Revealing the polar nature of a ferroelectric nematic by means of circular alignment
Per Rudquist
Abstract
Abstract The recent discovery of spontaneously polar nematic liquid crystals—so-called ferroelectric nematics—more than a century after the first discussions about their possible existence—has attracted large interest, both from fundamental scientific and applicational points of view. However, the experimental demonstration of such a phase has, so-far, been non-trivial. Here I present a direct method for the experimental verification of a ferroelectric nematic liquid crystal phase. The method utilizes a single sample cell where the two substrates are linearly and circularly rubbed, respectively, and the ferroelectric nematic phase (N F ) is revealed by the orientation of the resulting disclination lines in the cell.
Topics & Concepts
Liquid crystalFerroelectricityDisclinationPolarPhase (matter)Materials scienceBiaxial nematicOrientation (vector space)Condensed matter physicsOpticsPhysicsOptoelectronicsDielectricGeometryMathematicsQuantum mechanicsLiquid Crystal Research AdvancementsPlant Reproductive BiologyNonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation