The dynamics of swimming bacteria depend on the properties of their habitat media. Recently it is shown that the motion of swimming bacteria dispersed directly in a non-toxic water-based lyotropic chromonic liquid crystal can be controlled by the director field of the liquid crystal. Here, we investigate whether the macroscopic polar order of a ferroelectric nematic liquid crystal (N) can be recognized by bacteria B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
October 2024
Organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) have emerged as attractive devices for bioelectronics, wearable electronics, soft robotics, and energy storage devices. The electrolyte, being a fundamental component of OECTs, plays a crucial role in their performance. Recently, it has been demonstrated that ionic liquid crystal elastomers (iLCEs) can be used as a solid electrolyte for OECTs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFerroelectric nematic liquid crystals are fluids exhibiting spontaneous electric polarization, which is coupled to their long range orientational order. Due to their inherent property of making bound and surface charges, the free surface of ferroelectric nematics becomes unstable in electric fields. Here we show that ferroelectric liquid bridges between two electrode plates undergo distinct interfacial instabilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe recently discovered ferroelectric nematic (N_{F}) liquid crystals (LC) have been reported to show an extraordinarily large value of the real part of the dielectric constant (ϵ^{'}>10^{3}) at low frequencies. However, it was argued by Clark et al. in Phys.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe layered liquid crystalline phases formed by DNA molecules, which include rigid and flexible segments ("gapped DNA"), enable the study of both end-to-end stacking and side-to-side (helix-to-helix) lateral interactions, forming a model system to study such interactions at physiologically relevant DNA and ion concentrations. The observed layer structure exhibits long-range interlayer and in-layer positional correlations. In particular, the in-layer order has implications for DNA condensation, as it reflects whether these normally repulsive interactions become attractive under certain ionic conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFreestanding slender fluid filaments of room-temperature ferroelectric nematic liquid crystals are described. They are stabilized either by internal electric fields of bound charges formed due to polarization splay or by external voltage applied between suspending wires. The phenomenon is similar to those observed in dielectric fluids, such as deionized water, except that in ferroelectric nematic materials the voltages required are three orders of magnitudes smaller and the aspect ratio is much higher.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies of sessile droplets and fluid bridges of a ferroelectric nematic liquid crystal in externally applied electric fields are presented. It is found that above a threshold, the interface of the fluid with air undergoes a fingering instability or ramification, resembling to Rayleigh-type instability observed in charged droplets in electric fields or circular drop-type instabilities observed in ferromagnetic liquids in magnetic field. The frequency dependence of the threshold voltage was determined in various geometries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPositionally ordered bilayer liquid crystalline nanostructures formed by gapped DNA (GDNA) constructs provide a practical window into DNA-DNA interactions at physiologically relevant DNA concentrations; concentrations several orders of magnitude greater than those in commonly used biophysical assays. The bilayer structure of these states of matter is stabilized by end-to-end base stacking interactions; moreover, such interactions also promote in-plane positional ordering of duplexes that are separated from each other by less than twice the duplex diameter. The end-to-end stacked as well as in-plane ordered duplexes exhibit distinct signatures when studied via small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe isotropic to ferroelectric nematic liquid transition was theoretically studied over one hundred years ago, but its experimental studies are rare. Here we present experimental results and theoretical considerations of novel electromechanical effects of ferroelectric nematic liquid crystal droplets coexisting with the isotropic melt. We find that the droplets have flat pancake-like shapes that are thinner than the sample thickness as long as there is room to increase the lateral droplet size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA thermal gradient-induced circular motion of particles placed on ferroelectric nematic liquid crystal sessile drops is demonstrated and explained. Unlike hurricanes and tornadoes that are the prime examples for thermal motors and where turbulent flows are apparent, here the texture without tracer particles appears completely steady indicating laminar flow. We provide a simple model showing that the tangential arrangement of the ferroelectric polarization combined with the vertical thermal gradient and the pyroelectricity of the fluid drives the rotation of the tracer particles that become electrically charged in the fluid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding the origin of structural ordering in supercooled liquid gallium (Ga) has been a great scientific quest in the past decades. Here, reflective polarized optical microscopy on Ga sandwiched between glasses treated with rubbed polymers reveals the onset of an anisotropic reflection at 120 °C that increases on cooling and persists down to room temperature or below. The polymer rubbing usually aligns the director of thermotropic liquid crystals (LCs) parallel to the rubbing direction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe first study of the flexo-ionic effect, i.e., mechanical deformation-induced electric signal, of the recently discovered ionic liquid crystal elastomers (iLCEs) is reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough its mesomorphic properties have been studied for many years, only recently has the molecule of life begun to reveal the true range of its rich liquid crystalline behavior. End-to-end interactions between concentrated, ultrashort DNA duplexes-driving the self-assembly of aggregates that organize into liquid crystal phases-and the incorporation of flexible single-stranded "gaps" in otherwise fully paired duplexes-producing clear evidence of an elementary lamellar (smectic-A) phase in DNA solutions-are two exciting developments that have opened avenues for discovery. Here, we report on a wider investigation of the nature and temperature dependence of smectic ordering in concentrated solutions of various "gapped" DNA (GDNA) constructs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
January 2021
Nematic liquid crystals of achiral molecules or racemic mixtures of chiral ones form flat films when suspended in submillimeter size grids and submerged under water. Recently, it has been shown (Popov et al., 2017) that films of nematic liquid crystals doped with chiral molecules adopt biconvex lens shapes underwater.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present article entails the generation of flexoelectricity during cantilever bending of a solid polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM), composed of poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) precursor and ionic liquid (hexylmethylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate). The effects of thiosiloxane modification of PEGDA precursor on glass transition, ionic conductivity, and flexoelectric performance have been explored as a function of PEM composition. The glass transition temperature () of the PEM declines with increasing thiosiloxane amount in the PEGDA co-network, while the ionic conductivity improves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreparation and low voltage induced bending (converse flexoelectricity) of crosslinked poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA), modified with thiosiloxane (TS) and ionic liquid (1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate) (IL) are reported. In between 2µm PEDOT:PSS electrodes at 1 V, it provides durable (95% retention under 5000 cycles) and relatively fast (2 s switching time) actuation with the second largest strain observed so far in ionic electro-active polymers (iEAPs). In between 40 nm gold electrodes under 8 V DC voltage, the film can be completely curled up (270° bending angle) with 6% strain that, to the best of the knowledge, is unpreceded among iEAPs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe range of possible morphologies for bent-core B4 phase liquid crystals has recently expanded from helical nanofilaments (HNFs) and modulated HNFs to dual modulated HNFs, helical microfilaments, and heliconical-layered nanocylinders. These new morphologies are observed when one or both aliphatic side chains contain a chiral center. Here, the following questions are addressed: which of these two chiral centers controls the handedness (helicity) and which morphology of the nanofilaments is formed by bent-core liquid crystals with tris-biphenyl diester core flanked by two chiral 2-octyloxy side chains? The combined results reveal that the longer arm of these nonsymmetric bent-core liquid crystals controls the handedness of the resulting dual modulated HNFs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmart viscoelastic materials that respond to specific stimuli are one of the most attractive classes of materials important to future technologies, such as on-demand switchable adhesion technologies, actuators, molecular clutches, and nano-/microscopic mass transporters. Recently it was found that through a special solid-liquid transition, rheological properties can exhibit significant changes, thus providing suitable smart viscoelastic materials. However, designing materials with such a property is complex, and forward and backward switching times are usually long.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper describes the preparation, physical properties, and electric bending actuation of a new class of active materials-ionic liquid crystal elastomers (iLCEs). It is demonstrated that iLCEs can be actuated by low-frequency AC or DC voltages of less than 1 V. The bending strains of the unoptimized first iLCEs are already comparable to the well-developed ionic electroactive polymers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe 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 (N) phase transition. The elastic constants for director splay (K), twist (K) and bend (K) exhibit the relations K > K > K and K/K > 2 over the bulk of the N phase. Their behavior near the N-N transition shows dependency on the parity of the number (n) of the rigid mesomorphic units in the flexible n-mers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA simple process to clad conventional monofilament fibers with low-molecular-weight liquid crystals (LCs) stabilized by an outer polymer sheath is demonstrated. The fibers retain the responsive properties of the LCs but in a highly flexible/drapable format. The monofilament core makes these fibers much more rugged with a magnified response to external stimuli when compared to previously reported LC-core fibers produced by electrospinning or airbrushing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe synthesized the liquid crystal dimer and trimer members of a series of flexible linear oligomers and characterized their microscopic and nanoscopic properties using resonant soft X-ray scattering and a number of other experimental techniques. On the microscopic scale, the twist-bend phases of the dimer and trimer appear essentially identical. However, while the liquid crystal dimer exhibits a temperature-dependent variation of its twist-bend helical pitch varying from 100 to 170 Å on heating, the trimer exhibits an essentially temperature-independent pitch of 66 Å, significantly shorter than those reported for other twist-bend forming materials in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpatial confinement is known to affect molecular organizations of soft matter. We present an important manifestation of this statement for thin films of bent-core smectic liquid crystals. Prior freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy (FFTEM) studies carried out on nitro-substituted bent-core mesogens (n-OPIMB-NO_{2}) revealed an undulated smectic layer structure with an undulation periodicity of ∼8 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of the molecular chirality of chiral additives on the nanostructure of the twist-bend nematic (NTB) liquid crystal phase with ambidextrous chirality and nanoscale pitch due to spontaneous symmetry breaking is studied. It is found that the ambidextrous nanoscale pitch of the NTB phase increases by 50% due to 3% chiral additive, and the chiral transfer among the biphenyl groups disappears in the NTB* phase. Most significantly, a twist-grain boundary (TGB) type phase is found at c > 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing a photo-responsive dimer exhibiting the transition between nematic (N) and twist-bend nematic (NTB) phases, we prepared spherical cap-shaped droplets on solid substrates exposed to air. The internal director structures of these droplets vary depending on the phase and on the imposed boundary conditions. The structural switching between the N and NTB phases was successfully performed either by temperature control or by UV light-irradiation.
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