Issue 10, 2023

Topological phases and curvature-driven pattern formation in cholesteric shells

Abstract

We study the phase behaviour of cholesteric liquid crystal shells with different geometries. We compare the cases of tangential anchoring and no anchoring at the surface, focussing on the former case, which leads to a competition between the intrinsic tendency of the cholesteric to twist and the anchoring free energy which suppresses it. We then characterise the topological phases arising close to the isotropic–cholesteric transition. These typically consist of quasi-crystalline or amorphous tessellations of the surface by half-skyrmions, which are stable at lower and larger shell sizes, respectively. For ellipsoidal shells, defects in the tessellation couple to a local curvature, and according to the shell size, they either migrate to the poles or distribute uniformly on the surface. For toroidal shells, the variations in the local curvature of the surface stabilise heterogeneous phases where cholesteric or isotropic patterns coexist with hexagonal lattices of half-skyrmions.

Graphical abstract: Topological phases and curvature-driven pattern formation in cholesteric shells

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Oct 2022
Accepted
01 Feb 2023
First published
27 Feb 2023

Soft Matter, 2023,19, 1987-2000

Topological phases and curvature-driven pattern formation in cholesteric shells

G. Negro, L. N. Carenza, G. Gonnella, D. Marenduzzo and E. Orlandini, Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 1987 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM01347A

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