Prolate and oblate chiral liquid crystal spheroids

Mechanical strain, curvature, and elasticity lead to the emergence of exotic molecular configurations in chiral liquid crystals. Liquid crystals are known to exhibit intriguing textures and color patterns, with applications in display and optical technologies. This work focuses on chiral materials a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science advances 2020-07, Vol.6 (28), p.eaba6728-eaba6728
Hauptverfasser: Sadati, Monirosadat, Martinez-Gonzalez, Jose A., Zhou, Ye, Qazvini, Nader Taheri, Kurtenbach, Khia, Li, Xiao, Bukusoglu, Emre, Zhang, Rui, Abbott, Nicholas L., Hernandez-Ortiz, Juan Pablo, de Pablo, Juan J.
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container_end_page eaba6728
container_issue 28
container_start_page eaba6728
container_title Science advances
container_volume 6
creator Sadati, Monirosadat
Martinez-Gonzalez, Jose A.
Zhou, Ye
Qazvini, Nader Taheri
Kurtenbach, Khia
Li, Xiao
Bukusoglu, Emre
Zhang, Rui
Abbott, Nicholas L.
Hernandez-Ortiz, Juan Pablo
de Pablo, Juan J.
description Mechanical strain, curvature, and elasticity lead to the emergence of exotic molecular configurations in chiral liquid crystals. Liquid crystals are known to exhibit intriguing textures and color patterns, with applications in display and optical technologies. This work focuses on chiral materials and examines the palette of morphologies that arises when microdroplets are deformed into nonspherical shapes in a controllable manner. Specifically, geometrical confinement and mechanical strain are used to manipulate orientational order, phase transitions, and topological defects that arise in chiral liquid crystal droplets. Inspired by processes encountered in nature, where insects and animals often rely on strain and temperature to alter the optical appearance of dispersed liquid crystalline elements, chiral droplets are dispersed in polymer films and deformation induced by uniaxial or biaxial stretching. Our measurements are interpreted by resorting to simulations of the corresponding systems, thereby providing an in-depth understanding of the morphologies that arise in these materials. The reported structures and assemblies offer potential for applications in smart coatings, smart fabrics, and wearable sensors.
doi_str_mv 10.1126/sciadv.aba6728
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subjects Applied Physics
ENGINEERING
Materials Science
SciAdv r-articles
title Prolate and oblate chiral liquid crystal spheroids
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