The understanding of the relationship between molecular structure and the formation of the nematic twist-bend phase is still at an early stage of development. This is mainly related to molecular geometry, while the correlation between the nematic twist-bend phase and the electronic structure is ambiguous. To explore the electronic effect on properties and stabilization of the nematic twist-bend phase we investigated 2',3'-difluoro-4,4''-dipentyl--terphenyl dimers (DTC5C). We used polarized fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, which can, at least in principle, provide information about the ordering in the twist-bend phase. All dimers show a significant drop in the average value of the transition dipole moment for parallel dipoles at the transition from the nematic to the twist-bend phase, and an increase for perpendicular dipoles, despite remaining unchanged for the monomer. Density functional theory calculations were used to determine the geometric and electronic properties of the hydrogen bonded complexes. We have provided experimental and theoretical evidence of stabilization of the nematic twist-bend phase by arrays of multiple hydrogen bonds (XF⋯HX, X-benzene ring).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra10481g | DOI Listing |
Materials (Basel)
August 2024
Institute of Materials Science and Engineering, Military University of Technology, ul. gen. Sylwestra Kaliskiego 2, 00-908 Warsaw, Poland.
This work aims to determine how the nematic twist-bend phase (N) of bismesogens containing two rigid parts of cyanobiphenyls connected with a linking chain containing n = 7, 9, and 11 methylene groups behaves in mixtures with structurally similar cyanobiphenyls nCB, n = 4-12, 14. The whole phase diagrams are presented for the CB7CB-nCB system. For the other systems, CB9CB-nCB and CB11CB-nCB, only curves corresponding to N-N phase transition are presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
July 2024
Department of Applied Chemistry and Life Science, Graduate School of Engineering, Toyohashi University of Technology, 1-1 Hibarigaoka, Tempaku-cho, Toyohashi 441-8580, Aichi, Japan.
Photoisomerizable molecules in liquid crystals (LCs) allow for photoinduced phase transitions, facilitating applications in a wide variety of photoresponsive materials. In contrast to the widely investigated azobenzene structure, research on the photoinduced phase-transition behavior of imine-based LCs is considerably limited. We herein report the thermal and photoinduced phase-transition behaviors of photoisomerizable imine-based LC dimers with twist-bend nematic (N) phases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRep Prog Phys
August 2024
Institute for Molecules and Materials, Radboud University, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
The curvature of elongated microscopic building blocks plays a crucial role on their self-assembly into orientationally ordered phases. While rod-like molecules form a handful of liquid crystal (LC) phases, curved or banana-shaped molecules show more than fifty phases, with fascinating physical properties, such as chirality or polarity. Despite the fundamental and technological importance of these so-called 'banana-shaped liquid crystals', little is known about their microscopic details at the single-molecule level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
June 2024
Faculty of Chemistry, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland.
Spontaneous mirror symmetry breaking by formation of chiral structures from achiral building blocks and emergent polar order are phenomena rarely observed in fluids. Separately, they have both been found in certain nematic liquid crystalline phases; however, they have never been observed simultaneously. Here, we report a heliconical arrangement of achiral molecules in the ferroelectric nematic phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
April 2024
Institute of Physics, Lodz University of Technology, ulica Wólczańska 217/221, 93-005 Łódź, Poland.
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