Issue 24, 2019

Direct measurements of structural forces and twist transitions in cholesteric liquid crystal films with a surface force apparatus

Abstract

Using a surface force apparatus, a cholesteric liquid crystal was confined between two crossed cylindrical surfaces that induced strong planar anchoring and normal alignment of the chiral helix. The film thickness and total twist angle of the chiral molecular structure were simultaneously measured using multiple-beam optical interference. As the film thickness was increased and the chiral structure deformed, the twist angle remained almost unchanged until discontinuous changes occurred at critical distances that were equally spaced by one cholesteric half-pitch length. Structural deformations generated oscillatory elastic forces with periodically spaced maxima corresponding to twist transitions. These findings were reproduced using an equilibrium model of cholesteric confinement and force generation. The analysis indicates that the strength of the azimuthal surface anchoring on mica is high, exceeding 0.2 mJ m−2.

Graphical abstract: Direct measurements of structural forces and twist transitions in cholesteric liquid crystal films with a surface force apparatus

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Mar 2019
Accepted
27 May 2019
First published
05 Jun 2019

Soft Matter, 2019,15, 4905-4914

Direct measurements of structural forces and twist transitions in cholesteric liquid crystal films with a surface force apparatus

W. Zheng, C. S. Perez-Martinez, G. Petriashvili, S. Perkin and B. Zappone, Soft Matter, 2019, 15, 4905 DOI: 10.1039/C9SM00487D

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