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Direct measurement of the propagation of the phase-transition region of liquid crystals.


ABSTRACT: Many types of active matter, such as biological cells, have liquid-crystalline membranes, which are soft and flexible in their interactions with their surroundings and sometimes allow molecular-structural or -orientational changes to extend for long distances, owing to long-range molecular interactions. Despite the technological and fundamental importance of these long-range changes, there is no good physical property with which to express them for the liquid crystal. Here, we show direct measurements of the propagation of structural or orientational changes due to long-range molecular interactions in liquid crystals. We induced a patterned phase transition in a liquid crystal via illumination with a fringe pattern and observed the propagation of the phase-transition region. We determined that the propagation occurred in a ballistic manner with a velocity of 80-110?m/s and that two types of propagation-side-by-side and head-to-tail molecular interactions-were found.

SUBMITTER: Sato T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5357855 | biostudies-other | 2017 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Direct measurement of the propagation of the phase-transition region of liquid crystals.

Sato Takahiro T   Katayama Kenji K  

Scientific reports 20170320


Many types of active matter, such as biological cells, have liquid-crystalline membranes, which are soft and flexible in their interactions with their surroundings and sometimes allow molecular-structural or -orientational changes to extend for long distances, owing to long-range molecular interactions. Despite the technological and fundamental importance of these long-range changes, there is no good physical property with which to express them for the liquid crystal. Here, we show direct measur  ...[more]