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Curvature-directed anchoring and defect structure of colloidal smectic liquid crystals in confinement

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Abstract

Rod-like objects at high packing fractions can exhibit liquid crystalline ordering. By controlling how the rods align near a boundary, i.e. the anchoring, the defects of a liquid crystal can be selected and tuned. For smectic phases, the rods break rotational and translational symmetry by forming lamellae. Smectic defects thereby include both discontinuities in the rod orientational order (disclinations), as well as in the positional order (dislocations). In this work, we use experiments and simulations to uncover the geometrical conditions necessary for a boundary to set the anchoring of a confined, particle-resolved, smectic liquid crystal. We confine a colloidal smectic within elliptical wells of varying size and shape for a smooth variation of the boundary curvature. We find that the anchoring depends upon the local boundary curvature, with an anchoring transition observed at a critical radius of curvature approximately twice the rod length. Surprisingly, the critical radius of curvature for an anchoring transition holds across a wide range of rod lengths and packing fractions. The anchoring controls the defect structure. By analyzing topological charges and networks composed of maximum density (rod centers) and minimum density (rod ends), we quantify disclinations and dislocations formed with varying confinement geometry. Circular confinements, characterized by planar anchoring, promote disclinations, whereas elliptical confinements, featuring antipodal regions of homeotropic anchoring, promote long-range smectic order and dislocations. Our findings demonstrate how geometrical constraints can control the anchoring and defect structures of liquid crystals-a principle that is applicable from molecular to colloidal length scales.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberpgae470
Number of pages12
JournalPNAS Nexus
Volume3
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of National Academy of Sciences.

Funding

E.I.L.J. acknowledges funding from the European Commission (Horizon-MSCA, Grant No. 101065631). G.C.-V. acknowledges financial support from the Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO) ENW PPS Fund 2018-Technology Area Soft Advanced Materials (Grant No. ENPPS.TA.018.002). M.D. acknowledges financial support from the European Research Council (Grant No. ERC-2019-ADV-H2020 884902 SoftML). L.T. acknowledges support from the European Commission (Horizon-MSCA, Grant No. 892354) and the NWO ENW Veni grant (Project No. VI.Veni.212.028). E.I.L.J. and L.T. ac-knowledge support from the Starting PI Fund for Electron Microscopy Access from Utrecht University's Electron Microscopy Center.

FundersFunder number
European Commission101065631, 892354
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO) ENW PPS Fund 2018-Technology Area Soft Advanced MaterialsENPPS.TA.018.002
European Research CouncilERC-2019-ADV-H2020 884902
NWO ENW Veni grantVI.Veni.212.028
Starting PI Fund for Electron Microscopy Access from Utrecht University's Electron Microscopy Center

    Keywords

    • anchoring
    • confinement
    • liquid crystals
    • smectic
    • topological defects

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