Nematic liquid crystals
(NLCs) offer remarkable opportunities to
direct colloids to form complex structures. The elastic energy field
that dictates colloid interactions is determined by the NLC director
field, which is sensitive to and can be controlled by boundaries including
vessel walls and colloid surfaces. By molding the director field via
liquid-crystal alignment on these surfaces, elastic energy landscapes
can be defined to drive structure formation. We focus on colloids
in otherwise defect-free director fields formed near undulating walls.
Colloids can be driven along prescribed paths and directed to well-defined
docking sites on such wavy boundaries. Colloids that impose strong
alignment generate topologically required companion defects. Configurations
for homeotropic colloids include a dipolar structure formed by the
colloid and its companion hedgehog defect or a quadrupolar structure
formed by the colloid and its companion Saturn ring. Adjacent to wavy
walls with wavelengths larger than the colloid diameter, spherical
particles are attracted to locations along the wall with distortions
in the nematic director field that complement those from the colloid.
This is the basis of lock-and-key interactions. Here, we study ellipsoidal
colloids with homeotropic anchoring near complex undulating walls.
The walls impose distortions that decay with distance from the wall
to a uniform director in the far field. Ellipsoids form dipolar defect
configurations with the colloid’s major axis aligned with the
far field director. Two distinct quadrupolar defect structures also
form, stabilized by confinement; these include the Saturn I configuration
with the ellipsoid’s major axis aligned with the far field
director and the Saturn II configuration with the major axis perpendicular
to the far field director. The ellipsoid orientation varies only weakly
in bulk and near undulating walls. All configurations are attracted
to walls with long, shallow waves. However, for walls with wavelengths
that are small compared to the colloid length, Saturn II is repelled,
allowing selective docking of aligned objects. Deep, narrow wells
prompt the insertion of a vertical ellipsoid. By introducing an opening
at the bottom of such a deep well, we study colloids within pores
that connect two domains. Ellipsoids with different aspect ratios
find different equilibrium positions. An ellipsoid of the right dimension
and aspect ratio can plug the pore, creating a class of 2D selective
membranes