2H-N.M.R. studies of flexibility and orientational order in nematic liquid crystals

Abstract
Deuteron magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2H-N.M.R.) has been used to investigate the effect of the nematic environment on the flexibility and orientational order of two perdeuteriated cyanobiphenyl homologues: 4-methyl-4′-cyanobiphenyl (1CB-d 11) and 4-n-pentyl-4′-cyanobiphenyl (5CB-d 19). The systems studied were low concentrations of 1CB-d 11 and 5CB-d 19 dissolved in the nematic phases of 5CB, N-(-4-ethoxybenzylidene)-4′-n-butylaniline (EBBA), Merck ZLI-1132 (1132) and a 55wt% mixture of 1132: EBBA. The spectra are dramatically different in these environments. Previous studies on small solutes have suggested that in the 55wt% 1132: EBBA mixture (at 301.4 K) the dominant orienting mechanism depends on the size and shape of the molecule which suggests that it is a short range repulsive interaction. This interaction has been modelled by treating the liquid crystal as an elastic continuum and the solute as a collection of van der Waals spheres which stretch the liquid crystal in the two dimensions perpendicular to the director. The distortion of the liquid crystal depends on the dimensions of the solute, and the elastic energy is described in terms of a Hooke's law force constant, k. The model is extended to include flexible liquid crystal molecules and quadrupolar couplings are calculated for each conformation of the 5CB chain. Statistical averaging over all conformations gives an excellent fit to the experimental spectrum. The results for 1CB and 5CB show that in the other nematic phases contributions from additional mechanisms must be included. Previous studies of 2H2 and other solutes indicate that the additional mechanism is the interaction between the solute molecular quadrupole moment and the mean electric field gradient of the liquid crystal.