We demonstrate an exceptional ability of a high-polarization 3D ferroelectric liquid to form freely suspended fluid fibers at room temperature. Unlike fluid threads in modulated smectics and columnar phases, where translational order is a prerequisite for forming liquid fibers, recently discovered ferroelectric nematic forms fibers with solely orientational molecular order. Additional stabilization mechanisms based on the polar nature of the mesophase are required for this.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiquid crystal (LC) based magnetic materials consisting of LC hosts doped with functional magnetic nanoparticles enable optical switching of the mesogens at moderate magnetic field strengths and thereby open the pathway for the design of novel smart devices. A promising route for the fabrication of stable ferronematic phases is the attachment of a covalently bound LC polymer shell onto the surface of nanoparticles. With this approach, ferronematic phases based on magnetically blocked particles and the commercial LC 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB) liquid crystal were shown to have a sufficient magnetic sensitivity, but the mechanism of the magneto-nematic coupling is unidentified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSwitching of liquid crystal phases is of enormous technological importance and enables digital displays, thermometers and sensors. As an alternative to electric fields or temperature, magnetic fields are an interesting trigger, as they are on the one hand versatile to design, and on the other hand, they are compatible with a bouquet of applications. An interesting option to enable the magnetic switchability of nematic phases is by doping them with functional magnetic nanoparticles, but it remains a challenge to achieve well-compatibilized and stable ferronematic phases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dynamics of magnetic nanoparticles in rotating magnetic fields is studied both experimentally and theoretically. The experimental investigation is focused on the conversion of the magnetic forces to a mechanical torque acting on a ferrofluid confined in a spherical cavity in a rotating magnetic field. Polydispersity usually present in diluted ferrofluids is shown to play a crucial role in the torque conversion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the structure and the magnetooptical response of isotropic and anisotropic fibrillous organoferrogels with mobile magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs). We demonstrate that the presence of the gel network restricts the magnetooptical response of the ferrogel. Even though the ferrogel exhibits no magnetic hysteresis, an optical hysteresis has been found.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the structure and optical manipulation of the director configurations in emulsions of liquid-crystalline droplets of a compound exhibiting the nematic (N) and the twist-bend nematic (N) phases. We demonstrate a decrease in the ratio of the bent elastic constant K to the splay constant K by nearly 2 orders of magnitude with decreasing temperature in the N phase. The director structures in liquid-crystal droplets doped with a photoswitchable surfactant without and under ultraviolet (UV) light are discussed in light of the strong elastic anisotropy of the investigated compound.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) functionalized with (pro-)mesogenic ligands are implemented into a nematic liquid crystal (LC) and studied regarding both colloidal stability and magneto-optical behavior. In this study, the particle surface is specifically engineered to tune the MNP interactions with the LC host. For this purpose, four types of (pro-)mesogenic ligands (ML) are synthesized, which are composed of three structural parts, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe systematically studied the photoinduced anchoring transition in a nematic liquid crystal containing azo dendrimers. Because the azo dendrimers in the trans-isomer state were spontaneously adsorbed at substrate surfaces, which was confirmed by optical second-harmonic generation (SHG), a homeotropic orientation was established at the first stage. Ultraviolet (UV) light irradiation triggered a transition into a planar state which was accompanied by a suppression of the SH generation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA small amount of azo-dendrimer molecules dissolved in a liquid crystal enables translational and rotational motions of microrods in a liquid crystal matrix under unpolarized UV light irradiation. This motion is initiated by a light-induced trans-to-cis conformational change of the dendrimer adsorbed at the rod surface and the associated director reorientation. The bending direction of the cis conformers is not random but is selectively chosen due to the curved local director field in the vicinity of the dendrimer-coated surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
December 2013
We report on fingering and labyrinthine instabilities of the layer dislocation lines in freely suspended polar liquid-crystalline films. These polar fingerlike and labyrinth structures reversibly form upon a transition into a modulated phase. External electric fields of several kV/m applied in the film plane can reversibly influence the formation of the finger textures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
November 2012
We report on the contrasting phase behavior of a bent-core liquid crystal with a large opening angle between the mesogenic units in the bulk and in freely suspended films. Second-harmonic generation experiments and direct observation of director inversion walls in films in an applied electric field reveal that the nonpolar smectic C phase observed in bulk samples becomes a ferroelectric "banana" phase in films, showing that a mesogen with a small steric moment can give a phase with polar order in freely suspended films even when the corresponding bulk phase is paraelectric.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGeometric frustration gives rise to new fundamental phenomena and is known to yield the formation of exotic states of matter, such as incommensurate crystals, modulated liquid-crystalline phases, and phases stabilized by defects. In this Letter, we present a detailed study of polar structure of freely suspended fluid filaments in a polarization modulated liquid-crystal phase. We show that a periodic pattern of polarization-splay stripes separated by defect boundaries and decorating smectic layers can stabilize the structure of fluid fibers against the Rayleigh-Plateau instability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStable free-standing liquid filaments formed by some layered mesophases of bent-core mesogens are unique structures. Some of their physical properties have been analyzed in recent studies, but their microscopic structure and conditions for stability have still been unclear. We explore details of filament shapes and surface profiles of filaments drawn in liquid crystal phases of bent-core mesogens by AFM and SEM measurements, and we present a microscopic structure model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
March 2005
The formation of stable freely suspended filaments is an interesting peculiarity of some liquid crystal phases. So far, little is known about their structure and stability. Similarly to free-standing smectic films, an internal molecular structure of the mesophase stabilizes these macroscopically well-ordered objects with length to diameter ratios of 10(3) and above.
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