Issue 42, 2021

Co-revolving topological defects in a nematic liquid crystal

Abstract

A patterned surface defect of strength m = +1 and its associated disclination lines can decompose into a pair of surface defects and disclination lines of strength m = +1/2. For a negative dielectric anisotropy liquid crystal subjected to an applied ac electric field E, these half-integer defects are observed to wobble azimuthally for E > than some threshold field and, for sufficiently large fields, to co-revolve antipodally around a central point approximately midway between the two defects. This behavior is elucidated experimentally as a function of applied field strength E and frequency ν, where the threshold field for full co-revolution scales as ν1/2. Concurrently, nematic electrohydrodynamic instabilities were investigated. A complete field vs. frequency “phase diagram” compellingly suggests that the induced fluctuations and eventual co-revolutions of the ordinarily static defects are coupled strongly to—and driven by—the presence of the hydrodynamic instability. The observed behaviour suggests a Lehmann-like mechanism that drives the co-revolution.

Graphical abstract: Co-revolving topological defects in a nematic liquid crystal

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Aug 2021
Accepted
03 Oct 2021
First published
08 Oct 2021

Soft Matter, 2021,17, 9616-9623

Co-revolving topological defects in a nematic liquid crystal

A. L. Susser, S. Kralj and C. Rosenblatt, Soft Matter, 2021, 17, 9616 DOI: 10.1039/D1SM01124C

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