Effective long-range interlayer interactions and electric-field-induced subphases in ferrielectric liquid crystals

Phys Rev E. 2016 Apr:93:042707. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.93.042707. Epub 2016 Apr 19.

Abstract

Microbeam resonant x-ray scattering experiments recently revealed the sequential emergence of electric-field-induced subphases (stable states) with exceptionally large unit cells consisting of 12 and 15 smectic layers. We explain the emergence of the field-induced subphases by the quasimolecular model based on the Emelyanenko-Osipov long-range interlayer interactions (LRILIs) together with our primitive way of understanding the frustration in clinicity using the q_{E} number defined as q_{E}=|[R]-[L]|/([R]+[L]); here [R] and [L] refer to the numbers of smectic layers with directors tilted to the right and to the left, respectively, in the unit cell of a field-induced subphase. We show that the model actually stabilizes the field-induced subphases with characteristic composite unit cells consisting of several blocks, each of which is originally a ferrielectric three-layer unit cell stabilized by the LRILIs, but some of which would be modified to become ferroelectric by an applied electric field. In a similar line of thought, we also try to understand the puzzling electric-field-induced birefringence data in terms of the LRILIs.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't