Abstract
The Helfrich-Hurault (HH) elastic instability is a well-known mechanism behind patterns that form as a result of strain upon liquid crystal systems with periodic ground states. In the HH model, layered structures undulate and buckle in response to local, geometric incompatibilities in order to maintain the preferred layer spacing. Classic HH systems include cholesteric liquid crystals under electromagnetic field distortions and smectic liquid crystals under mechanical strains, where both materials are confined between rigid substrates. However, richer phenomena are observed when undulation instabilities occur in the presence of deformable interfaces and variable boundary conditions. Understanding how the HH instability is affected by deformable surfaces is imperative for applying the instability to a broader range of materials. In this review, the HH mechanism is reexamined and special focus is given to how the boundary conditions influence the response of lamellar systems to geometrical frustration. Lamellar liquid crystals confined within a spherical shell geometry are used as the model system. Made possible by the relatively recent advances in microfluidics within the past 15 years, liquid crystal shells are composed entirely of fluid interfaces and have boundary conditions that can be dynamically controlled at will. Past and recent work that exemplifies how topological constraints, molecular anchoring conditions, and boundary curvature can trigger the HH mechanism in liquid crystals with periodic ground states is examined. The review ends by identifying similar phenomena across a wide variety of materials, both biological and synthetic. The fact that the HH mechanism is a generic and often overlooked response of periodic materials to geometrical frustration is highlighted.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 015004 |
Journal | Reviews of Modern Physics |
Volume | 95 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 31 Mar 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2023 American Physical Society.
Funding
This work would not have been possible without Maurice Kleman’s significant contributions to the field of liquid crystals. C. B. thanks Maurice Kleman for introducing him to this exciting area of research. We thank Kunyun He and Daeseok Kim for their micrographs and useful discussions. G. D. and T. L.-L. were supported by the French National Research Agency (JCJC Program, Grant No. 13-JS08-0006-01). T. L.-L. acknowledges funding from the French National Research Agency (AAPG Program, Grant No. 18-CE09-0028-02). L. T. and R. D. K. were supported in part by NSF Grants No. DMR-1262047 and No. DMR-1720530. This work was supported by a Simons Investigator grant from the Simons Foundation to R. D. K. L. T. acknowledges funding from the Simons Society of Fellows of the Simons Foundation (Grant No. 579910) and the European CommissionMarie Curie Individual Fellowship project EXCHANGE_inLCs (Grant No. 892354). M. O. L. acknowledges partial funding from the Neutron Sciences Directorate (Oak Ridge National Laboratory), sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences.
Funders | Funder number |
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European CommissionMarie Curie | 892354 |
Simons Society of Fellows of the Simons Foundation | 579910 |
National Science Foundation | DMR-1720530, DMR-1262047 |
U.S. Department of Energy | |
Simons Foundation | |
Basic Energy Sciences | |
Oak Ridge National Laboratory | |
American Association of Petroleum Geologists | 18-CE09-0028-02 |
Agence Nationale de la Recherche | 13-JS08-0006-01 |