Issue 30, 2014

Left or right cholesterics? A matter of helix handedness and curliness

Abstract

Using an Onsager-like theory, we have investigated the relationship between the morphology of hard helical particles and the features (pitch and handedness) of the cholesteric phase that they form. We show that right-handed helices can assemble into right- (Image ID:c4cp01816h-t1.gif) and left-handed (Image ID:c4cp01816h-t2.gif) cholesterics, depending on their curliness, and that the cholesteric pitch is a non-monotonic function of the intrinsic pitch of particles. The theory leads to the definition of a hierarchy of pseudoscalars, which quantify the difference in the average excluded volume between pair configurations of helices having (Image ID:c4cp01816h-t3.gif) and (Image ID:c4cp01816h-t4.gif)-skewed axes. The predictions of the Onsager-like theory are supported by Monte Carlo simulations of the isotropic phase of hard helices, showing how the cholesteric organization, which develops on scales longer than hundreds of molecular sizes, is encoded in the short-range chiral correlations between the helical axes.

Graphical abstract: Left or right cholesterics? A matter of helix handedness and curliness

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Apr 2014
Accepted
15 Jun 2014
First published
16 Jun 2014

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014,16, 16225-16232

Author version available

Left or right cholesterics? A matter of helix handedness and curliness

E. Frezza, A. Ferrarini, H. Bindu Kolli, A. Giacometti and G. Cinacchi, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2014, 16, 16225 DOI: 10.1039/C4CP01816H

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