The phase-field-crystal model is used to access the structure and
thermodynamics of interfaces between two coexisting liquid crystalline phases
in two spatial dimensions. Depending on the model parameters there is a variety
of possible coexistences between two liquid crystalline phases including a
plastic triangular crystal (PTC). Here, we calculate numerically the profiles
for the mean density and the nematic order tensor across the interface for
isotropic-PTC and columnar-PTC respectively smectic A-PTC coexistence. As a
general finding, the width of the interface with respect to the nematic order
parameter characterizing the orientational order is larger than the width of
the mean density interface. In approaching the interface from the PTC side, at
first the mean density goes down and then the nematic order parameter follows.
The relative shift of the two profiles can be larger than a full lattice
constant of the plastic crystal. Finally, we also present numerical results for
the dynamic relaxation of an initial order-parameter profile towards its
equilibrium interfacial profile. Our predictions for the interfacial profiles
can in principle be verified in real-space experiments of colloidal
dispersions.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure