ABSTRACT
The approaches developed for studying the polarization of molecules and the dynamics of ions in dielectric materials are usually considered separately. The two effects are often believed to take place in different frequency ranges. The low frequency response is usually dominated by ionic migration, whereas the high frequency response is played by molecular polarization. The goal here is to clarify the interplay between free and bound charge densities and their influences on permittivity and impedance profiles by proposing a version of the Poisson-Nernst-Planck (PNP) model that allows to include the effect of a frequency-dependent (and thus not instantaneous) polarizability.
Subject(s)
Static Electricity , IonsABSTRACT
The twist-bend nematic (N_{TB}) phase is a doubly degenerated heliconical structure with nanometric pitch and spontaneous bend and twist deformations. It is favored by symmetry-breaking molecular structures, such as bent dimers and bent-core molecules, and it is currently one of the burgeoning fields of liquid-crystal research. Although tremendous advances have been reported in the past five years, especially in molecular synthesis, most of its potential applications are held back by the lack of a proper and definitive elastic model to describe its behavior under various situations such as confinement and applied field. In this work we use a recently proposed stable state elastic model and the fact that the mesophase behaves as a lamellar structure to propose a mesoscopic or coarse-grained model for the N_{TB} phase. By means of standard procedures used for smectic and cholesteric liquid crystals, we arrive at a closed-form energy for the phase and apply it to a few situations of interest. The predicted compressibility for several values of the cone angle and the critical field for field-induced deformation agree well with recent experimental data.