Issue 48, 2024

How smectic-A and smectic-C liquid crystals resolve confinement-induced frustration in spherical shells

Abstract

The layered structure of smectic liquid crystals cannot develop unobstructed when confined to spherical shells with layers extending in the radial direction, since the available cross section area increases from the inside to the outside of the shell yet the number and thickness of layers must be constant. For smectic-A (SmA) liquid crystals, with the layer normal m parallel to the director n, the frustration breaks up the texture into spherical lune domains with twist deformations of alternating sense, overlaid with a herringbone-like secondary modulation and mediated via localized bend regions where the boundary conditions are violated. The SmC phase has more degrees of freedom to resolve the frustration thanks to its non-zero tilt angle τ between n and m, but its response to tangential shell confinement was never studied. We show experimentally and theoretically that the lunes in shells undergoing a SmA–SmC transition become twice as wide and half as many and they lose the secondary modulation, adopting a configuration with no layer twist but uniform layer bend if τ reaches a large enough value. Our study expands our understanding of how smectics respond to spherical confinement and it opens new soft matter research opportunities, given the rich diversity of phases with SmC-like symmetry, including chiral and spontaneously polarized phases.

Graphical abstract: How smectic-A and smectic-C liquid crystals resolve confinement-induced frustration in spherical shells

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Oct 2024
Accepted
11 Nov 2024
First published
22 Nov 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 9586-9596

How smectic-A and smectic-C liquid crystals resolve confinement-induced frustration in spherical shells

A. Sharma, M. Magrini, Y. Han, D. M. Walba, A. Majumdar and J. P. F. Lagerwall, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 9586 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM01263A

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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