Nucleation and growth of blue phase liquid crystals on chemically-patterned surfaces: A surface anchoring assisted blue phase correlation length Article uri icon

abstract

  • In condensed matter, the correlation length is an essential parameter which describes the distance over which a material maintains its structural properties. In liquid crystals, for the orientational order parameter this characteristic length is of the order of nanometers, while in solid crystals it can extend to macroscopic length scales. Here, we report the measurement of the correlation length, or persistence length, of the crystallographic orientation of blue phases (BPs)-chiral liquid crystals with long-range 3D-crystalline structures and submicron-sized lattice-parameters. These materials exhibit phase transformations that have been identified as the liquid analog of crystal-crystal martensitic transformations. In this work, we use liquid epitaxial growth to achieve spontaneous BP-crystal nucleation and subsequent growth. Specifically, we design patterned substrates made of a binary array of regions with different liquid crystal anchoring, which facilitate a uniform nucleation and growth of BP-crystals with (100)-lattice orientation and a simple cubic symmetry. Our results indicate that this simple cubic BP, the so-called blue phase II (BPII), forms first on the patterned surface, thereby propagating the growth of domains in directions parallel or perpendicular to the patterned regions. These results are used to understand the emergence of a surface anchoring assisted BPII-correlation length, taken as the distance over which the BP preserves its lattice orientation, as a function of time and pattern characteristics. We found that BPII single crystals can be achieved on patterned regions whose lateral dimensions are equal to or larger than 10 μm, consistent with our measurements of the BPII-correlation length. This newly acquired understanding of the role of surfaces on the formation of BPs is then used to design processes that permit formation of macroscopically large mono-domain, single-crystal BPs by relying on significantly reduced patterned areas (only part of the area is patterned), a feature that could benefit the applications of this intriguing class of materials. © The Royal Society of Chemistry.

publication date

  • 2021-01-01