The nature of the nanoscale structural organization in modulated nematic phases formed by molecules having a nonlinear molecular architecture is a central issue in contemporary liquid crystal research. Nevertheless, the elucidation of the molecular organization is incomplete and poorly understood. One attempt to explain nanoscale phenomena merely "shrinks down" established macroscopic continuum elasticity modeling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe potential of mean torque governing the orientational ordering of prochiral solutes in the two nematic phases (N and N) formed by certain classes of symmetric achiral bimesogens is formulated and used for the analysis of existing NMR measurements on solutes of various symmetries dissolved in the two phases. Three distinct attributes of the solvent phase, namely polarity of the orientational ordering, chirality of the constituent molecules, and spatial modulation of the local director, are identified as underlying three possible mechanisms for the generation of chiral asymmetry in the low temperature nematic phase (N). The role and quantitative contribution of each mechanism to enantiotopic discrimination in the N phase are presented and compared with the case of the conventional chiral nematic phase (N*).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-field deuterium NMR spectroscopy is used to characterize a number of molecular liquids and their mixtures in order to probe the directional part of the intermolecular interactions through the orientational ordering induced in the isotropic liquid phase by the spectrometer magnetic field. The systems studied include benzene, chloroform, hexafluorobenzene, and thiophene at various concentrations and in mixtures. Dilution with the magnetically isotropic tetramethylsilane provides quantification of ordering at "infinite magnetic dilution", that is, in the absence of magnetic intermolecular correlations, and thereby allows identification of the contribution of these correlations to the orientational ordering in neat phases and at various degrees of magnetic dilution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have developed a molecular theory for enantiotopic discrimination in prochiral solutes dissolved in chiral nematic solvents by means of NMR spectroscopy. The leading rank tensor contributions to the proposed potential of mean torque include symmetric as well as antisymmetric terms with respect to spatial inversion; these lead to consistent determination of all prochiral solute symmetries for which enantiotopes are distinguishable by NMR and also to excellent quantitative agreement when tested against the available experimental data for the rigid solutes acenaphthene and norbornene as well as for the moderately flexible ethanol molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe study theoretically the molecular origins of the fascinating, and still debated, nematic-nematic phase transition exhibited by symmetric, statistically achiral, mesogenic dimers. A simple molecular model that mimics the key features and symmetry (C2V) of this class of mesogens is presented. In the mean-field approximation, the model yields up to three positionally disordered phases, one isotropic and two nematic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeuterium nuclear magnetic resonance ((2)H NMR) spectra of labeled molecular liquids obtained at high fields, for example, |B| = 22.3 T (950 MHz proton NMR), exhibit resolved quadrupolar splittings that reflect the average orientation of the molecules relative to B. Those residual nuclear spin interactions exhibited by benzene and chloroform provide an experimental determination of the leading tensor component of the pair correlation function for these two molecular liquids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
June 2015
We explore the phase behavior and structure of orthogonal smectic liquid crystals consisting of bent-core molecules (BCMs) by means of Monte Carlo molecular simulations. A simple athermal molecular model is introduced that describes the basic features of the BCMs. Phase transitions between uniaxial and biaxial (antiferroelectric) orthogonal smectics are obtained.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNMR measurements on a selectively deuterated liquid crystal dimer CB-C9-CB, exhibiting two nematic phases, show that the molecules in the lower temperature nematic phase, N(X), experience a chiral environment and are ordered about a uniformly oriented director throughout the macroscopic sample. The results are contrasted with previous interpretations that suggested a twist-bend spatial variation of the director. A structural picture is proposed wherein the molecules are packed into highly correlated chiral assemblies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
December 2013
The phase behavior of hard boardlike biaxial particles of relative dimensions close to the clamitic to discotic crossover is explored by means of Monte Carlo molecular simulations. Transitions between two distinct biaxial nematic phases as well as transitions from a biaxial nematic to a uniaxial Sm-A phase are obtained. The formation of anisotropic supramolecular assemblies is demonstrated and is quantified by means of rotationally invariant pair correlation functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
July 2011
The structure of nematic liquid crystals formed by bent-core mesogens (BCMs) is studied in the context of Monte Carlo simulations of a simple molecular model that captures the symmetry, shape, and flexibility of achiral BCMs. The results indicate the formation of (i) clusters exhibiting local smectic order, orthogonal or tilted, with strong in-layer polar correlations and antiferroelectric juxtaposition of successive layers and (ii) large homochiral domains through the helical arrangement of the tilted smectic clusters, while the orthogonal clusters produce achiral (untwisted) nematic states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe possible symmetries of the biaxial nematic phase are examined against the implications of the presently available experimental results. Contrary to the widespread notion that biaxial nematics have orthorhombic symmetry, our study shows that a monoclinic (C(2h)) symmetry is more likely to be the case for the recently observed phase biaxiality in thermotropic bent-core and calamitic-tetrapode nematic systems. The methodology for differentiating between the possible symmetries of the biaxial nematic phase by NMR and by IR spectroscopy measurements is presented in detail.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mesomorphic behavior of a calamitic mesogen (4'-undecyloxybiphenyl-4-yl-4-octyloxy-2-(pent-4-en-1-yloxy)benzoate) and of a supermesogenic octapode formed by the side-on attachment of the mesogen to a octasilsesquioxane central core is studied by X-ray diffraction and polarizing optical microscopy. The calamitic compound is found to have a nematic phase that has biaxial domains (cybotactic clusters) of tilted layers throughout its entire temperature range. Domains of analogous structure are also found in both the nematic and the hexagonal columnar mesophases exhibited by the obctapode compound.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn intermediate nematic phase is proposed for the interpretation of recent experimental results on phase biaxiality in bent-core nematic liquid crystals. The phase is macroscopically uniaxial but has microscopic biaxial, and possibly polar, domains. Under the action of an electric field, the phase acquires macroscopic biaxial ordering resulting from the collective alignment of the domains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA molecular model of cubic building blocks is used to describe the mesomorphism of conical fullerenomesogens. Calculations based on density functional molecular theory and on Monte Carlo computer simulations give qualitatively similar results that are also in good agreement with the experimentally observed mesomorphic behaviour. The columnar and lamellar mesophases obtained are non-polar, and their relative stability is controlled by a single model parameter representing the softness of the repulsive interactions among the building blocks of the conical molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA liquid-crystalline octapode, formed by laterally connecting calamitic mesogens to an inorganic silsesquioxane cube through flexible siloxane spacers, is studied using polarized light microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and X-ray diffraction (XRD). The studies are extended to mixtures of the octapode with the respective monomer mesogens. The monomer and the octapode show a nematic phase.
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