Nematic Liquid Crystals at Interfaces
- 1 February 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals
- Vol. 212 (1) , 21-32
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10587259208037245
Abstract
Through the example of nematic liquid crystals, which are the kind of crystalline phases in which surface effects have most extensively been studied, the principal aspects of the behaviour of liquid crystals at interfaces are presented. They can be separated in two categories. First, the presence of another phase in contact with the liquid crystal induces a perturbation of the liquid crystalline order. Second, the presence of a surface limiting the liquid crystalline phase has a macroscopic effect on the bulk of the phase: in absence of any other orienting field, the surface can impose the orientation of the whole phase. This orienting effect of surfaces on liquid crystals is the so-called anchoring phenomenon. These two aspects of surface effects are linked to each other as the induced anchoring direction depends on the structure of the perturbed region.Keywords
This publication has 75 references indexed in Scilit:
- Systematic studies of the anchoring transition in nematic liquid crystalsPhysical Review A, 1990
- The liquid-vapour interface of nematic liquid crystalsMolecular Physics, 1989
- Surface Anchoring of Nematic Liquid CrystalsMolecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals Incorporating Nonlinear Optics, 1988
- Order Electricity and Oblique Nematic Orientation on Rough Solid SurfacesEurophysics Letters, 1988
- Bistable Anchoring of Nematics on SiO FilmsEurophysics Letters, 1988
- X-ray reflectivity of classical smectic-A liquid crystalsJournal de Physique, 1988
- Alignment of nematic liquid crystals by inhomogeneous surfacesJournal of Applied Physics, 1985
- FILMS MINCES DE CRISTAUX LIQUIDESLe Journal de Physique Colloques, 1979
- A molecular theory of surface tension in nematic liquid crystalsJournal de Physique, 1976
- Surface defects and structural transitions in very low anchoring energy nematic thin filmsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1976