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1.
Phys Rev Res ; 2(1)2020 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33870201

RESUMO

Topological defects appear in symmetry breaking phase transitions and are ubiquitous throughout Nature. As an ideal testbed for their study, defect configurations in nematic liquid crystals (NLCs) could be exploited in a rich variety of technological applications. Here we report on robust theoretical and experimental investigations in which an external electric field is used to switch between pre-determined stable chargeless disclination patterns in a nematic cell, where the cell is sufficiently thick that the disclinations start and terminate at the same surface. The different defect configurations are stabilised by a master substrate that enforces a lattice of surface defects exhibiting zero total topological charge value. Theoretically, we model disclination configurations using a Landau-de Gennes phenomenological model. Experimentally, we enable diverse defect patterns by implementing an in-house-developed Atomic Force Measurement scribing method, where NLC configurations are monitored via polarised optical microscopy. We show numerically and experimentally that an "alphabet" of up to 18 unique line defect configurations can be stabilised in a 4x4 lattice of alternating s=±1 surface defects, which can be "rewired" multistably using appropriate field manipulation. Our proof-of-concept mechanism may lead to a variety of applications, such as multistable optical displays and rewirable nanowires. Our studies also are of interest from a fundamental perspective. We demonstrate that a chargeless line could simultaneously exhibit defect-antidefect properties. Consequently, a pair of such antiparallel disclinations exhibits an attractive interaction. For a sufficiently closely-spaced pair of substrate-pinned defects, this interaction could trigger rewiring, or annihilation if defects are depinned.

2.
Beilstein J Nanotechnol ; 9: 109-118, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29441256

RESUMO

Using a Landau-de Gennes approach, we study the impact of confinement topology, geometry and external fields on the spatial positioning of nematic topological defects (TDs). In quasi two-dimensional systems we demonstrate that a confinement-enforced total topological charge of m > 1/2 decays into elementary TDs bearing a charge of m = 1/2. These assemble close to the bounding substrate to enable essentially bulk-like uniform nematic ordering in the central part of a system. This effect is reminiscent of the Faraday cavity phenomenon in electrostatics. We observe that in certain confinement geometries, varying the correlation length size of the order parameter could trigger a global rotation of an assembly of TDs. Finally, we show that an external electric field could be used to drag the boojum fingertip towards the interior of the confinement cell. Assemblies of TDs could be exploited as traps for appropriate nanoparticles, opening several opportunities for the development of functional nanodevices.

3.
Soft Matter ; 13(45): 8442-8450, 2017 Nov 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29083004

RESUMO

Nematic cells patterned with square arrays of strength m = ±1 topological defects were examined as a function of cell thickness (3 < h < 7.5 µm), temperature, and applied voltage. Thicker cells tend to exhibit an escape or partial escape of the nematic director as a means of mitigating the elastic energy cost near the defect cores, whereas thinner cells tend to favor splitting of the integer defects into pairs of half-integer strength defects. On heating the sample into the isotropic phase and cooling back into the nematic, some apparently split defects can reappear as unsplit integer defects, or vice versa. This is consistent with the system's symmetry, which requires a first order transition between the two relaxation mechanisms.

4.
Phys Rev E ; 95(4-1): 042702, 2017 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28505708

RESUMO

We study decomposition of geometrically enforced nematic topological defects bearing relatively large defect strengths m in effectively two-dimensional planar systems. Theoretically, defect cores are analyzed within the mesoscopic Landau-de Gennes approach in terms of the tensor nematic order parameter. We demonstrate a robust tendency of defect decomposition into elementary units where two qualitatively different scenarios imposing total defect strengths on a nematic region are employed. Some theoretical predictions are verified experimentally, where arrays of defects bearing charges m=±1 and even m=±2 are enforced within a plane-parallel nematic cell using an atomic force microscopy scribing method.

5.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 90(5-1): 052501, 2014 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25493804

RESUMO

An atomic force microscope was used to scribe a polyimide-coated substrate with complex patterns that serve as an alignment template for a nematic liquid crystal. By employing a sufficiently large density of scribe lines, two-dimensional topological defect arrays of arbitrary defect strength were patterned on the substrate. When used as the master surface of a liquid crystal cell, in which the opposing slave surface is treated for planar degenerate alignment, the liquid crystal adopts the pattern's alignment with a disclination line emanating at the defect core on one surface and terminating at the other surface.

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