1 / 16

NEMATIC COLLOID AS A TOPOLOGICAL PLAYGROUND

NEMATIC COLLOID AS A TOPOLOGICAL PLAYGROUND. S. ŽUMER University of Ljubljana & Jozef Stefan Inst itute , Ljubljana, Slovenia. Confined Liquid Crystals: Perspectives and Landmarks June 19-20, 2010     Ljubljana. COWORKER : S. Čopar

rea
Télécharger la présentation

NEMATIC COLLOID AS A TOPOLOGICAL PLAYGROUND

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NEMATIC COLLOID AS A TOPOLOGICAL PLAYGROUND S. ŽUMER University of Ljubljana & Jozef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia Confined Liquid Crystals: Perspectives and Landmarks June 19-20, 2010     Ljubljana COWORKER:S. Čopar COLLABORATIONS: B. Črnko, T. Lubensky, I. Muševič, M. Ravnik,… Supports of Slovenian Research Agency, Center of Excellence NAMASTE, EU ITN HIERARCHY are acknowledged

  2. MOTIVATION • Nematic braids & nematic colloids • structures entangled by disclinations • modeling • experiments • spontaneous & mediated formation • quench laser tweezers d = 1mm, h = 2mm director S=0.5 surface of -1/2 defect line (Sbulk=0.533)

  3. OUTLINE • order parameter field • defects & colloidal particles • colloidal dimer in a homogenous nematic field • local restructuring of a disclination crossings • writhe & twist (geometry and topology of entangled dimers) • conclusions

  4. ORDER PARAMETER FIELD Tensorialnematic order parameter Q (directorn, degree of orderS, biaxialityP): eigenframe: n, e(1), e(2) Landau - de Gennes free energy with elastic (gradient) term and standard phase term is complemented by a surface term introducing homeotropic anchoring on colloidal surfaces. Geometry of confinement yields together with anchoring boundary conditions. Equilibrium and metastablenematic structures are determined via minimization of F that leads to the solving of the corresponding differential equations.

  5. DEFECTS • discontinues director fields & variation innematicorder • defects are formed after fast cooling, or by other external perturbations, • topological picture (director fields, equivalence, and conservation laws): - point defects: topological charge - line defects (disclinations) : • winding number, • topological charge of a loop • core structure (topology & energy): • singular (half- integer) disclination lines biaxiality & decrease of order • nonsigular(integer) disclination lines

  6. SPHERICAL HOMEOTROPIC PARTICLES CONFINED TO A HOMOGENOUSNEMATIC FIELD zero topological charge 2.5 mm cell 2 mm particle Strong anchoring S=0.5 surface of defect(Sbulk=0.533) Saturn ring (quadrupolar symmetry) dipole (dipolar symmetry) <= Stark et al., NATO Science Series Kluwer 02

  7. COLLOIDAL DIMER IN A HOMOGENOUS NEMATIC FIELD zero topological charge cell thickness: h = 2 mm , colloid diameter: d = 1 mm director figure of eight figure of omega entangled hyperbolic defect director In homogenous cells these structures are obtained only via melting & quenching

  8. LOCAL RESTRUCTURING OF DISLINATIONS Orthogonal crossing of disclinations in a tetrahedron Restructuring via tetrahedron reorientation

  9. LOCAL RESTRUCTURING via tetrahedron reorientation Director field on the surface of a tetrahedron

  10. RESTRUCTURING OF DIMERS

  11. DISCLINATION LINE AS A RIBBON

  12. RIBBONS in form of LOOPS LINKING NUMBER, WRITHE, AND TWIST Linking number (L) of a closed ribbon is equal to a number of times ittwistsaround itself before closing a loop. Calugareanu theorem (1959): writhe and twist are given by well known expressions L = Wr + Tw Symmetric planar loops (like Saturn)Tw = 0 and Wr = 0 Our tetrahedron transformation does not add twist. Twist is zerofor all dimerloopstructures ! L = Wr Following Fuller (1978) writhe is calculated in tangent representation on a unit sphere Wr = A/(2p) -1 mod 2 A - surface on a unit sphere encircled by the tangent.

  13. WRITHE IN TANGENT SPACE Writhechange due to a terahedron rotationfor 120o: DWr = 2/3

  14. FIGURE OF EIGHT 3D loop 2D

  15. NEMATIC COLLOIDAL DIMERS Disjoint SaturnsWr = 0 Entangled hyperbolic defect Wr = 0 Figure of eight Wr = + 2/3 Figure of omega Wr = + 2/3 twist: Tw =0 linking number L = Tw + Wr

  16. CONCLUSIONS • Desription: restructuring of an orthogonal line crossing via a tetrahedron rotation. • Clasification of colloidal dimers via linking number, writhe, and twist. • Further chalanges: • complex nematic (also chiral and biaxial) braids • chiral nematic offers further line crossings that for: • colloids easily lead to the formation of links • and knots in the disclination network • (Tkalec, Ravnik, Muševič,…) • confined blue phases enables restructuring • among numerous structures (Fukuda & Žumer)

More Related