the frequency and damping rate of underdamped layer motion should scale with scattering vector in a manner controlled by the relative magnitude of a surface elastic constant, which is associated with gradients in surface tension, as well as by the average surface tension. In addition, the damping in very thin films is predicted to be quite sensitive to the presence of an atmosphere surrounding the film. A distinct, overdamped mode, observable in sufficiently thick films, is also predicted to couple to the layer motion. We present results on these dynamical modes and their dispersion and demonstrate their consistency with the hydrodynamic theory subject to appropriate surface boundary conditions.


Light Scattering Studies of Dynamics of Bent-core Liquid Crystals

Light Scattering Studies of Dynamics of Bent-core Liquid Crystals

Author: Strahinja Stojadinovic

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 219

ISBN-13:

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Dynamical properties of the nematic and isotropic phase of several relatively new bent-core liquid crystals, as contrasted to conventional straight-core ("calamitic") liquid crystals, have been systematically studied by dynamic light scattering. Objective: Comparison of properties of bent-core nematics with straight-core nematics and search for a biaxial nematic phase due to the bent-core shape. Observations: Nematic phases are rather uncommon in bent-core compounds because nematic structure occurs only if the molecules can rotate relatively freely around their long axis, the condition apparently met in only a fraction of bent-core materials synthesized so far. The obtained results show that the elasticity to viscosity ratio for uniaxial bent-core nematics is typically two orders of magnitude lower than for straight-core nematics, due evidently to the large viscosity associated with optic axis distortions in the bent-core case. This result is independent of the normal mode of the director fluctuations probed. In one compound polarized light scattering data reveal fluctuations associated with the biaxial order parameter, occurring as a pretransitional effect on approach to the biaxial smectic-C phase. However, results on a homeotropically-aligned sample of another compound provide preliminary light scattering evidence for nematic biaxiality. Objective: To determine nature of isotropic to nematic phase transition and to measure dielectric fluctuations in the isotropic phase near the transition. Observations: The orientational order parameter fluctuations in the isotropic phase have been studied for the first time in bent-core compounds. Analogous to classic light scattering experiments performed on calamitic liquid crystals, fluctuations in nematic order in bent-core compounds exhibit a mean-field-like critical slowing down on approach to the isotropic-nematic transition from above. The fluctuations are intrinsically several orders of magnitude slower than for typical calamitics. In two related bent-core compounds, the transition is found to be weakly first-order, with the value of T NI -T* being ~3 times lower than the value typically obtained for calamitics. This reduction could be the effect of an enhanced density change at the I-N transition in the case of bent-core mesogens.


Light Scattering Near Phase Transitions

Light Scattering Near Phase Transitions

Author: Herman Z. Cummins

Publisher: North Holland

Published: 1983

Total Pages: 692

ISBN-13:

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Since the development of the laser in the early 1960's, light scattering has played an increasingly crucial role in the investigation of many types of phase transitions and the published work in this field is now widely dispersed in a large number of books and journals. A comprehensive overview of contemporary theoretical and experimental research in this field is presented here. The reviews are written by authors who have actively contributed to the developments that have taken place in both Eastern and Western countries.