An escaped radial director profile in a nematic liquid crystal cell can be transformed into a pair of strength m = +1/2 surface defects (and their associated disclination lines) at a threshold electric field. Analogously, a half-integer defect pair can be transformed at a threshold electric field into a director profile that escapes into the third dimension. These transitions were demonstrated experimentally and numerically, and are discussed in terms of topologically discontinuous and continuous pathways that connect the two states. Additionally, we note that the pair of disclination lines associated with the m = +1/2 surface defects were observed to co-rotate around a common point for a sufficiently large electric field at a sufficiently low frequency.
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Co-revolving topological defects in a nematic liquid crystal
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 ν 1/2 . 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.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1901797
- PAR ID:
- 10298365
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Soft Matter
- Volume:
- 17
- Issue:
- 42
- ISSN:
- 1744-683X
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 9616 to 9623
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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