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Defect transition of smectic liquid crystals confined in spherical cavities. | LitMetric

Defect transition of smectic liquid crystals confined in spherical cavities.

Soft Matter

State Key Laboratory of Polymer Physics and Chemistry, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun 130022, China.

Published: May 2023

The formation and transformation of defects in confined liquid crystals are fascinating fundamental problems in soft matter. Here, we use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to study ellipsoidal liquid crystals (LCs) confined in a spherical cavity, which significantly affects the orientation and translation of LC molecules near the surface. The liquid-crystal droplet can present the isotropic to smectic-B phase transition through the smectic-A phase, as the number density of the LC molecules increases. We further find the change of LC structure from bipolar to watermelon-striped during the phase transition from smectic-A (SmA) to smectic-B (SmB) phases. Our results reveal the transition from bipolar defects to the inhomogeneous structures with the coexistence of nematic and smectic phases in smectic liquid-crystal droplets. We also study the influence of the sphere size in the range of 10 ≤ ≤ 50 on the structural inhomogeneities. It shows a weak dependence on the sphere size. We further focus on how the structures can be affected by the interaction strength . Interestingly, we find the watermelon-striped structure can be changed into a configuration with four defects at the vertices of a tetrahedron upon increasing the interaction strength. The liquid crystals at a strong interaction strength of = 10.0 show the two-dimensional nematic phase at the surface. We further present an explanation for the origin of the striped-pattern formation. Our results highlight the potential for using confinement to control these defects and their associated nanostructural heterogeneity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sm01706gDOI Listing

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