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  1. An exact kinematic law for the motion of disclination lines in nematic liquid crystals as a function of the tensor order parameterQis derived. Unlike other order parameter fields that become singular at their respective defect cores, the tensor order parameter remains regular. Following earlier experimental and theoretical work, the disclination core is defined to be the line where the uniaxial and biaxial order parameters are equal, or equivalently, where the two largest eigenvalues ofQcross. This allows an exact expression relating the velocity of the line to spatial and temporal derivatives ofQon the line, to be specified by a dynamical model for the evolution of the nematic. By introducing a linear core approximation forQ, analytical results are given for several prototypical configurations, including line interactions and motion, loop annihilation, and the response to external fields and shear flows. Behaviour that follows from topological constraints or defect geometry is highlighted. The analytic results are shown to be in agreement with three-dimensional numerical calculations based on a singular Maier–Saupe free energy that allows for anisotropic elasticity.

     
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2024
  2. We study two dimensional tactoids in nematic liquid crystals by using a Q -tensor representation. A bulk free energy of the Maier–Saupe form with eigenvalue constraints on Q , plus elastic terms up to cubic order in Q are used to understand the effects of anisotropic anchoring and Frank–Oseen elasticity on the morphology of nematic–isotropic domains. Further, a volume constraint is introduced to stabilize tactoids of any size at coexistence. We find that anisotropic anchoring results in differences in interface thickness depending on the relative orientation of the director at the interface, and that interfaces become biaxial for tangential alignment when anisotropy is introduced. For negative tactoids, surface defects induced by boundary topology become sharper with increasing elastic anisotropy. On the other hand, by parametrically studying their energy landscape, we find that surface defects do not represent the minimum energy configuration in positive tactoids. Instead, the interplay between Frank–Oseen elasticity in the bulk, and anisotropic anchoring yields semi-bipolar director configurations with non-circular interface morphology. Finally, we find that for growing tactoids the evolution of the director configuration is highly sensitive to the anisotropic term included in the free energy, and that minimum energy configurations may not be representative of kinetically obtained tactoids at long times. 
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  3. We introduce a characterization of disclination lines in three dimensional nematic liquid crystals as a tensor quantity related to the so called rotation vector around the line. This quantity is expressed in terms of the nematic tensor order parameter Q , and shown to decompose as a dyad involving the tangent vector to the disclination line and the rotation vector. Further, we derive a kinematic law for the velocity of disclination lines by connecting this tensor to a topological charge density as in the Halperin-Mazenko description of defects in vector models. Using this framework, analytical predictions for the velocity of interacting line disclinations and of self-annihilating disclination loops are given and confirmed through numerical computation. 
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