Research Investigação
Nematic and cholesteric droplets adsorbed on (structured) fibers: Statics and Dynamics
There are interesting questions to be asked about the way in which nematic droplets interact with surfaces. For example, the response of nematic liquid crystal drops of toroidal topology threaded in cellulosic fibers, suspended in air, at different temperatures, and to an AC field at room temperature has been reported. The director is anchored tangentially at the fiber surface and homeotropically at the air interface. Upon application of the electric field, E, the disclination ring expands and moves along the fiber main axis, followed by the appearance of a stable rotating soliton-like “particle”. Necklaces of these liquid crystal drops open new perspectives for application in microelectronics and photonics.
Based on our experience on the statics (3D FEM to minimize the Landau-de Gennes free energy) and dynamics (3D Lattice Boltzmann Methods to solve the Beris-Edwards equations) of nematics and cholesterics (ongoing FCT projects), we aim to describe theoretically the equilibrium structures and the dynamical response to applied electric fields, in particular the rotating soliton-like “particle”.
References
- Interfacial motion in flexo- and order-electric switching between nematic filled states, M. L. Blow and M. M. Telo da Gama, submitted to Journal of Physics Condensed Matter 25, 245103 (2013).
- Nematic wetting and filling of crenellated surfaces, N. M. Silvestre, Z. Eskandari, P. Patrício, J. M. Romero Enrique and M. M. Telo da Gama, Physical Review E 86, 011703 (2012).