New Insights
into the Thermal Stability of the Smectic
C Phase
- Publication date
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Abstract
Subtle differences in the molecular
structure of mesogens can lead
to very different experimental polymorphisms. The smectic C (SmC)
phase can actually be exhibited by one isomer and not the other, or
the range of temperature can be completely different. Unveiling the
deep connection between atomic structure and the very existence of
the SmC phase will lead to the design of new performing liquid crystalline
materials for ferroelectric or nonlinear optical applications. Our
approach is based on running molecular dynamics simulation from an
initial SmC arrangement of molecules. When the temperature is increased,
the molecules automatically adjust in a more favorable organization.
Such modification in the imposed initial self-assembly is governed
by values of the nonbonded energies. Thanks to the combined use of
simulation and experimental phase diagrams, we have unveiled part
of the deep connection between atomic structure and the very existence
of the SmC phase. The actual display of the SmC mesophase stems from
a subtle balance between short-range interactions, which reveal arrangement
of molecules within a smectic layer, and long-range interactions,
which disclose organization of layers